Anonymous asked: Have you ever been catfished?
Nope.
This is me.
(Source: weloveshortvideos.com, via proletarianinstinct)
Masturbate first. Then decide if their really worth hitting up after your mind has been cleared up from that nut you busted from rubbing one out
Reblog to save a life
REBLOG TO SAVE A LIIIIIIIIIFE
Save some gas money while you’re at it
(Source: trappedinsideofspaceandtime, via proletarianinstinct)
Cosmic Beasts- Animal Constellation art print set
https://www.etsy.com/listing/210392986/cosmic-beasts-animal-constellation-art?
(via etsycult)
(Source: deeplifequotes, via fatal-e)
Turning Bridge-Building Sideways
In 1978, SOM architect Myron Goldsmith and engineer T.Y. Lin created a remarkable structure to span the challenging middle fork of California’s American River. Ruck-A-Chucky Bridge elegantly solves the problem of building a stable, economical structure across a wide, steep gorge by entirely rethinking the principles of bridge-building. A “hanging arc,” the bridge was to be suspended by 80 high-strength cables and balanced by tensile forces. Though unbuilt, Ruck-A-Chucky Bridge stands as a masterwork of innovative design and structural economy to this day. Learn more
Submitted by sleepnaught:
Jupiter triple moon eclipse
Five spots – one colored white, one blue, and three black – are scattered across the upper half of the planet. Closer inspection by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope reveals that these spots are actually a rare alignment of three of Jupiter’s largest moons – Io, Ganymede, and Callisto – across the planet’s face. In this image, the telltale signatures of this alignment are the shadows [the three black circles] cast by the moons. Io’s shadow is located just above center and to the left; Ganymede’s on the planet’s left edge; and Callisto’s near the right edge. Only two of the moons, however, are visible in this image. Io is the white circle in the center of the image, and Ganymede is the blue circle at upper right. Callisto is out of the image and to the right. This image was taken March 28, 2004, with Hubble’s Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer.Image Credit: NASA, ESA, and E. Karkoschka (University of Arizona)
