At long last,Denmark Twitter is good -- and it's all thanks to puppies.
On Monday, Twitter user @BlairBraverman, a dogsled racer and co-creator of BraverMountain Mushing, posted a massive thread of puppy photos and videos, and WE WERE NOT PREPARED.
SEE ALSO: Give this dog a Dundie for recreating the entire opening intro of 'The Office'Braverman kicked off the thread by sharing a stunning photo of a lil pup with thedefinition of Puppy Dog Eyes, explaining to followers, "As you know, we have a lot of puppies right now."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The next few tweets served to introduce some of these pups. Willow's were described as "bold, chubby, and fearless," while Glory's were said to be more timid... but ALL were cute as hell.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Braverman, on a mission to introduce the two groups, shared a video of Glory's puppies being set free from their little fenced in area. Then, all the puppies met and played together and for a few moments everything in the world seemed MORE THAN FINE.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
So many puppies just running, chasing milk, climbing on top of each other, and DISCOVERING HOW TO USE STAIRS.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Then, the plot thickened and the unthinkable happened: The group of puppies found ANOTHER dog named Flame. In the wise words of Queer Eye's Jonathan Van Ness, "CAN YOU BELIEVE??!"
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
They all played together and the mere sight was strong enough to thaw my ice cold 2018 heart.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Flame wound up acting as a uniting force between the two groups of pups and soon all the dogs were mingling like they were old pals.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The end. (Please check out the full thread to ensure you don't miss one single step of this beautiful journey.)
Want more clever culture writing beamed directly to your inbox? Sign up here for the twice-weekly Click Click Click newsletter. It's fun – we promise.
Painting the American Dream at Guantánamo by Paige LainoCocktails for Toasting the End of Patriarchy by Merrily GrashinOn Making Oneself Less UnreadableIf I Had a Sense of BeautyThe Paris Review Staff's Favorite Books of 2017Reading the Police BlotterThe Dark Feels Different in NovemberThe Rise of Queer ComicsHale and Hearty by Robin BellingerContributor Picks: Doomed Bohemians and Death MasksHale and Hearty by Robin BellingerWhite Man on a PedestalMark Twain’s Disturbing Passion for Collecting Young GirlsRilke’s ‘Letters to a Young Painter’The Wholesome Yet Filthy Comedy of Katya and TrixiePuerto Rico Sketchbook: The ComicAll This Blood and LoveOn Making Oneself Less UnreadableStaff Picks: Sohyang, Sacred Deer, and Steamers by The Paris ReviewAt the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations This Is (Literally) the World’s Tiniest Book On the Hundredth Anniversary of Henry James’s Death Letters from the Ransom Center’s Guy Davenport Collection The Long Quest to Authenticate a “Maltese Falcon” Statuette Lydia Davis Will Receive Our 2016 Hadada Award Who Is Professor Bhaer, Really? Part 4 of 5 Pun Home: Or, The Double Meaning of Life “The Unnecessary,” A Poem by Karen Murai (1990) Emilie Clark, ”Meditations on Hunting” Elena Ferrante‘s Children’s Book Is Being Translated and It Sounds Terrifying There is a New Record for Most Bollywood Lyrics Ever Written, and Other News Three Paintings and Two Sculptures by Izumi Kato On the Merits of Disturbing Literature Painting a Poem—Diane Szczepaniak’s Watercolors & Wallace Stevens Join Our Editor, Lorin Stein, for Two Events in Paris This Sporting Life: On David Storey’s Classic Rugby Novel Mourning Lincoln, and Other News The Strange, Working Romance of Fritz Lang and Thea von Harbou When Houdini Hired Lovecraft to Write for Him William Horton, the Forgotten Artist Championed by Yeats