(Source: souldischarge)
(Source: sociallyunacceptableart)
The Beatles & the Be Sharps & Yoko Ono
(via sundayintro)
(Source: tacos, via pleasingthecrowds)
Think of it like music. If you want a pop song that most people will enjoy, you have a catchy beat with lyrics about love or sex. But, if you want an indie song that would really touch into somebody or give out a message, you have instrumentation that reflects the emotions and lyrics that go into specific subject matter.
Everyone is specific. If everyone acted their complete selves, then we’d all be self-contained, making friends a lot harder to find. So we have this frame of mind that people sink into in order to relate to one and other. There are unwritten and unspecified standards that people go by, so that communication is a lot easier.
Which isn’t a bad thing. You go a little bit out of yourself in order to be open minded about others. It’s worse to force your own standards upon everyone and deem yourself inaccessible to the majority. What is bad, is when you never step out of that popular zone. Once you’ve been acquainted with someone, you should then open yourself more to see if there is something there. You don’t continue being this fake image, in fear that you won’t get any closer to that person if you be yourself.
I’m trying to say, that it’s okay to be a bit generic. If you sit in social gatherings, keeping quiet because you refuse to conform to the common chit-chat, you’re going to miss the chance of revealing yourself to someone worth getting to know.
It’s about time I went back to original content again.