Thats actually what hurts the most the thought that sometime in the distant future i could love someone else like i love you
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@aaliyah-danner
Thats actually what hurts the most the thought that sometime in the distant future i could love someone else like i love you
If I could breathe you in, I would keep you in my lungs and never take another breath
Me @ my hyperfixations
No haha please don’t go, you‘re so sexy haha
Sometimes octopi will punch other fish purely out of spite and you know what? I get that
„Animals keep evolving into crabs, which is somewhat disturbing“
At this point pretty girls are the only reason I keep going
My joints are fucked, my spine is fucked so my knee hurts and have back pain, I cant stop ticking and I also cant stop thinking that exact sentence to the rhythm of „I cant stop singing“ from teen beach movie ( which ive never even fucking seen btw) Im 19 and I know exactly two people in this city and life is just fucking great guys
And if the devil was to ever see you, he‘d kiss your eyes and repent
-Farouq Jwaydeh
It’s October 1st my dudes, you know what that means 🎃
I can’t stop thinking about kissing you and it’s ruINING MY LIFE
Yo we really need a redo of all the good decades like the 20s and 50s and 80s but with equal rights, and gays and lesbians and trans people and just queer people so everyone can just enjoy the good parts of them, the dances, the music, the suits or the gloves and hair-dos but with everyone included that would be great
Heather O’Neill (thewalrus.ca/portrait-of-the-artist-as-a-young-corpse)
TRIGGER WARNING: mentions of violence, abuse, gang rape, death, sexism.
‘Edgar Allen Poe wrote that “the death…of a beautiful woman is, unquestionably, the most poetical topic in the world.” Dead women have always been popular in art. For example, John Everett Millais’s esteemed painting of Ophelia: spurned by Hamlet, she is depicted as floating on top of the water at the moment of death, her delicate body adorned with wildflowers. Ophelia look-alikes are everywhere in fashion spreads in women’s magazines. Their white stockings and dresses are bloated like stingrays. Their hair curls around heads in tangled, fairy-like knots. Their eyes are closed sweetly, as though the women are eternally prepared for a kiss.
But the models aren’t just despairing, depressed girls like Shakespeare’s perturbed lass. The images suggest gang rape, murder, and extreme physical abuse. On a 2014 episode of America’s Next Top Model, the contestants were asked to pose as though they had just been murdered. Jimmy Choo had an ad that featured a seemingly dead woman lying in the trunk of a car, while a man (Quincy Jones) rests against it holding with a shovel. Calvin Klein ran an ad where Lara Stone appeared to be in the midst of being gang-raped. Marc Jacobs had Miley Cyrus sitting in the sand next to a lifeless redhead. W ran an editorial featuring a half-dressed woman lying unconscious in the woods. And these are but a few examples.
While writing my most recent novel, The Lonely Hearts Hotel, I decided to investigate this idea of the brutally murdered woman as art. I presented a series of images of murdered girls as still-life paintings: as though they were flowers that were plucked, at the height of their bloom, and arranged by men in a manner in which their beauty could be fully appreciated. There were girls with bullet holes in their heads. They were standing at the bottom of the river, their hair blowing magically and effortlessly around them, as they opened their mouths in perfect O’s of surprise.
This was perhaps the most violent depiction I had ever created of girls in my novels, and I have, at many times, subjected my characters to all manner of degradation. Why, you might ask, do I find myself writing stories about the broken bodies of young women? (…)
I was a blank screen with pornographic male gaze being projected onto it. (..)
Because of abuse, I used to run away from home. Montreal in the late eighties was in a state of disrepair, and it seemed as if so many buildings were falling into a state of ruin. There were abandoned apartments and warehouses and churches you could crawl into to sleep. There were many abandoned nunneries, their doors and windows boarded up, that were turned into squats. I crashed in a nunnery once. There was an Edwardian couch with blue felt pillows. I slept on it, curled up in a ball with my ski jacket as a blanket.
I thought I would wander around having a few good times and laughs and then be murdered. That’s what happened to girls who ran away from home. Underneath the ground are girls in basements. Maybe they are alive; maybe they are dead. They are like bulbs that bloom into all our treacherous and beautiful ideas.
I had no interest in boys, not really. I wasn’t mad about them the way that I was about other girls. I looked for fascinating girls on the street, the ones who had the strangest thoughts.
There was a girl with bangs to her nose who was always reading Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra. There was a girl who made miniature furniture out of bits of clay and kept them in a tin lunch pail. There was a skinny girl who had a voice like Grace Slick. There was a girl who had a scrapbook filled with images she cut out of pornographic magazines. One girl played a toy accordion she wore on her back like a school bag. There was a girl whose fingertips were always covered in black ink from drawing in her notebook. She drew tattoos all over my arm with a ballpoint pen. I was like Sleeping Beauty protected by a huge rose bush.
I met a girl wearing a rainbow-striped dress that went down to the ground. She had a pink beret over her thick, black hair. I adored her look. Girls dress for each other, not for boys. She was so mad it was lovely. She spoke about the moon and sadness so eloquently, I would be almost jealous. Once, she stole me a can of cranberries from the supermarket. I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to do with it. Once, she was committed in the psychiatric wing of the hospital. I could never see her. I would write her letters and leave them at the desk.
There are people who hate a free-spirited girl. You are supposed to choose a role and perform it. There are only a handful of roles you are supposed to play. Men all have Pygmalion complexes. They wanted to use your body to transform you into the girl of their dreams. They never understood that girls weren’t put on this earth to please them.
There is a moment when you are a teenage girl when you don’t belong to anybody. You aren’t really a daughter. You aren’t anyone’s partner. You aren’t related to anyone at all.
I fell madly in love with everything. Everything made me excited. Drinking coffee out of a cracked cup with a yellow rose on it. The covers of paperbacks in bookstore windows. The smell of skunk as I walked along the train tracks. A row of plastic horses on a windowsill. The gold songbirds on the wallpaper in a motel room. The stack of television monitors in the store window, each playing a different television show. A trumpet player in the subway.
You see the world in such a strange and intense and creative way in that brief time when you truly believe you don’t belong to anyone. When you are most likely to be murdered. When abuse cannot touch your personhood. The way I saw the world then was what I wanted to capture in art.
People have accused me of writing weak characters or disempowered females. They accuse me of that because everything about women is interpreted as weak and shallow and vulnerable. If an intelligent and serious person is judged by their similarities to a middle-aged white male, then yes, I fail, and my characters fail too.
But girls contain multitudes. We are made up of so many odd parts. The reason that the monster in Frankenstein is so memorable is that, when it opens its mouth, out comes the voice of an alienated teenage girl.’
-‘“Portrait of the Artist as A Young Corpse” is taken from the collection, Luminous Ink: Writers on Writing in Canada, Copyright © 2018 Heather O’Neill. Used with the permission of the author.’ From thewalrus.ca
Women are afraid to go out alone because they fear getting raped, kidnapped or murdered, black men have to fear being beat up or murdered, what are white men afraid of? Black men in their neighborhood ? And what for? They‘re not the ones calling the cops on you, or the ones torturing you, or the ones pointing a gun at you for existing or for you skin colour. Stop being pussys
If I had the ability to remember other stuff as good as I do song lyrics I would be too powerful and god knew
I always think y‘all are exaggerating Adoras kink for Catra scratching her, until I remember that one time a girl I didn‘t even like like that dragged her nails along my shoulder while moving away after hugging and it made me not only question if I was crushing on the right girl but also my entire existence
girls don’t want boys, girls want a catgirl girlfriend with a boob window and extremely sharp claws
they are girlfriends, your honor