sandra. lulu!. 16. sophomore. single. church. friends. god. love.

I like to blogg:love, music, clothes, shit that makes me happy, a ton of music, food, anything i basically deem interesting, things i like, my problems, my great moments, celebrities, makeup, and a ton of stuff from my dream closet, all of my amazing friends, hardships, makeups, breakuppps! oh and my own venting. :)

May 9th
May 9th oh my gahd hi.
May 9th projectcan:

Rubik’s Food
May 9th
May 9th
May 8th
May 8th
May 8th
May 8th
May 8th chocolatesdesire:

chanel shoes <3
May 8th
May 8th
May 8th
April 17th
April 17th kahikolove:

Haiku Stairs - Kane’ohe, O’ahu
Kane’ohe literally means “bamboo husband” (according to one account, a woman compared her husband’s cruelty to the cutting edge of a bamhoo knife).
“Kane’ohe Bay is surrounded by some of the most well-watered lands in Hawai’i and some of the most beautiful mountains in the world: the Ko’olau Range ­peaks, two to three thousand feet high, joined by walls of sheer green cliffs. Ka Moa’e (the ENE trade winds) sweeps warm moist air into the mountains and clouds form along the summit. Rainwater has cut steep gullies into the cliffs giving them their distinctive wrinkled appearance. When it rains, dozens of thin silvery waterfalls run down the vertical gullies; half obscured by rain and mist, the waterfalls seem to pour directly from the clouds. The names of ahupua’a around the bay celebrate the life-giving water that collects in the mountains and flows through the rolling hills and flatlands into the Bay: Waiakane (“Water of Kane”), Waiahole (“Water [of the] ahole fish”), Waihe’e (“Slippery water,” or “Water [of the] octopus”). Water was so highly prized in ancient Hawai’i, it was synonymous with wealth and life. Such “Wai-lands” were coveted by chiefs and priests.”
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