📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, May 28, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market continues to exhibit intense pricing pressure and structural tightening, with total available loads holding at an elevated 210,502 and the market average rate climbing to $3.07/mile. High operating costs, anchored by a national diesel average of $5.554/gallon, are acting as a hard floor for carrier negotiations and strictly limiting deadhead tolerance. Dry van spot rates are surging toward historic peaks with paid rates reaching $2.90/mile, while peak summer produce demand has pushed reefer paid rates to $3.39/mile. Open-deck capacity remains exceptionally tight, driving flatbed paid rates to a record high of $3.66/mile. Regional flooding across the South, Midwest, and Texas is further complicating transit along major corridors like I-10, I-40, and I-81, forcing brokers to prioritize carrier relationships and real-time pricing strategies to protect margins.
Insight
Paid rates are moving faster than the boards
The widening gap between posted and paid rates shows that replacement cost is still climbing after a load hits the board, especially in reefer and dry van. In this market, quote validity is shrinking to hours rather than days, and any lane that requires multiple carrier touches is likely to settle above the first market read.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flooding in East Tennessee (East Tennessee (TN, Cocke and Greene counties)): Heavy rainfall of 2 to 4 inches has led to flash flooding on local roads and highways near the I-40 and I-81 corridors. This may disrupt regional freight transit and cause localized delays for carriers moving through the Knoxville and Tri-Cities areas.
- River Flooding along the Gulf Coast (Gulf Coast Region (LA, MS, TX)): Minor flooding along the Calcasieu River and other coastal waterways is impacting local roads, including Goos Ferry Road near I-10. This could delay regional pick-ups and deliveries and force minor routing adjustments for carriers along the I-10 corridor.
- Midwest River Flooding (Ohio and Indiana (OH, IN)): Minor flooding on the South Fork Licking River is extending onto the I-70 exit ramp near Buckeye Lake, OH. This could delay regional flatbed and dry van shipments moving along the I-70 corridor and require localized detours.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
East Tennessee shifts from a same-day flood issue to a multi-day transit risk
Flood impacts around the Knoxville and Tri-Cities corridors are unlikely to clear cleanly after today. Additional rain Friday, heavier thunderstorm potential Saturday, and more rain Sunday keep secondary roads and mountain approaches vulnerable around I-40 and I-81, raising the odds of rolling delays for freight crossing between the Southeast, Mid-Atlantic, and Midwest.
- Build extra transit time into loads touching Knoxville, Morristown, Bristol, and Tri-Cities through the weekend.
- Protect hard delivery appointments on east-west freight with earlier pickups or alternate handoff plans.
Weather Insight
Southwest Louisiana risk is concentrated at pickup and delivery access points
Near Lake Charles, the bigger threat is not a full I-10 shutdown but local road flooding and storm-driven delays around customer facilities, ramps, and short connector roads. Repeated rain and thunderstorms from today into Saturday can turn a normal same-day turn into a detention-heavy move, particularly for time-definite freight along the western Louisiana Gulf corridor.
- Morning appointments carry less disruption risk than afternoon windows.
- Confirm site access and alternate truck entrances before dispatching into the Calcasieu area.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures remain volatile as global energy supply concerns and localized refinery constraints keep wholesale prices elevated, ensuring retail diesel prices remain above $5.50/gallon.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers and owner-operators are facing extreme financial strain due to the combination of high diesel prices and rising insurance costs, accelerating market consolidation and capacity exits.
- Economic Indicators: Robust construction spending, steady manufacturing output, and the peak summer produce season are keeping freight demand strong, offsetting broader macroeconomic uncertainties.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
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Spot Truckload Rates Surge Across All Segments Ahead of Summer 🔗:
Dry van, reefer, and flatbed spot rates are posting significant gains, with dry van rates approaching their late 2021 peak. This tightening market requires brokers to adjust their quoting strategies immediately, as carriers hold substantial pricing leverage. Brokers must communicate these rising rate trends to shippers to secure realistic pricing on contract and spot opportunities, while prioritizing carrier relationships to lock in capacity before further rate escalation.
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Soaring Diesel Prices Drive Operational Cost Pressures 🔗:
With diesel prices soaring up to 65.8% year-over-year in certain regions like California, transportation budgets are under immense strain. For brokers, this means carriers will strictly enforce deadhead limits and demand higher fuel surcharges. When quoting lanes, brokers must factor in these elevated fuel costs, especially for long-haul routes, and expect carriers to reject loads that require significant empty miles.
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FMCSA BOC-3 Compliance Requirements Essential for Authority Activation 🔗:
Understanding FMCSA compliance, specifically BOC-3 process agent filings, remains critical for new carriers entering interstate commerce. For brokers, verifying that partner carriers have active, compliant operating authority is essential to mitigate liability risks and avoid fraudulent 'chameleon' carriers. Strict carrier vetting processes must remain a top operational priority.
News Insight
High-paying freight is drawing in riskier capacity along with higher rates
Produce and specialized loads are the first places fraud and unstable carrier setups tend to surface when spot rates spike. Fast checks on operating authority status, BOC-3, insurance continuity, and recent identity or contact changes are now part of margin protection, because a failed tender on a hot lane is often more expensive than paying a compliant incumbent carrier a little more upfront.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast US is currently the most lucrative region for freight brokers due to a powerful convergence of peak produce harvesting (corn, blueberries, tomatoes in Florida and Georgia) and significant capacity imbalances. Outbound reefer demand is at its seasonal maximum, which is pulling temperature-controlled equipment away from other regions and driving spot rates up. Simultaneously, dry van capacity is tightening as retail and consumer goods volumes surge ahead of the summer. The region is also experiencing localized weather disruptions, with flooding along the Gulf Coast and East Tennessee affecting major corridors like I-10, I-40, and I-81, which further restricts carrier routing and increases rate volatility.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Lakeland, FL → Atlanta, GA: This lane is currently experiencing peak seasonal demand due to the heavy volume of outbound Florida produce, including tomatoes and sweet corn, moving north. Capacity is exceptionally tight as carriers flock to southern Florida to secure high-paying agricultural loads. Real-time data indicates that outbound reefer and dry van rates are climbing rapidly as shippers compete for limited equipment.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: As a major port-to-distribution-center corridor, this lane is seeing a surge in dry van and flatbed volume driven by rising import activity and regional construction demand. Capacity is tight but volatile, with carriers balancing port-directed freight against nearby agricultural opportunities. Localized flooding in the region is also causing minor transit delays.
Regional Insight
Lakeland-Atlanta works best when sold as a round-trip package
The northbound Florida produce premium is high enough to subsidize a discounted southbound repositioning leg, which is the cleanest way to unlock reefer capacity into the peninsula. Pairing Atlanta-area dry grocery, packaging, or retail freight back into central Florida lowers the carrier's net round-trip risk and gives brokers a stronger chance of securing committed trucks 24 to 48 hours out.
Regional Insight
Savannah-Charlotte pricing now hinges on dwell, not just miles
On short port-outbound freight, diesel above $5.50 and abundant alternatives mean carriers are pricing terminal wait time more aggressively than linehaul distance. Pre-pulled containers, firm appointment times, and fast out-gates will win materially better capacity than live terminal pickups with uncertain release timing.
📰 Breaking Down: Spot Market Surge and Capacity Tightening
The recent surge in dry van spot rates, which are now climbing toward their late 2021 peak, signals a fundamental shift in market dynamics. Real-time load board data shows dry van paid rates averaging $2.90/mile, a significant premium over the $2.72/mile posted rates. This rapid rate escalation is catching many shippers off guard, particularly those who have grown accustomed to a loose, buyer-favorable market over the past year. The primary catalyst for this tightening is a combination of post-Roadcheck capacity contraction, rising seasonal demand, and severe operating cost pressures driven by high diesel prices.
For freight brokers, this environment presents both immense opportunities and significant risks. Brokers who rely on static, week-old pricing data are likely to lose money, as spot rates are moving faster than traditional quoting models can track. To protect margins, brokers must shift to real-time pricing strategies and secure carrier commitments before finalizing rates with shippers. Additionally, communicating these market realities to customers is crucial; shippers must understand that securing reliable capacity in today's market requires realistic pricing and flexible shipping windows.
🚛 Reefer: Peak Produce and the Temperature-Controlled Premium
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile segment of the freight market, driven by the full summer produce season. Real-time data reveals that reefer paid rates have reached an average of $3.39/mile, commanding a massive $0.33/mile premium over posted rates of $3.06/mile. This extreme spread highlights the intense competition for reefer equipment, particularly in agricultural hotspots throughout California, Florida, and Georgia. Commodities like strawberries, cherries, and sweet corn require precise temperature control and rapid transit, leaving no room for operational delays.
This seasonal demand is further amplified by the high cost of diesel, which currently stands at $5.554/gallon. Running reefer cooling units (reefer units) adds significant fuel consumption, and carriers are aggressively factoring these costs into their rate demands. Brokers must recognize that reefer capacity is highly localized; while agricultural outbound lanes are commanding historic premiums, inbound lanes to these regions are soft. Brokers can find excellent arbitrage opportunities by booking high-margin outbound produce loads and securing cheap backhaul freight to reposition carriers back into the harvest zones.
🔧 Fuel Pressures and Compliance Crackdowns Shaping Sourcing
Carrier operational behavior is being heavily influenced by two major forces: sustained high diesel prices and tightening regulatory compliance. With the AAA national diesel average at $5.554/gallon, small fleets and owner-operators are operating on razor-thin margins. This financial pressure has made carriers extremely sensitive to deadhead miles and detention times. Carriers are increasingly rejecting loads that require more than 50 miles of empty travel or involve historically slow shipper docks, as idling and deadheading directly threaten their survival.
Simultaneously, the FMCSA's active crackdown on non-compliant and 'chameleon' carriers, combined with strict enforcement of BOC-3 filing requirements, is gradually shrinking the active capacity pool. This regulatory pressure, while improving safety, is making carrier vetting more complex for brokers. To navigate these dynamics, brokers must prioritize carrier health and compliance in their sourcing strategies. Offering quick-pay options, verifying active BOC-3 filings, and targeting carriers with optimized routing can help brokers secure reliable capacity while mitigating the risks of fraud and service failures.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Treat posted rates as a starting point, not a closing price, on same-day van and reefer freight.
- Add transit buffer and tighten appointment control on freight touching East Tennessee and southwest Louisiana through the weekend.
- Use loop pricing to pull trucks into Florida and use pre-pulled freight to hold service on Savannah port moves.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a real execution squeeze, not just a headline volume story.
- Total available loads are 210,502, up from 207,407.
- The market average rate is $3.07/mile, up from $3.02/mile yesterday.
- The important tell is not volume alone; it is that paid rates are clearing above posted rates in every major full-truckload mode except LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial).
The biggest broker mistake today is quoting off the board instead of the clearing market.
- Dry van: $2.72 posted / $2.90 paid = +$0.18/mile
- Reefer (refrigerated): $3.06 posted / $3.39 paid = +$0.33/mile
- Flatbed: $3.57 posted / $3.66 paid = +$0.09/mile
- Heavy haul: $3.66 posted / $3.69 paid = +$0.03/mile
- Specialized: $3.22 posted / $3.30 paid = +$0.08/mile
- LTL/Partial: $1.82 posted / $1.80 paid = -$0.02/mile
Industrial freight is still setting the tone for the whole board.
- Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 162,371 loads, which is about 77.1% of total available loads.
- Those same modes account for 62,755 of 77,733 loads moved, roughly 80.7% of live execution.
- That matters because open-deck and industrial freight are absorbing tractor attention, dispatch time, and route commitment, which indirectly tightens van and reefer in overlapping markets.
Diesel at $5.554/gallon is a hard behavioral floor.
- Carriers are not just asking, they are filtering freight harder based on:
- deadhead miles
- dwell time
- site access risk
- reload quality
- detour exposure
Weather risk is operational, not theoretical.
- East Tennessee is a multi-day transit risk around I-40 and I-81.
- Southwest Louisiana is an access-and-detention problem near customer sites and connectors around I-10.
- Buckeye Lake, OH adds local drag near I-70.
- Coastal South Texas adds pickup/delivery uncertainty around the Corpus Christi area.
- In markets like this, local access delays can cost more than the linehaul spread.
📈 What the market is actually saying
Volume is stable at a high level, but the cost structure is firmer.
- One week ago: 212,422 loads at $2.99/mile
- Today: 210,502 loads at $3.07/mile
- That is nearly the same board size with a meaningfully higher clearing rate.
- Translation: usable capacity is tighter than the load count alone suggests.
The month-over-month comparison is even more important.
- One month ago: 168,277 loads at $2.74/mile
- Today: 210,502 loads at $3.07/mile
- That is a major jump in both freight availability and replacement cost.
- This is what a pricing reset looks like before many shippers have emotionally accepted it.
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) is described as highly elevated, which fits the rest of the board.
- When contract carriers reject low-paying freight, routing guides fail.
- When routing guides fail, contract freight leaks into spot.
- When that happens during produce season and flood disruption, paid rates outrun posted rates quickly.
The psychology today is simple: carriers are selling selectivity.
- They are not just selling trucks.
- They are selling:
- clean pickup windows
- low deadhead
- fast dwell
- known reload markets
- reduced weather hassle
- Brokers who understand that will buy capacity faster and more profitably than brokers still negotiating as if this were a soft market.
🚚 Mode-by-Mode Broker Playbook
Dry Van: cover earlier than you think you need to
- 26,658 loads
- $2.72 posted / $2.90 paid
- The +$0.18/mile premium says dry van is no longer forgiving for stale quotes.
- Best freight today:
- retail replenishment
- food packaging
- predictable warehouse-to-warehouse moves
- lanes with strong reload density
- Broker move:
- shorten quote life to hours, not days
- reprice any load with fixed appointments
- pay attention to deadhead and out-of-route pickup asks
- Avoid:
- late tenders into weak reload markets
- live-load facilities with long historical dwell
- “cheap” coverage that requires multiple carrier touches
Reefer: this is the tightest and easiest mode to underquote
- 8,239 loads
- $3.06 posted / $3.39 paid
- The +$0.33/mile spread is the clearest warning sign on the board.
- Produce season in Florida, Georgia, California, and Oregon is pulling equipment toward origin markets.
- Best freight today:
- premium produce
- grocery overflow
- cold-chain freight with exact appointment discipline
- Broker move:
- secure trucks before selling aggressive rates
- pre-discuss temperature, pulp requirements, and pre-cooling expectations
- solve the return leg before sending a truck into a hot produce market
- Avoid:
- vague temperature instructions
- flexible customer language that becomes inflexible at ship time
- loading locations with uncertain staging or long check-in delays
Flatbed: still strong, but the risk is in execution detail
- 93,048 loads
- $3.57 posted / $3.66 paid
- A +$0.09/mile premium in flatbed matters because access, securement, and route friction can erase margin fast.
- Best freight today:
- clean industrial freight
- daylight loading
- jobsite freight with exact unloading details
- known shipper facilities
- Broker move:
- ask about tarp needs, securement, and site conditions before quoting
- build weather and detour time into ETA promises
- stop treating flatbed as a margin bank
- Avoid:
- muddy or flood-adjacent jobsites
- uncertain loading equipment
- “should be a quick load” language without confirmation
Heavy Haul: the visible spread is small, but the hidden cost is large
- 43,635 loads
- $3.66 posted / $3.69 paid
- The linehaul premium is only +$0.03/mile, but that is not where the danger lives.
- Broker move:
- confirm permit path
- check detour feasibility
- verify route restrictions around flooded or congested areas
- confirm escort timing where required
- Avoid:
- price-first, route-later quoting
- permit-sensitive loads into uncertain weather corridors
Specialized: quote only after exact specs are confirmed
- 25,688 loads
- $3.22 posted / $3.30 paid
- +$0.08/mile is enough to matter, especially when the capacity pool is smaller and more compliance-sensitive.
- Broker move:
- confirm dimensions, loading method, commodity, and handling needs before shopping
- use pre-vetted carriers first
- Avoid:
- first-time carriers with recent identity changes
- partial information tenders
LTL/Partial: the only real tactical buy-side pocket
- 13,234 loads
- $1.82 posted / $1.80 paid
- This is the one place where the broker still has a slight edge.
- Broker move:
- convert non-urgent, dimensionally clean freight
- use consolidation to protect margin where full truckload is overpriced
- Avoid:
- urgent freight
- poor dimension data
- claims-prone commodities
🗺️ Best Regional Plays for Today
Southeast: still the highest-opportunity region if you manage it correctly
- The opportunity is real, but so is the sloppiness tax.
- Reefer strength plus dry van tightening plus weather friction means the Southeast will pay brokers who are precise and punish brokers who are optimistic.
Lakeland, FL → Atlanta, GA: sell the loop, not just the leg
- This lane works best when pitched as a round-trip package.
- The northbound produce premium is strong enough to justify a more strategic reload plan.
- Best broker play:
- secure an Atlanta-area return
- target dry grocery, food packaging, retail, or other central-Florida-compatible backhaul
- offer carriers a clear two-move plan
- Why it works: carriers will accept slightly less outbound friction when the round-trip economics are visible.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: dwell is now more important than miles
- On short port moves, linehaul is only part of the price.
- With diesel at $5.554, carriers care heavily about:
- terminal wait time
- release certainty
- chassis or container readiness
- pre-pull status
- Best broker play:
- prioritize pre-pulled freight
- confirm release before dispatch
- use firm appointment language
- A clean short haul can outperform a higher-rate messy one.
East Tennessee corridors: sell transit realism
- Freight touching Knoxville, Morristown, Bristol, and Tri-Cities needs buffer.
- Best broker play:
- pull pickups earlier
- widen delivery windows where possible
- avoid over-promising same-day recovery on delayed freight
- This is likely a rolling delay environment, not a one-and-done weather event.
Southwest Louisiana and Gulf access points: manage first mile and last mile
- The bigger risk is not necessarily a full interstate shutdown.
- It is:
- flooded side roads
- slow facility access
- longer turn times
- detention-heavy afternoons
- Best broker play:
- favor morning appointments
- call facilities before dispatch
- ask about alternate truck entrances
- protect detention language in advance
Ohio / Indiana local detour freight: low drama, high nuisance
- The Buckeye Lake area can quietly blow up ETA plans on regional freight.
- Best broker play:
- add modest transit cushion
- communicate early on hard appointments
- avoid squeezing reloads too tightly on the same truck
💰 Where the Best Broker Money Is Today
Premium execution freight
- Freight with plant downtime risk, retail penalties, or jobsite sequencing pressure is where brokers can still earn strong margin.
- In this market, customers will pay for certainty if you explain the risk clearly.
Reefer positioning freight
- Inbound loads into Florida, Georgia, California, and Oregon are valuable because they help you place equipment where outbound produce pays best.
- The real margin is often in controlling the truck’s next move, not just the first one.
Port freight with low dwell
- Savannah-type freight can still be attractive if the move is operationally clean.
- Fast in-gate / out-gate / pre-pull certainty is monetizable today.
LTL/Partial conversion
- This is your best defensive margin tool when shippers resist full truckload resets.
- Use it selectively and only when the freight profile supports it.
Avoid these margin traps
- Late-day reefer quotes without secured capacity
- Flatbed freight into flood-affected local roads without site verification
- Cheap specialized coverage from unknown carriers
- Port freight with uncertain release times
- Loads with hard delivery appointments and vague pickup readiness
🧠 Negotiation Angles That Work Today
With shippers: close the expectation gap early
- Use direct language:
- “The posted market is not the same as the paid market this morning.”
- “Reefer is clearing about $0.33 per mile above posted, and van is clearing about $0.18 above posted.”
- “I can protect service, but I need either realistic pricing or a wider appointment window.”
- Give structured options:
- Premium execution: fastest coverage, highest confidence
- Standard execution: realistic transit buffer
- LTL/Partial alternative: where timing and commodity allow
With carriers: sell trip economics, not just linehaul
- Ask better questions:
- What reload market are you targeting next?
- How much HOS (Hours of Service) will you have after pickup?
- Are you comfortable with flood-affected local access?
- Is this live load or preloaded?
- How much dwell can you tolerate before you reprice?
- What wins trucks today:
- fast answers
- exact load details
- honest site conditions
- visible reload opportunity
With your team: stop stale quotes from becoming losses
- Reprice aging tenders
- Escalate every weather-touched load
- Require a paid-market check before customer commitment
- Flag live-load reefer and port freight for manager review if uncovered
⚠️ Risk Controls That Matter More Than Usual
Fraud and unstable capacity rise when rates spike
- High-paying produce and specialized freight attract bad actors.
- Mandatory checks today:
- active authority
- BOC-3 (Blanket of Coverage filing for process agents) status
- insurance continuity
- contact consistency
- recent identity or banking changes
Accessorial discipline is margin protection
- With diesel at $5.554, carriers will push harder on:
- detention
- layover
- TONU (Truck Ordered Not Used)
- reroute pay
- Get terms confirmed before dispatch, not after the problem starts.
ETA management is a customer retention tool
- In weather-affected lanes, the broker who updates first usually keeps credibility.
- Silence gets interpreted as lack of control, even when weather is the actual cause.
⏱️ Today’s Operating Plan
First 60–90 minutes
- Cover reefer first
- Reprice all dry van quotes tied to fixed appointments
- Audit flatbed freight for site/access risk
- Call every customer with East Tennessee, Gulf Coast, or port-sensitive freight
By late morning
- Verify facility access on Louisiana and Texas freight
- Push earlier pickups on East Tennessee lanes
- Convert suitable shipments to LTL/Partial
- Lock round-trip plans on Florida reefer freight
By lunch
- Review every uncovered load older than one quoting cycle
- Remove any rate built only from posted-market assumptions
- Confirm release status on Savannah-area port freight
- Tighten appointment control and document detention exposure
This afternoon
- Pre-position for Friday and weekend Southeast freight
- Watch for carrier repricing on loads that sat too long
- Do not use unknown carriers to rescue premium freight unless compliance is fully clean
- Start tomorrow with secured loops, not open-ended same-day buying
🎯 Probability-Weighted Outlook for the Next 24–72 Hours
Base case — 60%: tight market stays intact
- Dry van, reefer, flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized remain carrier-favored.
- Best move: cover early, shorten quote validity, and sell realistic transit.
Tighter case — 25%: Southeast and Gulf execution worsens
- Produce demand plus flood friction plus fuel pressure create another step up in replacement cost.
- Best move: use incumbent carriers and protect premium freight first.
Relief case — 15%: localized weather improves, but pricing does not reset much
- Even if some corridors clear, diesel, produce, and elevated tender rejections keep the market firm.
- Best move: take tactical buying wins where available, but do not lower your entire pricing posture.
🏁 Bottom Line
- Today is about execution quality, not rate-shopping heroics.
- The clearest signal on the board is the paid-over-posted spread, especially reefer at +$0.33/mile and van at +$0.18/mile.
- Industrial and open-deck freight are still controlling truck positioning nationwide.
- Diesel at $5.554 is keeping carriers strict on deadhead, dwell, and detour risk.
- Weather is raising costs mainly through access, timing, and detention—not just full corridor closures.
- The brokers who win today will buy sooner, explain the market better, package reloads smarter, and protect margin before dispatch—not after service fails.
📅 This Day in History
1242: Avignonet massacre: A group of Cathars, with the probable connivance of Count Raymond VII of Toulouse, murder the inquisitor William Arnaud and eleven of his companions.
1905: Russo-Japanese War: The Battle of Tsushima ends with the destruction of the Russian Baltic Fleet by Admiral Tōgō Heihachirō and the Imperial Japanese Navy.
1996: U.S. President Bill Clinton's former business partners in the Whitewater land deal, Jim McDougal and Susan McDougal, and the Governor of Arkansas, Jim Guy Tucker, are convicted of fraud.
💭 Quote of the Day
"First comes the shy wish. Then you must have the heart to have the dream. Then, you work, and work."
— Estee Lauder