The Story of a Bipolar Bear.

Be patient and tough, someday this pain will be useful to you.

—Ovid (via j-t-m)

(via eiliyahann)

yourefucking-beautiful:

if I get 200 reblogs on this, I’ll tell my parents about my bipolar depression, my anxiety, and my self harm. i’ll try to get help. I know it sounds like a cry for attention, but i just need support, I feel so alone.

You have my support and many others.

I know how hard it is to tell your parents about your bipolar disoder.

You got this.

(Source: sh--pcat)

I’ve missed more than 9000 shots in my career. I’ve lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I’ve been trusted to take the game winning shot and missed. I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.

—Michael Jordan (via missmairaisabel)

(via der-traurige-junge)

I made a post a long time ago about the word hope and believe.

I’m the person who looks up meaning of common words that everyone knows and tries to understand the deeper meaning of the word besides the common meaning we all know of.

Hope is defined as “feeling of expectations”

Believe is defined as accepting that the event will occur. Confident that it will come true.

“I hope I get better”

“I believe I will get better”

Two different statements, two different meanings.

You shouldn’t hope things get better, you should believe they will.

Don’t fall for expectations.

Don’t expect things will get better.

What if your expectations don’t measure up?

Start having full trust in your goal.

Have full faith in your dreams.

Don’t hope.

Believe.

Setting goals is the first step in turning the invisible into visible.

Anthony Robbins