My boyfriend of over 2 years sent me a game over skype. He said he wants to try and make Pokemon games since I play them so much. I opened it up and was super excited.
It seemed really well done and was super ready to start on my adventure!
He left a lot of cute notes and tips around town.
He remembered my favorite Kanto starter.<3
I was surprised it ran pretty well. I went on my journey and leveled up my Pokemon!
He showed me support and encouragement through a ton of NPC dialogue.
and then the gf told the mom “hey i want to propose to your daughter when we visit yall next month!” and the mom was like “oh f*** what am i supposed to do now” and ended up carefully strategizing so her daughter and her daughter’s gf would propose at the same time and neither of them knew it and the video is so goddamn cute
Hey everyone! I love you ❤ so I made you some valentines! Click here to get your free, downloadable Liz Climo Valentines! Print out as many as you’d like, cut them out, give them to friends, keep them for yourself, make a little house out of them.. whatever floats your love boat!(Note - there are two files, front and back, and are meant to be double-sided. For best results, print on card stock - I did that at my local print shop, and they turned out great!) ❤ HAPPY VALENTINE’S DAY
Apache helicopters — the kind of aerial weaponry immortalized in Hollywood tough-guy films such as “Rambo” and “Black Hawk Down” — are among the Army’s most revered killing machines, and those who fly them across enemy skies “have an attack mentality,” said Capt. Daniel Hall, a 30-year-old Apache helicopter pilot based at Fort Bliss, in Texas.
“That attack mind-set is shared by the entire Apache community,” Captain Hall said. “It’s a real macho thing.”
As he spoke, Captain Hall was flanked by Capt. Vincent Franchino, a 26-year-old fellow Apache pilot who is also stationed at Fort Bliss, where they are both a part of another community: the group of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender soldiers who serve there.
“It’s been a bit of a bumpy road for us,” said Captain Franchino, who married Captain Hall on Jan. 13 in the Cadet Chapel at the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., where they are believed to be the first active-duty, same-sex couple to exchange vows at the legendary Army post.
Howard Foster finally married his high
school sweetheart, Myra Clark, 45 years
after breaking up with her. Though he
was madly in love, he left her after they
went to college because he didn’t want
their relationship subjecting her to the
racism he dealt with every day. In 2013,
they reconnected, it was like they had
never been apart, and now they’re a
happily-married couple that falls asleep
holding hands every night. SourceSource 2Source 3