Photoset reblogged from Happy Hollow with 55,894 notes
I would’ve organized the systems in the order they were released.
Source: albotas
Photo reblogged from The World Is Nothing Compared To You. with 373 notes
Take time to think- it is the source of power.
Take time to play- it is the source of perpetual youth.
Take time to read- it is the fountain of wisdom.
Take time to pray- it is the greatest power on Earth.
Take time to love and be loved- it is a God-given privilege.
Take time to be friendly- it is the road to happiness.
Take time to laugh- it is the music of the soul.
Take time to give- it is too short a day to be selfish.
Take time to work- it is the price of success.
-The Hindu Prayer Book
Source: weheartit.com
Photoset reblogged from ADXN | el vacio de mi mente with 6,977 notes
The Five Stages of Grief:
Clock Town is denial. No one in the city wants to admit the moon is going to fall on them.
The Swamp is anger. The Deku Scrubs are rushing to kill a monkey they blame all their problems on, yet he had nothing to do with any of them.
The Mountain is bargaining. The Gorons, freezing and starving, perpetually keep their hope that their dead hero will come back and save them.
The Bay is depression. The Zoras lost their guitarist, and continuously mourn over him.
The Valley is acceptance. With no more transformation masks and virtually everyone in the zone already dead, the only thing Link has left to conquer is himself.
Link can’t really save everyone. Even after introducing the game as a quest to find Navi, he never will, but by the end we can accept that. One of the game’s opening lines mentions that he is searching for a lost friend, and one of Tatl’s last lines at the end of the game is “Well, both of us have gotten what we were after…”
Source: radiohea-d
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