In riding a horse, we borrow freedom

I'm Kelly and as you will see I love many fandoms. I'm also a nerdfighter!
  • ask me anything
  • rss
  • archive
  • poopflow:

    cause of death: second hand embarrassment 

    (via had-just-ten-hours-training)

    Source: poopflow
    • 9 hours ago
    • 23582 notes
  • iwillincendiotheheartoutofyou:

    queenofthedreamers:

    mypatronusisyou:

    you know what I love? everyone’s mutual love and respect for harry potter

    we might not all talk about Harry Potter that much but no matter what wars between or inside fandoms are happening, Harry Potter still trumps everything else and makes it irrelevant 

    if someone makes a Harry Potter reference it’s immediately understood no matter what other fandoms you’re in

    After all this time?

    Always.

    (via had-just-ten-hours-training)

    Source: mypatronusisyou
    • 10 hours ago
    • 15138 notes
  • Spencer made me a sonic screwdriver.

    Spencer made me a sonic screwdriver.

    • 11 hours ago
    • 1 notes
  • (via sorry-neither)

    Source: lexiegrey
    • 21 hours ago
    • 21694 notes
  • eezybree:

    in horse you don’t say “i love you” you say “neigh neigh snort neigh whinny snort” which roughly translates to “give me a carrot you little shit” i think thats really beautiful

    (via jumpersdoitbetter)

    Source: eezybree
    • 21 hours ago
    • 1649 notes
  • phoenixfire-thewizardgoddess:

    [x]

    …well, if this isn’t the greatest metaphor for Fandoms on Day One of a Hiatus…

    (via sorry-neither)

    Source: youshouldhaveletmesleep
    • 21 hours ago
    • 18113 notes
  • LOL, “if I was Tony” (x).

    (via allofspace)

    Source: iwantcupcakes
    • 1 day ago
    • 5619 notes
  • People wonder why I get emotional over LOST and its ending. When LOST ended on May 23, 2010 I was graduating from high school, saying goodbye to a lot of my friends, my dad was battling cancer (and won), and I had to put my horse down. LOST taught me that not every goodbye is filled with grief. That eventually you will see those people again one day. The reunions will be even better and everyone has a purpose. LOST will always have a special place in my heart because of those lessons and family gained. I miss it so much but just like my horse was one of a kind, so is LOST and nothing will ever replace it.

    • 1 day ago
    • 1 notes
    • #LOST
  • (via lostaway)

    Source: thewestniallvirus
    • 1 day ago
    • 888 notes
  • lostaway:

lostaway:
VINCENT
The very first episode was told from his point of view. He appeared in more episodes than Jacob, Christian, and Eloise combined. He was the only character to appear in both the opening scene and the closing scene of LOST—that lived to tell the tale. 
“I need you to go find my son” Christian told Vincent. “He’s over there in that bamboo forest, unconscious. I need you to go wake him up. Okay? Go on. He was work to do.” (Christian to Vincent in Mobisode 13.)
Christian does not point to Jack’s location. He does not lead Vincent there. He provides verbal instruction only. He somehow expects Vincent to understand what a bamboo forest is, that a man is unconscious in that forest, and that it is his job to wake the man. 
Vincent could never have understood complex human speech prior to his arrival on the island. The Island worked its strange magic on the dog, too. 
Vincent’s mission never changed, and he never wavered in his commitment, even to the very end. Just as he stood by Jack in the first seconds of his mission, he was there in the closing moments, too, giving comfort to the one he had sworn to guide through the most treacherous obstacles a human being could ever be expected to face.
“Live together, die alone,” Jack said.
At the end of the story, there was a sadness for Jack’s passing, but the tears that streaked our faces, more than anything were tears of joy, for a man whose legacy would live forever, for an Island that had become an abode of peace, and for a dog who would not allow a great man to die without another’s love.
—A short excerpt from Vincent’s chapter of Lost Identity. 
because I just need to point out the epicness of Vincent again. That last paragraph….

    lostaway:

    lostaway:

    VINCENT

    The very first episode was told from his point of view. He appeared in more episodes than Jacob, Christian, and Eloise combined. He was the only character to appear in both the opening scene and the closing scene of LOST—that lived to tell the tale. 

    “I need you to go find my son” Christian told Vincent. “He’s over there in that bamboo forest, unconscious. I need you to go wake him up. Okay? Go on. He was work to do.” (Christian to Vincent in Mobisode 13.)

    Christian does not point to Jack’s location. He does not lead Vincent there. He provides verbal instruction only. He somehow expects Vincent to understand what a bamboo forest is, that a man is unconscious in that forest, and that it is his job to wake the man. 

    Vincent could never have understood complex human speech prior to his arrival on the island. The Island worked its strange magic on the dog, too. 

    Vincent’s mission never changed, and he never wavered in his commitment, even to the very end. Just as he stood by Jack in the first seconds of his mission, he was there in the closing moments, too, giving comfort to the one he had sworn to guide through the most treacherous obstacles a human being could ever be expected to face.

    “Live together, die alone,” Jack said.

    At the end of the story, there was a sadness for Jack’s passing, but the tears that streaked our faces, more than anything were tears of joy, for a man whose legacy would live forever, for an Island that had become an abode of peace, and for a dog who would not allow a great man to die without another’s love.

    —A short excerpt from Vincent’s chapter of Lost Identity. 

    because I just need to point out the epicness of Vincent again. That last paragraph….

    image

    Source: lostaway
    • 1 day ago
    • 302 notes
© 2011–2013 In riding a horse, we borrow freedom
Next page
  • Page 1 / 934