Haha, I hope their neighbors are into halloween.I see your LMFAO and raise you This is Halloween.
OMYGOD OK YUP THIS ONE WINS BY FAR OMG KJASBFJKABSF
omg
ERKS I HAVE GOOSEBUMPS
Holy fuck. Can i be your neighbor?
When the car drove by? That’s when I began to believe, LOL. That is the best
I can’t even.. <3
this is fucking amazing.
Can we be neighbors? :3
that awkward moment when you get emotional over the sheer awesome of some people.all of the fucking awards man
Mother of god.
to the owner of this home: i love you.
omg that was truly awesome!!
TOO AWESOME TO NOT REBLOG
BLESSSSS THESE PEOPLE
i hope they play this at my job on halloween lmao. and omfgggg i wish i lived next to them lmao
These are the kind of people that make holidays enjoyable. (:
If I lived here, I’d be on acid ALL THE TIME.
(Source: grimapparitions)
I don’t have a camera right now but here is a modified version of costume from last year via webcam. Luckily I just lost a bunch of weight so that corset looks sick.
I heard a story on the radio this morning about two cats that grew up together. One of them died of natural causes and the other was very upset about it. The story goes that the second cat sat in the middle of a busy highway until it was struck by a car and died. Supposedly its a first hand story. But I do think animals experience loss if not grief. My Labrador lost all his puppy behavior after our old golden retriever had died. The sad part is that he was locked in a shed with her all day until we discovered that she had died later that night. (We kept them in the shed to keep them out of the bad weather). So he had to realize something was up since she wasn’t moving anymore. I’m the one that found her and the Labrador was just laying beside her, not jumping around excitedly like his normal routine. This was before my mood could have affected him. I can dig it.The detailed memory of those we lose was thought to be a uniquely human trait, but animals clearly react to loss in a special way. NPR takes a look at whether animals “grieve” …
Two cats, Siamese sisters named Willa and Carson, lived for 14 years with my friends. The sisters’ bond was visibly close; they ate, slept and relaxed together, sun-basking or dozing in favored spots in the house. As she aged, Carson developed some health problems. One day, she urgently needed the vet, who decided to keep her overnight in an incubator for warmth. Carson died in her sleep that night.
At first, Willa acted mildly upset, as she had before when separated for brief periods when one of the pair had visited the vet. Within two or three days, however, matters changed. Willa began to emit sounds that are, my friends say, best compared to Irish keening for the dead. These were outright, otherworldly wails, accompanied by constant searching behavior for the lost Carson.
First learning of Willa’s behavior, I kept the specter of anthropomorphism firmly in mind. The attribution of grief to animals (especially non-apes, non-elephants and non-cetaceans) is controversial because to feel grief requires a memory of the individual who’s missed. Some evolutionary theorists insist that a capacity for sustained remembering is a uniquely human trait. So I asked myself: Could Willa’s mood have been not true grief but instead a sort of felt contagion, picked up from her human caretakers’ own sadness at losing their cat? Or could Willa’s upset primarily have been caused by the change in her own daily routine?
(Source: jtotheizzoe)
My step dad used to force me to watch this movie telling me I’d learn something. I actually really liked it but it was kind of inappropriate for my age.
(Source: dryheave)









