"Blanco! I hope one day you’ll find a guy like Mike, someone who you can love with all your heart, but someone better than Mike, someone who’ll love and appreciate you much more than he did."
[Drunk] Vica Jean
Number 7 always knows the right thing to say, drunk or sober =)
(Source: le-blancs)
Listening to Miss Lauryn Hill at 5 in the morning
"Be honest, brutally honest. That is what’s going to maintain relationships."
Lauryn Hill (via geraldinesays)
(via geraldinesays)
The Last Kalinga Tattoo Artist of the Philippines by Lars Krutak
Although decades of missionization, colonial administration, and modernization have gradually led to the abandonment of Kalinga batok (tattoo), enduring fragments of this rich tradition of body art continue to be worn by Kalinga elders: including the last generation of headhunting warriors whose numbers have perhaps dwindled to some thirty men. These World War II veterans who bravely fought Japanese machine gunners with spears, shields, and axes incited great fear in their Nipponese enemies; because once captured their heads would be taken and their bodies left to decompose in the moist air of the mountainous jungle terrain.
One of the last Kalinga warriors (mingor) to wear the traditional tattoos of his ancestors is 88-year-old Lakay Miguel (Lakay means “respected elder”). Miguel earned his marks for inter-village combat before WWII and for the heads he took during the great conflict. Because he killed or wounded more than two enemies he was permitted to receive the bikking tattoos on his chest which are the headhunter’s primary emblem. But Miguel’s bravery on the battlefield was unsurpassed and he was also allowed to receive the tattooed khaman or head-ax on his rib cage, markings on his back, and tattoos on his arms. The human anthropomorph tattooed beneath his khaman symbolizes his Japanese victims and also denote that he is a warrior of the highest rank. He also wears a faded cruciform between his eyes, three marks on his Adam’s apple as a preventive therapy against goiter, and small tally marks behind the ear that represent his number of enemy engagements.
Miguel is a WWII veteran who earned most of his tattoos combating Japanese forces. He is worried that future generations of Kalinga youth will perhaps forget what the tattooing culture of his people represents once he’s gone. “First the missionaries came, then the school teachers and then people in the towns began discriminating against those men and women who wore tattoos. Now we have no more tattooists and our custom of tattooing will disappear when my generation dies.”
Miguel confided to me that one of his fondest memories was when he took the mandible of a Japanese enemy and began using it as the handle of his gangsa gong; a traditional custom of the Kalinga people. Today, gangsa gongs with human jawbone handles are considered priceless heirlooms and are only used during very special occasions.
Never looking at a gangsa the same way ever again. Goddamn shit. Igorots don’t play.
(via le-blancs)
(via pnoydoughboy)
(Source: pushthemovement)
And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going - Jennifer Holiday & Jessica Sanchez (PARODY)
there is nothing worse than the feeling of shame you get after you run over your own banana peel in mario kart
(via harlequines)
"Being a geek is all about your own personal level of enthusiasm, not how your level of enthusiasm measures up to others. If you like something so much that a casual mention of it makes your whole being light up like a halogen lamp, if hearing a stranger fondly mention your favorite book or game is instant grounds for friendship, if you have ever found yourself bouncing out of your chair because something you learned blew your mind so hard that you physically could not contain yourself — you are a geek."
The Mary Sue defines what it means to be a geek —
(via)
(Source: curiositycounts, via abbyfoshizay)
Song Of The Night: Robert Glasper & Stokley Williams-“Why Do We Try”