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A Woman Left Her Husband Of 60 Years An Adorable Love Note To Find After She Died

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She hid it in his checkbook to remind him they’ll meet again someday.


Jimmy and Billie Breland were married in 1954 and remained very much in love during their 60 years together.


Jimmy and Billie Breland were married in 1954 and remained very much in love during their 60 years together.


Cliff Sims, the couple's grandson, wrote on Yellow Hammer News that she was a public school teacher and he was a Baptist student minister, and they were known in their community for their kindness and generosity.


Courtesy Cliff Sims / Via yellowhammernews.com


In late 2014, Billie's health began failing but Jimmy remained by her side in the hospital until she died this month at the age of 83.


In late 2014, Billie's health began failing but Jimmy remained by her side in the hospital until she died this month at the age of 83.


Courtesy Cliff Sims / Via yellowhammernews.com


"Every photo on the walls of their home is meticulously documented," Sims said. "She wrote down funny things that happened or quotes she wanted to remember, all in the perfect cursive handwriting that could only belong to a school teacher."


And at some point before she died, she wrote a heartwarming note — this one for Cliff — which the family later found tucked inside her checkbook.


And at some point before she died, she wrote a heartwarming note — this one for Cliff — which the family later found tucked inside her checkbook.


It says, "Please don't cry because I died! Smile because I lived! Know that I'm in a happy place! Know that we will meet again! I'll see you there!"


Courtesy Cliff Sims / Via yellowhammernews.com




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This End-Of-The-World Engagement Shoot Is Completely Badass

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Their love can survive anything.


After Chris Love and Kara Kyser got engaged at Comic Con last fall, they decided to have a little fun with their engagement photos.


After Chris Love and Kara Kyser got engaged at Comic Con last fall, they decided to have a little fun with their engagement photos.


"We're both geeks," Love, 35, told BuzzFeed Life. "Kara is a gamer and cosplayer. I'm more a movie geek, I guess, and dabble in the realm of cosplay too. Between the two of us we hatched the idea of this post-apocalyptic theme — nukes, not zombies — from our mutual interests."


Courtesy Chris Love


The Kansas City couple hired photographer Joshua Hoffine to shoot their photos. Here's how they turned out...


The Kansas City couple hired photographer Joshua Hoffine to shoot their photos. Here's how they turned out...


"The video game series Fallout is one of my favorites," Kyser, 25, told BuzzFeed Life. "I've always been intrigued by the idea of a post-nuclear fallout and the resourcefulness of people surviving it."


Joshua Hoffine / Via hoffinephotography.com


"We thought it would be fun to kind of tell this story where we got married, but then the fallout happened, but it's okay because we managed to survive and are still rocking our wedding day attire," she said.


"We thought it would be fun to kind of tell this story where we got married, but then the fallout happened, but it's okay because we managed to survive and are still rocking our wedding day attire," she said.


Joshua Hoffine / Via hoffinephotography.com


Hoffine photographed them at Missouri's Belvoir Winery, which is the site of an old orphanage and nursing home and is rumored to be haunted.


Hoffine photographed them at Missouri's Belvoir Winery, which is the site of an old orphanage and nursing home and is rumored to be haunted.


As for their attire and props, Love said the tuxedo belonged to his grandfather and the wedding dress came from his sister-in-law. They rented the guns and ammo from a shop called Have Guns, Will Rent, which he said "exists in the shadier part of KC."


Joshua Hoffine / Via hoffinephotography.com




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49 British Swearwords, Defined

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A guide for the bewildered.



Alice Mongkongllite / BuzzFeed


1. Arse, arsehole – n., variants of ass and asshole. Can also be used to mean bothered ("Can't be arsed") or acting the fool ("Stop arsing about!"). Mild.


2. Bastard – n., illegitimate child or mongrel; objectionable fellow, probably one who has won one over on you; unpleasant situation ("I'm having a bastard of a morning!". See also: git, rotter, swine.


3. Bell, bellend – n., head of a penis; fool. (Only write as "bell end" if referring to the end of an actual bell.) Medium strength. See also: dickhead, knobend.


4. Berk – n., idiot. Very mild, yet apparently originated as rhyming slang for "Berkeley hunt".


5. Bint – n., derogatory synonym for woman. Avoid, on the whole.


6. Blimey, blimey O'Reilly, cor blimey, gorblimey – n., expression of astonishment. Thought to derive from the phrase "God blind me!" Terribly mild. See also: crikey.


7. Blighter – n., person or thing to be regarded with contempt/envy. See also cad, rotter, swine. Mild.


8. Bloody – adv., intensifier, popularly used in the phrase "Bloody hell!" Very common, medium strength.


9. Blooming – adj., basically a very mild, somewhat archaic form of "bloody". Use with abandon.


10. Bollocks – n., testicles. Used to mean rubbish or nonsense, as in the exclamation of disbelief "Bollocks!" and the album title Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols; in phrases such as "the dog's bollocks" to mean something definitive and perfect; and, in the related word bollocking, a dressing-down ("I gave the useless fool a bollocking"). Medium strength, and very common.



MTV / okstupidadventures.wordpress.com




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14 Must-Haves For The Perfect Booklovers' Night In

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You can get these by Valentine’s Day if you really book it.


Arrange the Date


Arrange the Date


Library Card Valentine, $7.00


Meow Kapow Shop / Via etsy.com


Get Casually (and Literally) Elegant


Get Casually (and Literally) Elegant


Romeo and Juliet Text Tights, $24.90


Coline Design / Via etsy.com


Spruce Up A Bit


Spruce Up A Bit


Oscar Wilde Perfume, $110.00


Anthropologie / Via anthropologie.com


Offer a Sweet Love Token


Offer a Sweet Love Token


Folded Book Heart, $25.00


LucianaFrigerio / Via etsy.com




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Building The Man I Am

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I lost my mother last year, and this is what I made her.



Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed


My mom bought me a pretty, twilight-blue dresser back in the spring. I'd just moved for the third time in a year and was broke in that desperate, "Should I buy this plunger or wait until next week?" way moving breaks you. She'd come into a little bit of money and asked me if I needed anything.


I was 33, a new man — new to New York and manhood itself, only three years on testosterone and freshly bearded — and I needed a lot, really. My missing inventory belied the loneliness of that winter and the bachelor, sweaty summer since I'd moved from New England, dream-dumb and starting over in a city full of tattooed, bearded men who looked just like me. I didn't own silverware, a table to sit down to — civilized tools of home that said: Here is a man who goes to sleep each night and wakes up knowing he belongs in the world. Aspirational, really — like my pricey Lower East Side studio, like the muscle of my body, like my self-made life.


Still I asked her for the dresser, embarrassed and eying the stacks of clothes on the windowsill. There were factors: a woman I'd just started dating and wanted to impress, who'd inspired in me nesting desire for spicy candles and good towels and a place to put my clothing.


Mom said, "Sure, honey." A few days later she emailed to let me know that the dresser was on its way, and that the assembly looked "complicated." I thanked her and tried not to be insulted by the implication.


It arrived that weekend in three boxes, flattened into dozens of numbered parts and accompanied by hundreds of bits of hardware. I unpacked the whole thing the day of my housewarming party, swore mightily, and promptly shoved the disassembled pieces under my bed.


Days after the party my mom called again. "How's it look?" she asked, and I stared, humiliated, at my growing pile of T-shirts, toppling in a pile onto the floor. I thought of the bones of the dresser, gathering dust beneath me. I thought of my inability to make a real home. "Great," I told her.


"You get it put together OK?"


"Yeah, it was easy to put together, actually," I said.


"Good boy," she said. Later that year, my mom would go to the emergency room of the hospital where she would eventually die, and who knew then that this was her last act of maternal nurturing, one of a million such gestures, cohesive after death but hard to define during life, the many small ways Mom was my mom.


"It's perfect," I said, feeling tender at her. We were speaking to everything we'd never said, of course. Like: I wish I'd could have bought you a million dressers, let's make up for lost time. Like: I'm sorry that this is so messy, thanks for making room for the man I am — a soft heart in a boxing glove. A man who can put it together; a man who knows how to fall apart.



Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed


"What makes a man?" was my question for years and in this beard, these muscles, this echolocation of body language I use to track my movement in space, I found my answer.


Or, I found two: the man I am and the man the world wants me to be. The "man up" versus the man I am.


The tools that helped me bloom like a bristled flower — the spiked needles, the nippled vials of testosterone, the blood tests and bandages — are crude as the violence of my initial arrival, a new man in my thirties, brawny and birthed full-grown into a world I thought I understood but, in fact, I hardly knew at all.


I am a disruptive man, in my ripped T-shirt or pressed white Oxford, with my hand tattoos and smart guy glasses, passing like Clark Kent at work and in barbershops with bros who hassle me kindly about my girlfriend, she who requests, always, that they not cut out my curl.


I know the rules and I break them, at the outdoor bar where I locate in myself a surprisingly passionate, deep knowledge of Sex and the City, which makes me dissonant and strange to the straight woman I'm talking to, but I go on anyway.


My body is a technology, a miracle, a testimony, a call and response.




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Did Your One-Night Stand Lead To True Love?

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Because maybe “the rules” about when it’s OK to sleep with someone are actually bullshit.


When it comes to sex and dating, some people still believe in certain rules.


When it comes to sex and dating, some people still believe in certain rules.


Grand Central Publishing


Women, specifically, are advised not to have sex with men "too early."


Women, specifically, are advised not to have sex with men "too early."


Because if she has sex on the first date, he would then think she has sex with every dude on the first date, which would mean she's Not The Marrying Kind.


Creative Commons / Via Flickr: boston_public_library


Something something something no one wants to buy the cow if you're blah blah blah.


Something something something no one wants to buy the cow if you're blah blah blah.


http://Thinkstock.com


But! The fact is, plenty of people bang it out "too early" and no judgment is cast.


But! The fact is, plenty of people bang it out "too early" and no judgment is cast.


ABC / Via imdb.com




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24 Reasons Harry Potter Is The Worst Character Of The Whole Series

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He actually killed Sirius Black.


It's probably safe to say that everyone knows who Harry Potter is.


It's probably safe to say that everyone knows who Harry Potter is.


Warner Bros. / Via rebloggy.com


But not many people have woken up to the fact that he's actually a huge douchebag.


But not many people have woken up to the fact that he's actually a huge douchebag.


Warner Bros. / Via giphy.com


It's undeniable, really.


It's undeniable, really.


Warner Bros. / Via libereading.com


First off, he's rude.


First off, he's rude.


Warner Bros. / Via hogwartsneverends.blogspot.com.au




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