HELP ME???? i’ve found this for the first time and am losing my entire mind
Is this what happiness looks like?
,,Izvini devojko, mogu li te pitati nešto?"
,,Naravno, recite?"
,,Ne zameri, ali posmatram te kako sediš tu i pišeš, mogu li znati šta to?"
Baka mi se nasmeši.
,,Samo neke svoje misli i izmišljene priče."
,,Da li bi htela da čuješ moju? Možda je zapišeš i sačuvaš od zaborava."
,,Rođena sam u zimu '49, kao peto dete i prva devojčica. Valjda su me zato previše pazili, šta znam..imala sam lepo detinjstvo, ali se završilo previše brzo. Roditelji su mi poginuli kada sam imala 16 i ostala sam sa braćom kojima se ukazala prilika da me udaju za nekog bogataša iz susednog mesta. On je bio dosta stariji od mene, ali to tad nije bilo važno. Sa 17 sam mu rodila prvog sina, sa 18 drugog. Nije hteo žensko dete i valjda sam imala sreće..bio je dobar čovek, ali mnogo nezgodan kad popije. Ako me pitaš jesam li ga volela..poštovala sam ga. Ipak je bio otac moje dece. A ljubav, ja sam volela samo jednog čoveka u životu i voleću ga do groba. Voleo je i on mene, ali nije nam se dalo..takvo je vreme bilo. On je bio sirot, braća nisu htela ni da čuju. A svako ga veče i dalje sanjam onako kako ga pamtim, je l' mi veruješ? Takva ljubav ne umire..veče pred moju svadbu, iskrala sam se iz kuće da ga vidim još jednom. Bila sam mu spremna reći vodi me sa sobom, ali on ni da čuje! Kaže čeka te dobar život, ja to nemam da ti ponudim, ne možemo od ljubavi živeti. A ja danas tvrdim da smo mogli, dan jedan nije prošao a da ja na njega nisam pomislila. Na dan venčanja sam ga videla ispred crkve kako plače..ispratio me je drugom čoveku i to mu jedino nisam oprostila. Kada sam se preselila, nisam ga videla godinama. A onda jedno jutro na pijaci, ma nisam ga ni ugledala, a već sam ga osetila, ja ti to ne mogu opisati. Vodio je za ruku malu devojčicu, a meni je srce eto prepuklo! Nismo se pozdravili, samo smo se gledali dugo, valjda nam reči ne bi bile dovoljne. Tad sam ga videla poslednji put...čula sam priče od ljudi da je tokom rata otišao za Nemačku, a posle ništa ne znam. Ali znam da me i dalje voli, osećam to. Valjda je imao lepši život od mog, nadam se, eto.."
D.Đ
support me on ko-fi!
as a barca and bvb fan these 1st halves are going great tonight 🥲🥲🥲
All of Us Are Dead + Reductress headlines - Part 1
This might be the best celebration I've seen
Someone hold me
Wishing him the best retirement
Happy International Women’s Day! Here’s a list of TED-Ed Lessons to watch as you celebrate all of the world’s women, past and present.
The genius of Marie Curie: Marie Skłodowska Curie’s revolutionary research laid the groundwork for our understanding of physics and chemistry, blazing trails in oncology, technology, medicine, and nuclear physics, to name a few. But what did she actually do? Shohini Ghose expounds on some of Marie Skłodowska Curie’s most revolutionary discoveries.
The contributions of female explorers: During the Victorian Age, women were unlikely to become great explorers, but a few intelligent, gritty and brave women made major contributions to the study of previously little-understood territory. Courtney Stephens examines three women – Marianne North, Mary Kingsley and Alexandra David-Néel – who wouldn’t take no for an answer (and shows why we should be grateful that they didn’t).
Equality, sports and Title IX: In 1972, U.S. Congress passed Title IX, a law which prohibited discrimination against women in schools, colleges, and universities — including school-sponsored sports. Before this law, female athletes were few and far between, and funding was even scarcer. Erin Buzuvis and Kristine Newhall explore the significance and complexity of Title IX.
The true story of Sacajawea: In the early 19th century, a young Agaidika teenager named Sacajawea was enlisted by explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to aid her husband Toussaint Charbonneau as a guide to the Western United States. Karen Mensing debunks some of the myths that surround the familiar image of the heroic woman with a baby strapped to her back and a vast knowledge of the American wilderness.
Why should you read Virginia Woolf?: How best can we understand the internal experience of alienation? In both her essays and her fiction, Virginia Woolf shapes the slippery nature of subjective experience into words, while her characters frequently lead inner lives that are deeply at odds with their external existence. Iseult Gillespie helps make sense of these disparities to prepare you for the next time you read Virgina Woolf.
The pharaoh that wouldn’t be forgotten: Hatshepsut was a female pharaoh during the New Kingdom in Egypt. Twenty years after her death, somebody smashed her statues, took a chisel and attempted to erase the pharaoh’s name and image from history. But who did it? And why? Kate Green investigates Hatshepsut’s history for clues to this ancient puzzle.
Back in the day, movies started with a cartoon. Learn the secrets of the Red Planet in these animated 60 second chunks.
Watch two galaxies collide billions of years from now in this high-definition visualization.
Wait for the dark of the waning Moon next weekend to take in this 4K tour of our constant celestial companion.
Watch graceful dances in the Sun’s atmosphere in this series of videos created by our 24/7 Sun-sentinel, the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO).
Crank up the volume and learn about NASA science for this short video about some of our science missions, featuring a track by Fall Out Boy.
Follow an asteroid from its humble origins to its upcoming encounter with our spacecraft in this stunning visualization.
Join Apollo mission pilots as they fly—and even crash—during daring practice runs for landing on the Moon.
Join the crew of Apollo 8 as they become the first human beings to see the Earth rise over the surface of the Moon.
Watch a musical, whimsical recreation of the 2005 Huygens probe descent to Titan, Saturn’s giant moon.
Our Goddard Scientific Visualization Studio provides a steady stream of fresh videos for your summer viewing pleasure. Come back often and enjoy.
Read the full version of this article on the web HERE.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
psychology student • football fan • bookworm • wannabe artist/photographer/writer • animal lover • and a bunch of other things. • welcome. 🌱
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