The T Life

im the Toribear, also known as, tori, tbear, t money, t dragon...
and now torimonkee =D
im an artist =D
I love having fun =]
i truely trust few people:p
rarely lie unless its to leave my house ;]
love partying and just hanging out with friendlies
huggling, snuggling, and chilling are the best
i love my ashaboo the mostest :]
and i have an amazing man in my lifeezzz :] ..actually THE most amazing man :] my CHRIS! :] hehe mwah! i love you =D
i am NOOWW out of high school =Dand on to Ripon college :] YAY!!

I pretty much
love
life
<3

January 27, 2012 9:35 pm
wickedclothes:

dayofthebaphomets:


Meet Omari. Two days ago he returned from the hospital after being hacked in the face by a machete defending an orphanage of 35 children by himself. 

    This man dedicates his life to take care of 35 orphaned children from the ages of 2-17 in Kenya. A couple of days ago a group of thugs raided the orphanage to pilage anything they could find, after beating and slashing Omari’s face for defending the children and himself from a previous attempted attack.
     The only thing the children are living off of right now are things growing from their small garden, and eggs from a couple of chickens in their coup. Reddit looked to aim to raise $2,000 a couple of hours ago to help build a concrete wall around the orphanage with a 3 layered barbed-wire coil set on top. 
     In 3 hours, over $11,000 has been donated - and all the extra money is going to feeding them, giving them an education, keeping these children (and many more) safe, and building a new facility. 
     Please feel free to donate here:
http://www.longonoteducation.org/
     Remember, anything counts!! Lets see what we can do in 24 hours! :))

Up-to-date progress can be tracked: here.

wickedclothes:

dayofthebaphomets:

Meet Omari. Two days ago he returned from the hospital after being hacked in the face by a machete defending an orphanage of 35 children by himself. 

    This man dedicates his life to take care of 35 orphaned children from the ages of 2-17 in Kenya. A couple of days ago a group of thugs raided the orphanage to pilage anything they could find, after beating and slashing Omari’s face for defending the children and himself from a previous attempted attack.

     The only thing the children are living off of right now are things growing from their small garden, and eggs from a couple of chickens in their coup. Reddit looked to aim to raise $2,000 a couple of hours ago to help build a concrete wall around the orphanage with a 3 layered barbed-wire coil set on top. 

     In 3 hours, over $11,000 has been donated - and all the extra money is going to feeding them, giving them an education, keeping these children (and many more) safe, and building a new facility. 

     Please feel free to donate here:

http://www.longonoteducation.org/

     Remember, anything counts!! Lets see what we can do in 24 hours! :))

Up-to-date progress can be tracked: here.

(Source: )

January 9, 2012 12:08 pm
snowce:

Nobuyoshi Araki, Intimacy
Nobuyoshi Araki published “Sentimental Journey”, a book of pictures of his wife taken during their honeymoon. When she died a few years later, the Japanese photographer thought that those pictures were the most beautiful present he could ever had.

snowce:

Nobuyoshi Araki, Intimacy

Nobuyoshi Araki published “Sentimental Journey”, a book of pictures of his wife taken during their honeymoon. When she died a few years later, the Japanese photographer thought that those pictures were the most beautiful present he could ever had.

(Source: vivuc, via keeperofthelostandfound)

January 3, 2012 9:27 pm
fringeconception:

3/366
“Fiery Breath” - Caught my girlfriend swatting up on dragon lore this evening and I’ve always liked a sneaky read over the shoulder. I’m probably really annoying. Anyway, she’s awesome. Follow her on twitter: @autumnkennedy

fringeconception:

3/366

“Fiery Breath” - Caught my girlfriend swatting up on dragon lore this evening and I’ve always liked a sneaky read over the shoulder. I’m probably really annoying. Anyway, she’s awesome. Follow her on twitter: @autumnkennedy

August 12, 2011 11:50 am
maybeghosts:

dowelikeit:

gacarmy:

Photo of an alleged demon at the site of an accident.

It looks more like a Hipster with sideburns, a handle bar mustache and wearing Ben Franklin bifocal glasses. But I guess some people do consider Hipsters to be demons.

hahaha this had to be re(re)blogged for that caption alone.

maybeghosts:

dowelikeit:

gacarmy:

Photo of an alleged demon at the site of an accident.

It looks more like a Hipster with sideburns, a handle bar mustache and wearing Ben Franklin bifocal glasses. But I guess some people do consider Hipsters to be demons.

hahaha this had to be re(re)blogged for that caption alone.

(via thesiska)

August 11, 2011 4:36 pm
life:

“Jackson Pollock: Is he the greatest living painter in the United States?” So asked the headline of the famous August 8, 1949, LIFE article that made Pollock’s reputation — and that he spent much of the rest of his life trying to live up to.
By giving birth to the abstract expressionist movement and making America the center of the art avant-garde, Pollock would prove the headline correct. But he soon abandoned the drip method that had made him famous, and spent the last few years of his life trying less successful styles and battling demons of depression and alcoholism.
As this week marks the 55th anniversary of his death (in a single-car crash, on August 11, 1956, at age 44), LIFE.com presents rare and unseen outtakes from LIFE photographer Martha Nelson’s shoot with Pollock, images that offer a more complete portrait of the artist’s home life in the Hamptons (with wife and fellow painter Lee Krasner) and the singular working method that made him an art-world hero.

life:

“Jackson Pollock: Is he the greatest living painter in the United States?” So asked the headline of the famous August 8, 1949, LIFE article that made Pollock’s reputation — and that he spent much of the rest of his life trying to live up to.

By giving birth to the abstract expressionist movement and making America the center of the art avant-garde, Pollock would prove the headline correct. But he soon abandoned the drip method that had made him famous, and spent the last few years of his life trying less successful styles and battling demons of depression and alcoholism.

As this week marks the 55th anniversary of his death (in a single-car crash, on August 11, 1956, at age 44), LIFE.com presents rare and unseen outtakes from LIFE photographer Martha Nelson’s shoot with Pollock, images that offer a more complete portrait of the artist’s home life in the Hamptons (with wife and fellow painter Lee Krasner) and the singular working method that made him an art-world hero.

(via thesiska)