Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
CRAZY, STUPID, LOVE (2011) dir. Glenn Ficarra, John Requa
1K notes
·
View notes
Video
youtube
Wanted to do something special for the last song on Nurture, so here it is in a form of a lyric comic. I think the music cuts off if you’re on dashboard if you scroll too much, so if that happens just view it on my blog or pop the actual video from YouTube.
66 notes
·
View notes
Photo
You’re missing the point– You’re so thick Robbins, you’re always just to the left of the point. 9x24 || 11x14
430 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Maternal-fetal surgeons look professional yet feminine at work.
466 notes
·
View notes
Photo
grey’s anatomy meme: nine episodes
¬Staring at the End | The Distance⌐
I never placed much value in wondering about an afterlife. My concern was always this life. What would I do with it? How would I make my mark? I wanted to break new ground. I wanted to leave a legacy. I wanted my life, my brain, my existence to mean something. The thing I never really thought about though, the thing I never really wrapped my brain around until now was, in order to be remembered, in order to leave something significant behind, you have to leave.
The key, though, win or lose, is to never fail. And the only way to fail is not to fight. So you fight until you can’t fight anymore. Hold up your head and enter the arena and face the enemy. Fight until you can’t fight anymore. Never let go. Never give up. Never run. Never surrender. Fight the good fight. You fight. Even when it seems inevitable that you’re about to go down swinging. Why do we even try when the barriers are so high and the odds are so low? Why don’t we just pack it in and go home? It would be so, so much easier. It’s because in the end, there’s no glory in easy. No one remembers easy. They remember the blood and the bones and the long, agonizing fight to the top. And that is how you become legendary.
66 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Truly one of the best endings to a characters plot line ver
671 notes
·
View notes
Text
“I don’t like questions without any answers. Like, where do we go when we die? I mean, I know what happens physiologically speaking, but beyond that, what really happens? Anything? That’s what you start asking yourself when you live on a clock. All these questions without any answers. They drive you nuts. That’s why I like what I do. Fixing babies. Birthing babies. No ambiguity there. No questions, just answers. Clear, precise, obvious answers. And life, beautiful, new life. Hope for the future. God, I miss that.”
—
Dr. Nicole Herman
Season 11, Episode 13 – Staring at the End

15 notes
·
View notes