Sylvia Plath, from a letter to Ann Davidow-Goodman, featured in The Letters Of Sylvia Plath Volume I: 1940–1956
[Text ID: I know I’ll always think of you with something like hurt and nostalgia―and a great deal of love.]
Truly the funniest thing about puppet history is that it’s still educational. I DID learn what defenestration is! I learned all about Bessie Coleman and Victorian medicine and the Trung sisters! I also watched a grown man passionately fist fight a puppet being worn by his friend. It’s about balance.
literally i cannot stress how important it is that everyone has a thing.
i do not care if it is a color or a hobby or an animal, everyone needs to have a thing so that their friends can see that thing and think of them that’s what being alive is all about
peanutpalace-deactivated2023011:
me outside at night: hm. what’s the scariest image I’ve ever seen
Unstoppable force (my desire to ramble) meets unmovable force (my desire to never say a word ever)


















