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I believe humans have lived enough to have written every sort of fiction that could be imagined. There are no new stories, unconventional plots nor does exist the myth of unexpected twists. By the time your half through a book , you’d know the outcome ,but you would still go through reading it . Reason , and I am no psychologist, but no one is satisfied with their life. we need fiction to compensate for the tidy pace of our lives. A book will make you experience feeling normally you would not feel: absolute certainty of what is right , unconditional love and the liberating feeling of the heroine lashing out at the peek of suspense -which you would never do ,out of fear of consequences and if you were stupid enough to do so , it wouldn’t be as miraculous nor as fluently -. What we learn from fiction may provide few hours of the notion that the universe does make sense .No bad deed goes unpunished, no matter how many times the heroin thinks his antagonist has gotten away. Every single event is linked somehow to a greater event you need only to patient. Well that’s not how real life is, at least not mine.
This is Hideaki Akaiwa. When the Tsunami hit his home town of Ishinomaki, Hideaki was at work. Realising his wife was trapped in their home, he ignored the advice of professionals, who told him to wait for the army to arrive to provide search and rescue.
Instead he found some scuba gear, jumped in the raging torrent - dodging cars, houses and other debris being dragged around by the powerful current, any of which could have killed him instantly - and navigated the now submerged streets in pitch dark, freezing water until he found his house. Swimming inside, he discovered his wife alive on the upper level with only a small amount of breathing room, and sharing his respirator, pulled her out to safety.
If he had waited for the army, his wife of 20 years would be dead.
Oh, and if that’s not enough badassery for one lifetime, Hideaki realised his mother was also unaccounted for, so jumped back in the water and managed to save her life also. Since then Hideaki enters the water everyday on a one man search and rescue mission, saving countless lives and proving that two natural disasters in a single day - and insurmountable odds - can’t stand in the way of love. This man is my hero.
(via thecrazyjogger)
(via splendidfull)
EVERY DAMN DAY.
(Source: thunderstruckredemption, via razan)
I KNOW ITS MEAN , that women must have been out of her mind scared during the robbery . but the remix is soo catchy and hilarious , i cant help laughing my head off