aliveinquotes - Alive in Quotes
Alive in Quotes

584 posts

Make It A Good OneAnd If You Wanna Make It Through The NightYou Better Say My Name LikeThe Good, The

Make It A Good OneAnd If You Wanna Make It Through The NightYou Better Say My Name LikeThe Good, The
Make It A Good OneAnd If You Wanna Make It Through The NightYou Better Say My Name LikeThe Good, The

Make it a good one And if you wanna make it through the night You better say my name like The Good, The Bad, and The Dirty

  • anchorghost
    anchorghost reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • anchorghost
    anchorghost liked this · 2 years ago
  • anti-social-mediax
    anti-social-mediax reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • arcticboosh
    arcticboosh reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • lastofthemadones
    lastofthemadones reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • autokad92
    autokad92 reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • enbyratt
    enbyratt reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • pepsi-and-other-drugs
    pepsi-and-other-drugs reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • ostorian
    ostorian reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • days-of-havok
    days-of-havok reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • aliveinquotes
    aliveinquotes reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • cats-boys-satan
    cats-boys-satan reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • the-art-student-in-221c
    the-art-student-in-221c liked this · 8 years ago
  • xanderwithanx
    xanderwithanx liked this · 8 years ago
  • doctorquinnzel
    doctorquinnzel reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • doctorquinnzel
    doctorquinnzel liked this · 8 years ago
  • guard-mama-heather
    guard-mama-heather reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • galaxymanda
    galaxymanda liked this · 9 years ago
  • pollythepsychic
    pollythepsychic reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • masqueradeforthedamned
    masqueradeforthedamned liked this · 9 years ago
  • masqueradeforthedamned
    masqueradeforthedamned reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • vampvelour
    vampvelour liked this · 9 years ago
  • isthatagrenade
    isthatagrenade reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • xxx-vii
    xxx-vii reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • theoneandonlyplap
    theoneandonlyplap reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • theoneandonlyplap
    theoneandonlyplap liked this · 9 years ago
  • leoprrd
    leoprrd reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • cougheeorkhaos
    cougheeorkhaos reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • bonbonucan
    bonbonucan liked this · 9 years ago
  • neufintheafternoon
    neufintheafternoon reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • a28yearoldmantryinghisbest
    a28yearoldmantryinghisbest liked this · 9 years ago
  • orphanage-body
    orphanage-body liked this · 9 years ago
  • em-mariaa
    em-mariaa reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • irlspaceoddity
    irlspaceoddity reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • twentyone-links-blog
    twentyone-links-blog liked this · 9 years ago
  • landfill-of-fandoms
    landfill-of-fandoms liked this · 9 years ago
  • too-latefor-logic
    too-latefor-logic liked this · 9 years ago
  • bodynabyss
    bodynabyss liked this · 9 years ago

More Posts from Aliveinquotes

9 years ago
To Make Someone An Icon Is To Make Him An Abstraction, And Abstractions Are Incapable Of Vital Communication

“To make someone an icon is to make him an abstraction, and abstractions are incapable of vital communication with living people.”

— David Foster Wallace, Consider the Lobster

8 years ago

The (500) Days of Summer attitude of “He wants you so bad” seems attractive to some women and men, especially younger ones, but I would encourage anyone who has a crush on my character to watch it again and examine how selfish he is. He develops a mildly delusional obsession over a girl onto whom he projects all these fantasies. He thinks she’ll give his life meaning because he doesn’t care about much else going on in his life. A lot of boys and girls think their lives will have meaning if they find a partner who wants nothing else in life but them. That’s not healthy. That’s falling in love with the idea of a person, not the actual person.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt (via pratfall)


Tags :
8 years ago

i. “Your name is Tasbeeh. Don’t let them call you by anything else.” My mother speaks to me in Arabic; the command sounds more forceful in her mother tongue, a Libyan dialect that is all sharp edges and hard, guttural sounds. I am seven years old and it has never occurred to me to disobey my mother. Until twelve years old, I would believe God gave her the supernatural ability to tell when I’m lying. “Don’t let them give you an English nickname,” my mother insists once again, “I didn’t raise amreekan.” My mother spits out this last word with venom. Amreekan. Americans. It sounds like a curse coming out of her mouth. Eight years in this country and she’s still not convinced she lives here. She wears her headscarf tightly around her neck, wades across the school lawn in long, floor-skimming skirts. Eight years in this country and her tongue refuses to bend and soften for the English language. It embarrasses me, her heavy Arab tongue, wrapping itself so forcefully around the clumsy syllables of English, strangling them out of their meaning. But she is fierce and fearless. I have never heard her apologize to anyone. She will hold up long grocery lines checking and double-checking the receipt in case they’re trying to cheat us. My humiliation is heavy enough for the both of us. My English is not. Sometimes I step away, so people don’t know we’re together but my dark hair and skin betray me as a member of her tribe. On my first day of school, my mother presses a kiss to my cheek. “Your name is Tasbeeh,” she says again, like I’ve forgotten. “Tasbeeh.” ii. Roll call is the worst part of my day. After a long list of Brittanys, Jonathans, Ashleys, and Yen-but-call-me-Jens, the teacher rests on my name in silence. She squints. She has never seen this combination of letters strung together in this order before. They are incomprehensible. What is this h doing at the end? Maybe it is a typo. “Tas…?” “Tasbeeh,” I mutter, with my hand half up in the air. “Tasbeeh.” A pause. “Do you go by anything else?” “No,” I say. “Just Tasbeeh. Tas-beeh.” “Tazbee. All right. Alex?” She moves on before I can correct her. She said it wrong. She said it so wrong. I have never heard my name said so ugly before, like it’s a burden. Her entire face contorts as she says it, like she is expelling a distasteful thing from her mouth. She avoids saying it for the rest of the day, but she has already baptized me with this new name. It is the name everyone knows me by, now, for the next six years I am in elementary school. “Tazbee,” a name with no grace, no meaning, no history; it belongs in no language. “Tazbee,” says one of the students on the playground, later. “Like Tazmanian Devil?” Everyone laughs. I laugh too. It is funny, if you think about it. iii. I do not correct anyone for years. One day, in third grade, a plane flies above our school. “Your dad up there, Bin Laden?” The voice comes from behind. It is dripping in derision. “My name is Tazbee,” I say. I said it in this heavy English accent, so he may know who I am. I am American. But when I turn around they are gone. iv. I go to middle school far, far away. It is a 30-minute drive from our house. It’s a beautiful set of buildings located a few blocks off the beach. I have never in my life seen so many blond people, so many colored irises. This is a school full of Ashtons and Penelopes, Patricks and Sophias. Beautiful names that belong to beautiful faces. The kind of names that promise a lifetime of social triumph. I am one of two headscarved girls at this new school. We are assigned the same gym class. We are the only ones in sweatpants and long-sleeved undershirts. We are both dreading roll call. When the gym teacher pauses at my name, I am already red with humiliation. “How do I say your name?” she asks. “Tazbee,” I say. “Can I just call you Tess?” I want to say yes. Call me Tess. But my mother will know, somehow. She will see it written in my eyes. God will whisper it in her ear. Her disappointment will overwhelm me. “No,” I say, “Please call me Tazbee.” I don’t hear her say it for the rest of the year. v. My history teacher calls me Tashbah for the entire year. It does not matter how often I correct her, she reverts to that misshapen sneeze of a word. It is the ugliest conglomeration of sounds I have ever heard. When my mother comes to parents’ night, she corrects her angrily, “Tasbeeh. Her name is Tasbeeh.” My history teacher grimaces. I want the world to swallow me up. vi. My college professors don’t even bother. I will only know them for a few months of the year. They smother my name in their mouths. It is a hindrance for their tongues. They hand me papers silently. One of them mumbles it unintelligibly whenever he calls on my hand. Another just calls me “T.” My name is a burden. My name is a burden. My name is a burden. I am a burden. vii. On the radio I hear a story about a tribe in some remote, rural place that has no name for the color blue. They do not know what the color blue is. It has no name so it does not exist. It does not exist because it has no name. viii. At the start of a new semester, I walk into a math class. My teacher is blond and blue-eyed. I don’t remember his name. When he comes to mine on the roll call, he takes the requisite pause. I hold my breath. “How do I pronounce your name?” he asks. I say, “Just call me Tess.” “Is that how it’s pronounced?” I say, “No one’s ever been able to pronounce it.” “That’s probably because they didn’t want to try,” he said. “What is your name?” When I say my name, it feels like redemption. I have never said it this way before. Tasbeeh. He repeats it back to me several times until he’s got it. It is difficult for his American tongue. His has none of the strength, none of the force of my mother’s. But he gets it, eventually, and it sounds beautiful. I have never heard it sound so beautiful. I have never felt so deserving of a name. My name feels like a crown. ix. “Thank you for my name, mama.” x. When the barista asks me my name, sharpie poised above the coffee cup, I tell him: “My name is Tasbeeh. It’s a tough t clinging to a soft a, which melts into a silky ssss, which loosely hugs the b, and the rest of my name is a hard whisper — eeh. Tasbeeh. My name is Tasbeeh. Hold it in your mouth until it becomes a prayer. My name is a valuable undertaking. My name requires your rapt attention. Say my name in one swift note – Tasbeeeeeeeh – sand let the h heat your throat like cinnamon. Tasbeeh. My name is an endeavor. My name is a song. Tasbeeh. It means giving glory to God. Tasbeeh. Wrap your tongue around my name, unravel it with the music of your voice, and give God what he is due

Tasbeeh Herwees, The Names They Gave Me (via cat-phuong)

I am weeping.

(via strangeasanjles)

8 years ago

beautiful things grow to a certain height and then they fail and fade off, breathing out memories as they decay.

 F. Scott Fitzgerald   (via alpacakingdom)


Tags :