#JustChill some how some way its going to get better after you follow me so go head #Poet #NaturallyGifted #MSU MusicLivesInMe

 

et-in-arkadia:

anactualbear:

xjohndeeregirlx:

Went Goat shopping today..This baby girl claimed me as her own before I could even decide.

oh my god oh my god

things to do:
goat shopping

et-in-arkadia:

anactualbear:

xjohndeeregirlx:

Went Goat shopping today..
This baby girl claimed me as her own before I could even decide.

oh my god oh my god

things to do:

  1. goat shopping

perfectlyimperfectbeauty:

psychoticmist:

if you ever feel bad about yourself remember that george bush was once informed that 4 brazilian people were killed in iraq and he responded ‘how many is a brazilian’

Dig my grave man lmao

omgoshitskabs:

My footsteps broke the silence of the pre-dawn hours as I drifted down Bleaker St.  Past shop windows, barred against the perils of the night. Up ahead, a neon sign emerged from the fog. The letters glowed red hot In that way I knew so well, branding a message into my mind. A single word, Hotel.

YAAAAAAAAAAAAAASSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!

(Source: thatmichaeljackson)

(Source: nicklugo)

cavetocanvas:

Gordon ParksDr. Kenneth B. Clark conducting the Doll Test, Harlem, New York, 1947

In the “doll test,” psychologists Kenneth and Mamie Clark used four plastic, diaper-clad dolls, identical except for color. They showed the dolls to black children between the ages of three and seven and asked them questions to determine racial perception and preference. Almost all of the children readily identified the race of the dolls. However, when asked which they preferred, the majority selected the white doll and attributed positive characteristics to it. The Clarks also gave the children outline drawings of a boy and girl and asked them to color the figures the same color as themselves. Many of the children with dark complexions colored the figures with a white or yellow crayon. The Clarks concluded that “prejudice, discrimination, and segregation” caused black children to develop a sense of inferiority and self-hatred. This photograph was taken by Gordon Parks for a 1947 issue of Ebony magazine.