It’s Monday did you take your medicine ?
It’s Tuesday did you take your medicine ?
It’s Wednesday did you take your medicine ?
It’s Thursday did you take your medicine ?
It’s Friday did you take your medicine ?
It’s Saturday did you take your medicine ?
It’s Sunday did you take your medicine ?
(via maydaymadier)
Trauma often messes with one’s ability to say “no”.
You either consciously or subconsciously think, “I don’t want to hurt this person’s feelings” or “If I say no, then they’ll hurt me” or “It won’t really be that bad” or “I can handle this” or “I need to do this to prove myself” or “I deserve this”, or you forget that “no” is even an option.
It’s still not your fault if you didn’t say “no”, even if you think maybe you could have. It’s still not your fault. You didn’t deserve what happened to you and you didn’t bring it upon yourself. It was never your fault.
I just cried when I read this. Thank you.
(via maydaymadier)
I made a fool of myself today and I will make a fool of myself tomorrow. Good night
(via krunkneck)
Kim Possible was like I’m an extremely adept martial arts fighter and world hero and this is my sidekick Ron who comes along because he’s my best friend and I like him
(via maydaymadier)
*hears thunder* thor if thats u bitch i love u
This is Zeus erasure
Zeus deserves to be erased
(via emsexcite)
one of the most important things i’ve learned in therapy is that when you’ve experienced prolonged trauma in your childhood, pleasure feels uncomfortable. like, not that you don’t feel it, but that when you do feel it there’s an impulse to make it stop, because it’s extremely unfamiliar. and pleasure can mean many things, as simple as feeling cozy, and as complex as feeling loved. the neural pathways for feeling good have not had a chance to develop, and the neural pathways for feeling bad are quite practiced. feeling good, too, takes conscious practice.
(via maydaymadier)







