fuck yeah eeyore


Be Sad and Succeed →

psychotherapy:

Next time you find yourself in a bad mood, don’t try to put on a happy face—instead tackle a project that has been stymieing you. Melancholy might just help you hit peak performance, reports Joseph Forgas, a professor of psychology at the University of New South Wales, in the journal Australasian Science. Forgas reviewed several of his studies in which researchers induced either a good or bad mood in volunteers. Each study found that people in a bad mood performed tasks better than those in a good mood. Grumpy people paid closer attention to details, showed less gullibility, were less prone to errors of judgment and formed higher-quality, persuasive arguments than their happy counterparts. One study even supports the notion that those who show signs of either fear, anger, disgust or sadness—the four basic negative emotions—achieve stronger eyewitness recall while virtually eliminating the effect of misinformation…

— 2 years ago with 413 notes

Nobody tells me. Nobody keeps me informed. I make it 17 days come Friday since anybody spoke to me.


Eeyore, The house at Pooh Corner by AA Milne

— 2 years ago with 3 notes
"People are always saying that change is a good thing. But all they’re really saying is that something you didn’t want to happen at all…has happened."
Nora Ephron
— 2 years ago with 1 note
NYC - New York in Last Place in Happiness Rating - NYTimes.com →

shaneguiter:

It falls to a New Yorker to ask how it is, if this is such an unhappy place, that more people are living in the city than ever before: an estimated 8.4 million. “That’s a very sensible point,” Professor Oswald said. Many people, he said, do indeed think of states like New York and California as “marvelous places to live in.”

“The problem,” he said, “is that if too many individuals think that way, they move into those states, and the resulting congestion and house prices make it a nonfulfilling prophecy.”

— 2 years ago with 3 notes