viα morbidism: Katia chausheva
The taste of silhouette could pry on naivety…
(via d-i-a-b-o-l-i-q-u-e-s)
Uma Thurman, timeless styling.
(Source: andiezone, via d-i-a-b-o-l-i-q-u-e-s)
You see your reflection that will take you to clarity.
(via d-i-a-b-o-l-i-q-u-e-s)
Carry on thinking that tomorrow is the greatest.
(Source: obsolence, via d-i-a-b-o-l-i-q-u-e-s)
Smart thy physicality of your mind caving in.
Heidi Mount by David Slijper for Elle UK December 2012
(via d-i-a-b-o-l-i-q-u-e-s)
I had been banging my head on the wall for not being in Italia last October.
You really have to act upon “something’s gotta give” statement in life.
It is giving me a sense of belongingness that I am missing so much. I can’t go on not thinking that I missed my time there again. The limits are in. The possibilities are undone.
There are more to what it is being read here. There will be decisions to be made soon in which can determine what I can do next— if I can be where I should be right now.
You cannot give up where you should belong.
A colleague or moreover, a subordinate who calls you “dear”, “sweetie”, “hun”… and so on.
I like terms of endearment… but not so much in the workplace, unless it’s a personal conversation from a colleague who happens to be your friend too… during coffee break.
It looks condescending and unprofessional. We’re not Mad Men.
Professional emails with smilies in them.
It cheapens the professional conversation; undermines the power of communication and respect toward a colleague/s.
It gives a friendly tone, yes, but it just doesn’t fit professionally.
Childish.