My heart feels heavy.
Again.

My heart feels heavy.
Again.
All I know is that
The only thing keeping me from ruining you
Is the fact that I love you despite all that you did to me.
Since when did i find “what’s on your mind?” such an unsettling question
How i missed the combination of Dr. Pepper and Camel Crush. Takes me back 4 years ago.
“It is true when you are by yourself and you think about life, it is always sad. All that excitement and so on has a way of suddenly leaving you, and it’s as though, in the silence, somebody called your name, and you heard your name for the first time.”
— Katherine Mansfield, from Stories by Katherine Mansfield; “At the Bay”
Despite deep-sea environments covers about half of the Earth’s surface and is home to a vast range of species, little is known about these environments, and mining could have long-lasting and unforeseen consequences, not just at mining sites but also across much larger areas.
According to a study published in scientific journal Frontiers in Marine Science, which is the first to give a global overview of all current plans to mine the seabed, in both national and international waters, and looks at the potential impacts including physical destruction of seabed habitats, creation of large underwater plumes of sediment and the effects of chemical, noise and light pollution arising from mining operations.
Rising demand for minerals and metals, including for use in the technology sector, has led to a resurgence of interest in exploration of mineral resources located on the seabed. Such resources, whether seafloor massive sulfides around hydrothermal vents, cobalt-rich crusts on the flanks of seamounts or fields of manganese nodules on the abyssal plains, cannot be considered in isolation of the distinctive, in some cases unique, assemblages of marine species associated with the same habitats and structures.
Some operations are already taking place, generally at relatively shallow depths near national coastlines. The first commercial enterprise, expected to target mineral-rich sulfides in deeper waters, at depths between 1,500 and 2,000 m on the continental shelf of Papua New Guinea, is scheduled to begin early in 2019.
Me as a tree. (via bluedelliquanti)
sometimes it’s still lonely
I am so in love with my s.o.
Credo by Neil Gaiman.
So if i let go of control now, i could be strong~~
There's this urge to run away again
I yearn for my safe little cozy bubble which separates me from the world. Sometimes we just need to take that kind of break again every once in a while. I haven't been taking mine...
There is this desire to go away for a while again.