All the best people are mad.

Look at me, look at me, I’m a cool kid
I’m an individual, yea, but I’m part of a movement
My movement told me be a consumer and I consumed it
They told me to just do it, I listened to what that swoosh said
Look at what that swoosh did
See it consumed my thoughts.

REBLOG IF YOU WANT LOVE LETTERS IN YOUR INBOX

(Quelle: the-young-fish-prince, via so-lost-in-us)

south-england:


Views from the Hochfelln, Rupholding »» Thomas Hanks

south-england:

Views from the Hochfelln, Rupholding »» Thomas Hanks

(via zweckl0s)

winterkristall:


(by .orphin)

Du bist einer dieser Menschen, mit denen ich gerne alt werden möchte.

(Quelle: marlboroperle, via zweckl0s)

Ich hasse diese Möchtegern-Tumblrbitches dafür, dass sie hier sind. Für die 08/15 Blogs, ohne Bedeutung. Für die Songtexte die sie rebloggen ohne jemals den Sinn verstanden zu haben, oder auch nur das Lied dazu zu kennen. Diese Möchtegern Depressionen. Ich möchte euch so gerne einen Backstein ins Gesicht werfen, bleibt mal bei Facebook, da wo ihr hin gehört.

(Quelle: blaue-flecken, via zweckl0s)

If I’m a sarcastic asshole when I talk to you its either because I really like you and feel comfortable teasing you

Or I really hate you and don’t care if you know it

Good luck figuring out which one

(Quelle: nontarian, via so-lost-in-us)

kenobi-wan-obi:

Milky Way Shows 84 Million Stars in 9 Billion Pixels

Side Note: The two images shown above are mere crop outs from ESA’s recent hit: The 9 Billion Pixel Image of 84 Million Stars. These two focus on the bright center of the image for the purpose of highlighting what a peak at 84,000,000 stars looks like.

Astronomers at the European Southern Observatory’s Paranal Observatory in Chile have released a breathtaking new photograph showing the central area of our Milky Way galaxy. The photograph shows a whopping 84 million stars in an image measuring 108500×81500, which contains nearly 9 billion pixels.

It’s actually a composite of thousands of individual photographs shot with the observatory’s VISTA survey telescope, the same camera that captured the amazing 55-hour exposure. Three different infrared filters were used to capture the different details present in the final image.

The VISTA’s camera is sensitive to infrared light, which allows its vision to pierce through much of the space dust that blocks the view of ordinary optical telescope/camera systems.

source

(via so-lost-in-us)

(Quelle: caloriqe, via so-lost-in-us)