
اس گھڑی کی آمد کی آگہی سے ڈرتے ہو؟ // it rains a lot here
785 posts
A7mred - It's Kinda Saad If You Think About It - Tumblr Blog
Even though I am an adlock shipper until the day I die it would be stupid to deny that this isn´t exactly what happened in the episode called A Scandal in Belgravia.
Irene: *is a dangerous person who manipulates people to get what she wants*
Mycroft: *warns Sherlock about how dangerous she is and that she uses people as a means to an end*
Sherlock: *falls in love with Irene Adler and does as she pleases* Lmao red flags ?Where? What red flags?
Irene: *manipulates Sherlock and uses him to get what she wants*
Mycroft: 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🙄
Sherlock:

sherlock admits he texts Irene back
sherlock texts irene back
SHERLOCK HOLMES TEXTS IRENE ADLER
CAUSE HE LIKES LIKES HER
Adlock's time in Karachi is my Roman Empire.
Think about it very often.
it’s like that (1) Indian movie ‘Om Shanti Om’ where my boy gets fucking REINCARNATED to avenge/see shanti again; and she (just) smiles at him. (Don’t think he complained, but still, food for thought)
"A Scandal in Bohemia" is so funny because from Holmes' perspective it's like, it changed his whole perception of women, he remembered her for the rest of his life, she was a major influence on him. But from Irene Adler's perspective it was like:


Franz Kafka, from a letter featured in Letters to Friends, Family, and Editors

Anna Akhmatova, from The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova; "Music,"
“Be with me always - take any form - drive me mad! only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you! Oh, God! it is unutterable! I can not live without my life! I can not live without my soul!”
Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights

Emily Brontë, from "Wuthering Heights," originally published in 1847






Hannibal 1.05 Coquilles | 3.04 Aperitivo


Ernesto Sabato, from his novel titled “The Tunnel,” originally published c. May 1948

Mahmoud Darwish, tr. by Sinan Antoon, from “In The Presence of Absence,”




1. finger back, vampire weekend 2. didn't know what i was in for, better oblivion community center 3. the art of disappearance, hanif abdurraqib 4. infinite jest, david foster wallace






sing me lullabies of broken dreams and memories long forgotten. —𝓜𝓼. 𝓜𝓲𝓼𝓪𝓷𝓽𝓱𝓻𝓸𝓹𝓮










“nostalgia is a villain that we are told is a hero, all it ever does is hurt.”













all time ever does is pass and all i ever do is remember.
sue zhao / sexual devotion, nickie zimov / @ seashellronan / nomad, clairo / annihilation, jeff vandermeer / edward scissorhands (1990) / sky vance / dictionary of obscure sorrows / jonny, faye webster / the madman, kahlil gibran / may (2002) / the lonely city, olivia laing / punch and judy, elliott smith



Danez Smith, Don't Call Us Dead

“It is great when the poet, presenting his tragic hero before the admiration of men, dares to say, “Weep for him, for he deserves it.” For it is great to deserve the tears of those who are worthy to shed tears. It is great that the poet dares to hold the crowd in check, dares to castigate men, requiring that every man examine himself whether he be worthy to weep for the hero. For the waste-water of blubberers is a degradation of the holy. – But greater than all this it is that the knight of faith dares to say even to the noble man who would weep for him, “Weep not for me, but weep for thyself.””
— Søren Kierkegaard, Fear and Trembling