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168 posts tagged life

I finally figured out that the things that hurt us the most can become the fuel and the catalyst that propel us toward our destiny. It will either make you bitter or it will make you better. 

*I can choose to sit in perpetual sadness, immobilized by the gravity of my loss, or I can choose to rise from the pain and treasure the most precious gift I have - life itself.* 

The universe has to move forward.
Pain and loss, they define us as much as happiness or love.
Whether it’s a world, a person, or a relationship… Everything has its time. And everything ends. 

I have a feeling that once you live through something like this, you become a little bit invincible. I am not a victim. No matter what I have been through, I’m still here. I have a history of victory. 

Reblogged from blarsh


the greatest irony of love: loving the right person at the wrong time, having the wrong person when the time is right and finding out you love someone right after that person walks out of your life. and sometimes, you think you’re already over a person, but when you see them smile at you, you’ll suddenly realize that you’re just pretending to be over them to ease the pain of knowing that they will never be yours again. for some, they think that letting go is one way of expressing how much you love the person.. and some are afraid to see the one they love being held by someone else. most relationships tend to fail not because of the absence of love.love is always present. it’s just that one was being loved too much and the other was being loved too little. as we all know that the heart is the center of the body but it beats on the left. maybe that’s the reason why the heart is not always right. most often, we fall in love with the person we think we love but only to discover that for them, we are just to pass the time. while the one who truly loves us remains either a friend or a stranger. so here’s a piece of advice: let go when you’re hurting too much. give up when love isn’t enough, and move on when things are not like before. for sure, there is someone out there who will love you even more.

the greatest irony of love:
loving the right person at the wrong time,
having the wrong person when the time is right
and finding out you love someone
right after that person walks out of your life.
and sometimes, you think you’re already over a person,
but when you see them smile at you,
you’ll suddenly realize that you’re just pretending to be over them
to ease the pain of knowing that they will never be yours again.
for some, they think that letting go
is one way of expressing how much you love the person..
and some are afraid to see the one they love
being held by someone else.
most relationships tend to fail
not because of the absence of love.
love is always present. 
it’s just that one was being loved too much
and the other was being loved too little.
as we all know that the heart is the center of the body
but it beats on the left.
maybe that’s the reason why the heart is not always right.
most often, we fall in love with the person we think we love
but only to discover that for them,
we are just to pass the time.
while the one who truly loves us
remains either a friend or a stranger.
so here’s a piece of advice:
let go when you’re hurting too much.
give up when love isn’t enough,
and move on when things are not like before.
for sure, there is someone out there who will love you even more.


When you step out of the phone booth and try to fly and the very people you wanna save are the ones standing on your cape. When your boots fill with rain and you’ll be up to your knees in disappointment.. those are the very days you have all the more reason to say “thank you.”
This life will hit you. Hard. In the face. and wait for you to get back up so it can kick you in the stomach. But getting the wind knocked out of you is the only way to remind your lungs how much they like the taste of air.
There is hurt, here, that cannot be fixed by band-aids or poetry, but this world is made out of sugar. It can crumble so easily… but don’t be afraid to stick out your tongue and taste it. 

When you step out of the phone booth and try to fly and the very people you wanna save are the ones standing on your cape. When your boots fill with rain and you’ll be up to your knees in disappointment.. those are the very days you have all the more reason to say “thank you.”

This life will hit you. Hard. In the face. and wait for you to get back up so it can kick you in the stomach. But getting the wind knocked out of you is the only way to remind your lungs how much they like the taste of air.

There is hurt, here, that cannot be fixed by band-aids or poetry, but this world is made out of sugar. It can crumble so easily… but don’t be afraid to stick out your tongue and taste it. 

(via despicable-g)

21 Ways to Help Yourself Heal

1. Give yourself the emotional break you need. We work so hard to prove to others that we are worth it and prove to yourselves that we matter. Start realizing you have nothing to prove.

2. Recognize the joy in small things. Some days, when it rains yet again or the weather isn’t as temperate as the forecast promised, it can be hard to see the good in the world. On those days, don’t try to see the good in everything. See the good in something small, like a great cup of coffee.

3. Make up with someone with whom you’ve been putting off a reconciliation. Be the person who picks up the phone to reach out. We sometimes hate ourselves for caving first, as if you get a prize for holding out. You outlasted. However, I think you should get a prize for forgiveness  They give people medals for synchronized swimming. Why not for working to preserve a friendship or relationship? That’s the Olympic spirit we should be honoring, our marathons of interpersonal marriages.

4. Work on being nicer to yourself. Whenever I let myself down or screw up, I have a bad habit of repeating, “You’re an asshole. You’re such a motherfucking asshole,” until I believe it. We need to stop being our own worst enemies.

5. Look at the messages you feed yourself every day. What is your media telling you about your body and your self-worth?

6. Stop looking at self-improvement as a once-a-year resolution. Start seeing it as a long-term, year-round commitment to emotional and physical wellness.

7. Listen to your parents and friends more often and trust them with your problems, while also remembering to be true to yourself and your own instincts. Start to listen to the voices around you but realize that none is more powerful than your own.

8. Let your body get as much rest as it needs. Don’t tell yourself that you’re “only going to get 5 hours” because you have work to do or want to get ahead of this deadline. If you can feel the tension getting to you, give your body what it needs. Don’t set your alarm and let your body tell you when it wants to wake up. Just make sure you have no important tests to miss in the process.

9. Face yourself in the mirror for a solid minute and just look at yourself smiling. Sometimes we have to be reminded how beautiful our happiness looks to remember why committing to wellness is so important.

10. Don’t go to the gym today. We’re always so focused on pushing ourselves to the limit that I often worry we forget to let ourselves play hooky or hang out with the little kid inside us. You don’t always have to be the person who drinks protein shakes. You’re allowed to eat the pizza or not make every goal you set for yourself this week. Let yourself be human.

11. Embrace your mistakes. Everything in the universe was created imperfect, built with the capacity for atrophy and decay. When you screw up, remember that you have the universe inside you. This is part of the plan.

12. Don’t talk about it. We can often become so focused on healing that we become obsessed with our own progress.  Invite someone over with whom you can just be comfortable with and not talk it out.

13. Stop putting off that vacation, even if just a small one. Go somewhere. It can be somewhere in your own city or state if you don’t have the funds to travel. Visit your friend on the far north side of the city, that you’ve never even been to, or go be with your family in the burbs. You don’t have to spend a ton of money to celebrate your capacity to explore, take risks and discover new things, even the ones that were right in front of you all along.

14. Remember to balance. Stay home if you feel like you’ve been going out too much, or if you feel like you’ve been a homebody recently, recommit to your friendships. Strive to be person who lives the happy medium.

15. Practice positivity. You can start by looking at how you react to things. Are you a person who immediately moves to pessimism and self-doubt when faced with an obstacle? If so, take steps to change your perspective. Learn to embrace these challenges as an opportunity for growth through struggle.

16. Let go of things. It doesn’t have to be something huge. It can be dropping your change on the subway and not getting it back. Don’t look at every mishap as a life-altering setback. Remember not just that you cannot change things but that five years down the road, you probably wouldn’t want to change it if you could. Every mistake made now will look like a learning opportunity later.

17. Rely on yourself more. We often think that we are weak and cannot do it on our own. We think we can’t sew, can’t do this or that. We become interdependent in ways that teach us to cherish the resources of our community, but also sometimes hold us back from providing for ourselves. We need to trust in our ability to take charge of our lives and be the one who is in control, whether that’s changing the lightbulb or being proactive about improvement.

18. Laugh at yourself. Don’t take yourself so seriously all the time.

19. Work on someone else’s healing. Sometimes we get perspective and wisdom from being a witness to somebody else’s pain and struggle and being an agent in their betterment. We learn about ourselves through watching others face problems that are both like ours and every different from ours. While we journey, we must remember to be present to those around us and also walk with them. You can walk alone, but don’t travel alone.

20. Believe in people again. Surround yourself with those who don’t accept your guarded cynicism, the people who remind you how beautiful life can be. Even when the world is at its worst, we need those who help us to see its potential, who fill us with hope. We need to be with those working to clean it up and make it better.

21. Find new ways to pray. A Facebook post told me yesterday to pray for Boston. If you don’t believe in God or pray with your hands, pray by keeping your heart open. I don’t care how you pray: whether you pray by smiling at strangers, by striving to make the world a better place, by updating your status, by reminding your mother how much you appreciate her or by reflecting on the victims of violence worldwide (the many whose losses go undocumented). Send your love, however you can. The world needs more love every day, but especially today.

How To Accept What You Can’t Change

1. Start with moving toward accepting who you are. If you do some analyzing, you’ll find that most problems are, one way or another, rooted in not accepting and loving yourself. This is the best place to start.

2. Don’t rely on ineffective coping mechanisms, find healthy outlets for yourself. For example, suppressing your feelings and ignoring the problem will never bode well for you in the long term, and you know this.

3. Make lists, write things out, consider the possibilities. This is how I deal with mostly everything I can’t figure out immediately. I write things down, make lists and weigh pros and cons. For the sake of acceptance, write down why you can’t change it or the reasons why you may be happy this happened in the future.

4. Don’t try to change everything at once. You won’t do anything thoroughly if you try to uproot your whole life one day. Take it one step at a time, the best changes, and the ones that last, are the ones that happen in gradual steps.

5. Find your happy place. My happy place is often my bed. This is not a sexual innuendo. I just love to nap, read or write while sitting in bed. Your happy place can be a state of mind or a room in your house. It doesn’t have to be some intangible unrealistic place that you won’t be able to go to on a daily basis. Find it, and go there.

6. Find other thoughts to fill your head. You won’t just stop thinking about what hurts unless you find other things to think about. Suppressing your thoughts, as mentioned before, will not make them go away. They’ll make them more powerful when they eventually all come back to haunt you. Find new things to think about. Go to bed reading poetry and wake up letting any negative thoughts pass by you and finding beautiful ones to fill your emptiness.

7. Let the feelings wave through you and pass. Breathe through them. Don’t resist them, just let them go. You will never, ever, reach a day where you don’t have feelings, the good and the bad. Resisting them will not help, it will hurt. Train yourself to acknowledge your feelings, consider what they’re trying to tell you, and let them pass.