Training with the pretty boy!! <3
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Oh no….how sad and alone he must have been. R.I.P. #Robin #Williams
For sure one of my favorite actors of all times 😥 💖#dressage #dressagequeen #dressur #dressagegirl #turnier #equine #equestrian #horse #pferd #horseforsale #hwfarm #hanoverian #photooftheday #horseshow #fei #reitsport #champion #worldwide #luxury #The_luxury_life #horsesofinstagram #dressagerider #girl #pony #beautiful #showhorse
Selected top quality horses for sale at www.HWfarm.com 💕
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The reason I don’t smile when I’m riding is because I’m trying to remember where the fuck I’m going.
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pats for the pon pon
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Almost a thousand people in West Africa die from ebola and nobody bats an eyelash, yet 2 white people in the US contract it and miraculously a cure is released and given to them because they’re an “extreme circumstance.” Satire is dead and real life is a…
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Source For more posts like this, follow Ultrafacts
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Juan Manuel Muñoz & Fuego <3
Perfection
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Tampons were packed with their strings connecting them, like a strip of sausages, so they wouldn’t float away. Engineers asked Ride, “Is 100 the right number?” She would be in space for a week. “That would not be the right number,” she told them. At every turn, her difference was made clear to her. When it was announced Ride had been named to a space flight mission, her shuttle commander, Bob Crippen, who became a lifelong friend and colleague, introduced her as “undoubtedly the prettiest member of the crew.” At another press event, a reporter asked Ride how she would react to a problem on the shuttle: “Do you weep?”
Astronaut Sally Ride and the Burden of Being “The First” (via yahighway)
Men don’t appreciate the amount of self-control women have to exercise in order not to spend their entire lives facepalming.
(via vulvanity)
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On the morning of September 4, 1957, fifteen-year-old Dorothy Counts set out on a harrowing path toward Harding High, where-as the first African American to attend the all-white school – she was greeted by a jeering swarm of boys who spat, threw trash, and yelled epithets at her as she entered the building.
Charlotte Observer photographer Don Sturkey captured the ugly incident on film, and in the days that followed, the searing image appeared not just in the local paper but in newspapers around the world.
People everywhere were transfixed by the girl in the photograph who stood tall, her five-foot-ten-inch frame towering nobly above the mob that trailed her. There, in black and white, was evidence of the brutality of racism, a sinister force that had led children to torment another child while adults stood by. While the images display a lot of evils: prejudice, ignorance, racism, sexism, inequality, it also captures true strength, determination, courage and inspiration.
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