Uch, I’ve fallen so hard for my boyfriend that I’m reblogging sickeningly cute pictures on tumblr. I’m shaking my head at myself, but at the same time, I love it.
(via whiskaylullaby)
Source: t-tangents
Source: weheartit.com
Remember the time when we stole the whole day?
And nobody knows it, we took it away,
And it will be forever mine,
And it will be forever yours.
Now we own the night, and it can’t be undone,
We’ll never forget how it feels to be young.
RIP: Florence Green, believed to be the world’s last remaining WWI vet, passed away Saturday night in her sleep. She was 110.
Green, who served as an Officer’s Mess Steward in the Royal Air Force during the Great War, was less than two weeks shy of her 111th birthday.
The King’s Lynn, Norfolk resident joined up at age 17, two months before the armistice. Her daughter, June Evetts, says Green didn’t talk much about her time in the military, but was “proud of her service and loved the people she worked with.”
Last February, the United States lost its last surviving doughboy, Frank Buckles. Two months later, Claude Stanley Choules, the last living World War I combat veteran, passed away at 110.
[bbc.]
Source: thedailywhat
I’ve been watching these two on youtube for years now. They’re two beautiful people who have formed a beautiful relationship. You never realise how invested you get in these peoples lives. I’m so pleased for them.
(Seriously, these vlogs are better than any soap opera.)
Watch 11:35 and 16:40 for cuteness.
I usually don’t do New Years resolutions, but this year I’m going to set myself a goal. I spent a lot of my time and energy in 2011 on other people. This year I’m putting my time and energy into myself.





![thedailywhat:
RIP: Florence Green, believed to be the world’s last remaining WWI vet, passed away Saturday night in her sleep. She was 110.
Green, who served as an Officer’s Mess Steward in the Royal Air Force during the Great War, was less than two weeks shy of her 111th birthday.
The King’s Lynn, Norfolk resident joined up at age 17, two months before the armistice. Her daughter, June Evetts, says Green didn’t talk much about her time in the military, but was “proud of her service and loved the people she worked with.”
Last February, the United States lost its last surviving doughboy, Frank Buckles. Two months later, Claude Stanley Choules, the last living World War I combat veteran, passed away at 110.
[bbc.]](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lz19n6G0hP1qzpwi0o1_1280.jpg)

