(Source: mathani)
(Source: dudeyouresocool, via belliciousx)
YUNA / music: Soul Mate.
To personally evolve means to grow through the things that challenge us the most. Our Souls long to do this—we inherently want to become greater people. Deep within us we are called make our way through struggles and emerge victorious. Our Soul Mates are the people that give us the opportunity…
(via belliciousx)
(via itsherlove)
lulz
(Source: awkwardnigerian, via lalalulale)
(via puteribintiahmad)
‘tsundoku’ - the Japanese word for buying books & not reading them, leaving them to pile up.
(via lalalulale)
So I loved until I fell in love.
—Salah Abdel Sabour, The Tragedy of al-Hallaj (via rabbrakha)
(Source: larmoyante, via yyzzx)
I learned a lot from my past relationships to not screw this one up. I can feel it. InshaAllah.
Innalillah
you lost the love you love the most. be strong love. for i am here. always. and so is he. eternally in you. heart and mind.
i am sorry for your lost.
may he rest in peace
may Allah grant him jannah
may Allah grant you and your family serenity, calmness, strength.
Alfatihah.
—Lelaki...
such a beautiful song for a scumbag
cabaret feel, “Chicago”, love, love, love this song!
“Lelaki…”
Music/Lyrics : Yuna
Produced by: AG Coco
Mixed by: Huzai
APRIL 2013
Tashiro-jima (or Tashirojima), 田代島, is a small island in Japan. It has become known as “Cat Island” due to the large stray cat population that thrives as a result of the local belief that feeding cats will bring wealth and good fortune. The cat population is now larger than the human population on the island.
There is a small cat shrine Neko-jinja (猫神社) in the middle of the island, roughly situated between the two villages. In the past, the islanders raised silkworms for silk, and cats were kept in order to keep the mouse population down (because mice are a natural predator of silkworms). Fixed-net fishing was popular on the island after the Edo Period and fishermen from other areas would come and stay on the island overnight. The cats would go to the inns where the fishermen were staying and beg for scraps. Over time, the fishermen developed a fondness for the cats and would observe the cats closely, interpreting their actions as predictions of the weather and fish patterns. One day, when the fishermen were collecting rocks to use with the fixed-nets, a stray rock fell and killed one of the cats. The fishermen, feeling sorry for the loss of the cat, buried it and enshrined it at this location on the island.
There are at least ten cat shrines in Miyagi Prefecture. There are also 51 stone monuments in the shape of cats.
I am moving here
(via moonhmz)
(Source: voguelustys, via meerabelle)

