The Possimpible

25. Reproductive health nurse. Feminist. Minnesooootan. Cupcakes. Sarcasm. Bluegrass. Fat acceptance. HIMYM. Weezer.
Who I Follow

Beautiful night for a ballgame. #twins (at Target Field)

jacklullaby:

jacklullaby:

unfollower:

men should take advantage of the lack of dress code rules set for guys and wear mini skirts and tank tops to school every day

OH MY GOD LAST YEAR THE DUDES ON MY CLASS HAVE DONE IT

AND THEY GOT ALL CALLED IN THE PRINCIPAL’S ROOM

BUT THEY…

(via jamba-jew)

So proud!!

thelovelycurves:

crowcrow:

WISHBONE!!!!!!!

WAHHH!!!

diamondpistols:

Or for Size 18s…

74 plays
The Replacements,
Tim [Expanded Edition]

stuffaboutminneapolis:

Here Comes A Regular - The Replacements

It is currently raining, we are under a winter storm warning on May 1, so it seems like a perfect day to play Paul Westerberg’s melancholy ode to the CC Club “Here Comes A Regular”, which is being sold today.

Stop comparing where you’re at with where everyone else is. It doesn’t move you farther ahead, improve your situation, or help you find peace. It just feeds your shame, fuels your feelings of inadequacy, and ultimately, it keeps you stuck. The reality is that there is no one correct path in life. Everyone has their own unique journey. A path that’s right for someone else won’t necessarily be a path that’s right for you. And that’s okay. Your journey isn’t right or wrong, or good or bad. It’s just different. Your life isn’t meant to look like anyone else’s because you aren’t like anyone else. You’re a person all your own with a unique set of goals, obstacles, dreams, and needs. So stop comparing, and start living. You may not have ended up where you intended to go. But trust, for once, that you have ended up where you needed to be. Trust that you are in the right place at the right time. Trust that your life is enough. Trust that you are enough.
Daniell Koepke (via touchpulp)

(via thebabayaga)

stuffaboutminneapolis:

The CC Club: An oral history

The CC Club has long been a drinkers’ haven in south Minneapolis, a dim intersection of different scenes and people from across the city. Few establishments in the Twin Cities have seen more glasses emptied, cigarettes smoked, or strangers find each other.

But the neighborhood is changing. In a part of the city once defined by its independence, expensive condos crowd the streets and corporate chains have pushed out local businesses. Earlier this year, the owners of neighboring restaurant French Meadow bought the CC, and will officially take ownership on May 1. The new managers say they plan to keep the bar the same, but some CC regulars are skeptical — perhaps because the French Meadow is an organic bistro, and the CC is a seedy dive bar. Or maybe it just seems inevitable that a place like the CC Club can’t last forever.

click pic for great article by City Pages

There’s a good chance you can find me here on my weekends off. If French Meadow changes it, I’m going to be so sad.

I did this when I was in third grade for Girl Scouts. So awesome. I don’t think I slept at all.

(via lie-forfun)