rest assured, rational me and impulsive me are having a fuckin smackdown 24/7 100% of the time
Mike Driver
Xuebing Du

#extradirty
Sweet Seals For You, Always
h

titsay
Peter Solarz
hello vonnie
Not today Justin
Misplaced Lens Cap
will byers stan first human second
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
taylor price
official daine visual archive
ojovivo
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Keni
🪼
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@4sec--wait
rest assured, rational me and impulsive me are having a fuckin smackdown 24/7 100% of the time
To them, there is no world without whiteness, so even if they acknowledge the hell whiteness necessarily brings, there is no other future possible than that hell.
In a recent discussion, my friend Preston Anderston posited that white people “can understand the destruction of the planet before the destruction of the white world,” and perhaps nothing exemplifies this better than their dystopian imaginings. To them, there is no world without whiteness, so even if they acknowledge the hell whiteness necessarily brings, there is no other future possible than that hell
ooo too read later
You notice it when you're thin.
I spent a year being skinny, and it was like being in a different world.
People wanted to sit beside me on the bus, I got asked out on dates, and I got told that I was pretty. People commented on my weight loss constantly.
New acquaintances and strangers, and health care providers also spoke in really cruel and troubling ways about fat people, because they thought I was thin for real, like them.
Now I am fat again, and I just feel the SILENCE from strangers and new people. They are clever enough not to say cruel things to my face, but that silence is deafening. I know that strangers and health care providers are saying terrible things. I heard it from them when I was thin.
I feel like I’ll never trust anyone, like I want to hide from everyone.
Thin privilege is not worrying that strangers hate you. Thin privilege is not feeling the barbs of others words, or knowing that those sentiments can still exist in silence.
What I hate most is the I’m-sorry face when I tell some well-meaning, left-leaning acquaintance that I’m a queer. Of course I don’t say it quite that way. I say softly, and with my signature smile: “My partner and I have been together for almost eleven years.” Translation: I love someone. In case it concerns you, I am capable of committed love, too. Notice how I sashay away from the coming-out spiel, how I hold the word sex deliberately at bay. Even the phrase “same-sex couple” might put us all uncomfortably in mind of naked bodies, spin the wheel of hetero-wonder a little too hard, thinking who does what to whom? These new associates don’t realize they are making an I’m-sorry face. They confuse it with the I-empathize-with-the-challenges-I’m-sure- you-have-had-to-face face. They nod and lean in a little closer, to show they are not afraid. Like expert ventriloquists, they’ll transmit I’m sorry without ever moving their lips. Translation: I know you don’t have a choice about this. But what if I did? What if there was someone to wave a magic wand and turn me wild with lust for a man—some men—most men—all men— until even a little trace of stubble on a square jaw, a pec flexed, a bulge in a tight pair of slacks— I’m hopeless! I don’t know what straight women watch for when they go out hunting for men—sent me reeling, sent me clawing the walls and calling for all their manly names and macho numbers. I’d say, Fairy Godmother, keep your spell. But what I’d really mean—beneath my soft voice and signature smile—is Fairy Godmother, you can go straight to hell, and take your goddamn straight spell with you. I love who I love, which is what everyone says, but I mean I love loving her whole being (her body, too) exactly the way that I do—with my whole being (my body, too). Translation: I have no regrets, no wish to be otherwise. That is: If you give me a choice, I’ll choose queer every time. If you make me flip a dime, I’ll mark the sides GAY and GAYER STILL.
Julie Marie Wade, “I Would Rather Be Gay Than Straight Any Day (& Other Things I Think But Never Say)”
me when a girl refers to her “partner”: 👀 me when i find out she was talking about her boyfriend with a beard: 😴
bi women when the lesbian you were talking to suddenly devalues you for dating a guy:
woman finding out the lesbian shes talking to assumes her nb partner is a man:
Marsha P. Johnson and others celebrate Christmas Eve at the home of Randy Wicker, New York City, c. 1980s. Photo © Randolfe Wicker. #lgbthistory #HavePrideInHistory (at New York, New York)
Parting Glances (1986)
magic
How many tries did it take to get this
one because im a fuckin wizard
🤔 via Shitty_Car_Mods
THIS OWNS
SHITTY-CAR-MODS-DAILY RETIRE BITCH
Inaction is not an option. Ignorance is not bliss.
How many ghosts must I always carry with me? / How much more must I expand to accommodate?
Chloë Rose, from “Haunted,” published in Anomaly (via lifeinpoetry)
you wear your names the same way a deer wears a bullet in his neck, bleeding gently on a winter ground.
M.S. Swain, from “something took aim,” published in Thread (via lifeinpoetry)
We live as we dream - alone. While the dream disappears, the life continues painfully.
Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness (via bookmania)
“billionaires bad” is an objectively good opinion actually
One of the best soundbites I’ve heard about modern economics is (paraphrased)) “It’s not possible to earn a billion dollars. It is possible to steal a billion dollars.” There is nobody smart enough, hardworking enough, trained enough and dedicated enough to earn a billion dollars without leveraging corrupt systems and exploiting people. The poverty threshold in America is $11,490 for one person. If someone has a billion dollars, that is 87,032 times the poverty line. It’s possible for someone to be twice as smart as another worker. It’s possible for them to be four or five times as hardworking. It’s possible for one person to have ten times the training of another person. So if you have one person that is half as smart, a fifth as hardworking, and a tenth as trained, they should reasonably earn one percent of the other. That’s the very outside figure. But anyone who takes in more than a million dollars per year did not earn that, they stole it. They found a vulnerable system to exploit or they found a group of people to cheat. Maybe they did it legally. Maybe they paid someone to make it legal to do that. It happens. But “earn”? Actually -deserving- that much money because of their merits and efforts? No.