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HAPPY 27TH BIRTHDAY, JOSHUA WILLIAM DUN

I can try and put into words what you mean to me but I feel as though it’ll be a lot easier said than done. I remember having some of the darkest thoughts you could imagine, literally just wanting to end it all, but hearing your bands lyrics was one of the few things I could count on to keep me here. I remember some of my friends asking how I cope or how I manage to deal with my demons, and all I could really reply with was “music” because there were certain bands or songs that got me through it all. You guys have been an outlet for me when I felt stuck, insecure, alone, lost, incapable, and most importantly, sad. So thank you for everything that you’ve done for me without even really being aware. I appreciate everything that both you, and Tyler have done over the past few years from your interviews, and speeches with the intent to help others, to your music and lyrics. You’re more amazing than you know and I hope you have the most amazing birthday anyone could possibly have, stillstreet

twenty-one-clique:

I CAN’T STOP WATCHING THIS OMFG

(Source: vine.co, via sew-mine)

pilotsinthetrees:

I can’t believe it’s josh dun’s birthday tomorrow! He’s so old!! What is he, 6 now? Aww they grow up so fast!! :))

bestlookingponyinthegluefactory:

Happy 27th Birthday Josh Dun!

wasforcenturies-deactivated2016:

1029 the Buzz: Bonnaroo 2015 interview with Twenty One Pilots

colorsinautumn-archive:

“Fear is such a powerful thing. On this record, I wrote about love for the first time because I found my wife and that was a first for me to write from a mindset of something that’s very positive. If anything, it just became even more dynamic when I dove into the other side of things. I think you can feel—when I listen back to it—how we’re struggling to figure out what the record should sound like and we never quite land on what it should sound like and it just sends. I really like that its a snapshot that you can feel where we’re struggling and where we should write something that’s commercial and can fit into the mainstream and whether it’s in radio or commercials. Now is the first time we’ve ever been aware of what makes a song able to be commercial. Now that we understand that, it can be another mind game when it came to writing the record.”

- Tyler Joseph on writing Blurryface

(via fuckyeahtwentyonepilots)

twentyonepilots:

your boys on the fricking beach.

(via joshuaduns)

(via teaboxes)

(via planers)