The day you wake up & realize I’m the girl for you , I’ll be waking up next to the guy that already knew (;
That awkward moment when you make a statement that pisses the person you’re with me…but its so damm funny you cant help it.
World AIDS Day is December 1st of every year. I am a few days behind.
The first reports of (what later became known as) AIDS was reported in the U.S. in 1981. At this point in time, someone in America is infected with HIV every 9 1/2 minutes. It is estimated that over 1 million people are currently living with AIDS in the U.S., and 1 in 5 of those people do not even know it yet.
Globally, about 33.4 million people are currently living with AIDS. Since the first reports of AIDS in 1981, more than 25 million people have died worldwide of AIDS.
97% of AIDS victims live in low and middle-income countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa.
67+% live in sub-Saharan Africa.
As of 2008: An estimated 4.7 million people who live in Asia were living with HIV, including 350,000 people who became newly infected. An estimated 2 million people were living with AIDS in Latin America. About 1.5 million people were living with AIDS in Eastern Europe & Central Asia.
Most people who have the uncurable infection do not have access to prevention, care, or treatment. Many countries that are hit the hardest by HIV also suffer from other infectious diseases, food insecurity, and other serious problems.
There is still HOPE. Prevention is slowly decreasing the rate of infection. More people are recieving treatment.
Many people know that AIDS is a very serious disease, though many people do not think that themselves or anyone they care about will be infected. AIDS is everywhere. The fight for AIDS needs as much support as possible. We need to find a cure. We need to raise awareness. I got all of this information from www.aids.gov and I suggest you check out all of the statistics! And be careful, remember AIDS is everywhere.
(Source: fuckyeahsillycats)
(Source: gabbsta)
(Source: weheartit.com)
This picture is from an article called “The Rescuing Hug”. The article details the first week of life of a set of twins. Each were in their respective incubators and one was not expected to live. A hospital nurse fought against the hospital rules and placed the babies in one incubator. When they were placed together, the healthier of the two, threw an arm over her sister in an endearing embrace. The smaller baby’s heart stabilized and temperature rose to normal.
(Source: im-perfect4lyfe)

