Hiusten värjäys pelasta minut. Pelasta, hiusten värjäys D:

Origami Around
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
official daine visual archive

blake kathryn

pixel skylines
taylor price
untitled

ellievsbear

No title available

★

Love Begins
One Nice Bug Per Day
sheepfilms
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

shark vs the universe
YOU ARE THE REASON

Kaledo Art

⁂
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Tanzania

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Tunisia
seen from Greece

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@agentbolan
Hiusten värjäys pelasta minut. Pelasta, hiusten värjäys D:
Reading between the lines here.
more spn lines i think about
very strange cottage industry on youtube of giving exhaustive "critiques" of harry potter that amount to things like "the magic school is dangerous and that's bad!!!" and treating that with equal severity as the fatphobia or the slavery apologia, then patting themselves on the back as if this amounts to some kind of praxis
cinemasins is not praxis lol. how about materially supporting and protecting trans people from joanne and forgetting about her wizard books
I loved harry potter growing up. it made me feel seen as an abused and closeted kid. I idolized and looked up to joanne, wanting to become an author like her
then she started funnelling all her wizard book money into destroying the rights of my people and I resolved not to give her any more of my money
I didn't have to reevaluate the quality of her writing to do this. whether she's good at keeping her worldbuilding consistent or whatever has nothing to do with my decision to boycott her work. who cares how good or bad her writing is. she's killing trans people
OP, you get it. This is exactly the problem.
Matthias & Maxime
Limbes - a film by Érika Rivette (Deleted scene)
Ok so im really enjoying learning finnish, its all very slow steps forward but thats fine, kinda comes with being dyslectic. Though, I have, unfortually, found a word i absolute hate.
Pitää.
IT HAS ABSOLUTELY NO RIGHT BEHAVING LIKE THAT! YOU ABSOLUTE WHORE OF A WORD, PICK ONE MEANING AND STICK TO IT! YOU GREEDY ASS BITCH!
Itse en pidä juuri minään
Minä pidän, että pitää pitää pidot sanan kunniaksi
Pidän pidoista, mutta pitää muistaa, että nyt on säitä pidellyt
Pidin tästä postauksesta, oli sitä lukiessa naurussa pidättelemistä
The straight woman is unsatisfied with straight studio porn. She wants to get off to something in which the actors actually emote and show passion beyond canned moans from the women and, at best, vacant grunts from the men. She turns to gay porn. She knows it's not "for her," but neither was the straight porn, and at least the actors look like they're enjoying themselves. And for a short while she is satiated by Sean Cody et al, but she runs into the same problems she had to begin with. She was not looking at sex but a simulacrum of sex, trapped in Plato's cave. Unsatisfied, she turned to vintage gay porn, harkening to a time when most gay bars still had darkrooms and reliably smelled of piss and Amyl Nitrite. Here was the real thing, in all its animalistic passion. But she still couldn't immerse herself in the fantasy. She wanted the media to engage with her own imagination and meet her half-way, rather than having it spoonfed to her onscreen. She turned to yaoi, with its elongated figures reminiscent of mannerist portraiture, then bara, including hardcore BDSM scenes. But the tactile sensations depicted in the pages didn't do justice to their real life counterparts. She turned deeper into her own imagination, this time reading erotica. No, not the poolside paperbacks sold at Barnes and Noble. The good shit. Why then, was she still not satisfied? She dug deeper, searching for the true meaning of eroticism. She studied the psychoanalysis of Freud, the cultural criticism of Susan Sontag the feminist poetry of Audre Lorde. She took vacation time and flew to Europe, starting at the caves of Lascaux to explore the human urge to create, then traversed the Camino de Santiago on foot, along the way meeting a 56 year old carpenter from Burgos named Andrés, with whom she had an explosive affair. They both knew it couldn't last, which made them cherish each other's touch all the more. Upon flying home, she gave up. If her search for true eroticism never bore fruit this whole time, why would it now? It would take years before she stumbled upon the answer by pure happenstance: dubstep.
hi hello i just wanted to say hey :-3 howww ya doing?
hi hello im very very tired from having to wake up at 6.30 for work everyday and not having a shower in the flat but im good and also payday will be soon!
noooooo that is TERRIBLE i hate employment but yeah getting money is goodgood
do you get to look at the applications or do you just help people?,? if you deal with the applications maybe i get to call you on work time someday hehe
yesss i very much deal with the applications my work is pretty much just reading through them and deciding if they are elligable for legal aid! and then requesting more info so maybe i will have to call you then!
Kinda wild how the concept of emotional labour changed from
"people have to hide their emotions to perform specific types of labour where their apparent emotions influence another person's. Eg. Flight attendants have to be cheerful all the time, so that passengers feel welcome and safe. This suppression and masking of emotion can cause a sense of disconnect within the individual where they dont know what their true feelings are. This is part of the Marxist idea of alienation from labour and from the self."
To
"If you ask me to care about you or listen to your problems, youre being toxic."
It's worth taking a look at how we got here.
Sociologist Arlie Hochschild coined the term in 1983, specifically describing it as emotional performance required by a worker for a job. This alienates the worker from their own feelings. The expected emotion can be care, joy, etc. but it can also be harshness or simply the expectation to not show your real emotions in the workplace.
Sociologist Arlie Hochschild also coined the term 'the second shift' in 1989. describing how in families where a man and a woman both have a job, the woman is often still expected to do all the child raising and house cleaning, meaning she is carrying a double workload.
Already in 1983 (before coining the term 'second shift' but already developing the concept), Hochschild herself connected the two ideas, writing: "In a typical nuclear family unit, it is thought that women become responsible for much of the emotional labor by default, meaning they are responsible for shaping and managing the family’s feelings." So we have the person who coined the term, immediately after coining the term, also using emotional labor to describe unpaid household work! This is part of the term since its inception!
Around 2015 the term gained a lot of popularity and began to be more broadly applied. Some things that are, according to Hochschild, NOT emotional labor include:
Doing physical chores around the house
Doing mental chores like remembering birthdays
Hochschild: "if we talk about all the unpaid labor women do in the home as “emotional labor,” we’re insinuating that any kind of labor that falls most often to a woman is “emotional.” Like chores are just labor. Writing Christmas cards is just labor."
Also not emotional labour:
Expressing genuine emotions that you feel
Doing things that make other people feel better
Hochschild emphasizes that doing things to positively impact other people's emotions isn't 'emotional labor'. Managing and suppressing your own emotions is. That's where the alienation that is central to emotional labor comes in: it's alienation from your own feelings.
It's also essential that there must be an expectation on the person to do this. Hiding your real feelings by choice isn't emotional labor. As with emotional labor in the workplace, non-caring emotions and suppression of emotions typically expected of men are included. So when a wife expects her husband to suppress his pain and not cry in front of the children, that is an example of emotional labor. So to summarize, emotional labor according to Hochschild doesn't have to always be paid labor, but it does always involve:
The management of your own emotions
Alienation from your real emotions, as a result of being forced to perform other emotions.
Pressure/expectation, there are negative consequences if you don't do the performance.
There is a system, (the workplace, genderroles, etc) shaping these expectations, putting specific expectations on categories of people.
Finally, Hochschild never said that emotional labor shouldn't exist or that it doesn't have a function. In the workplace and out of it, emotional labor can achieve important things. The nurse that uplifts the patient and the parent that comfort their child might both be hiding their real feelings and that itself is not bad. The problem is the pressure to do this labor when you dont want to, the lack of acknowledgement of this labour and óf its potential for alienation, and the division of this labour according to gendered expectations.
that is actually my main principle of explicit fic is that the personalities stay On during sex.
"I love you more than life" Trite and lowkey dangerous
"I love you more than phone" contemporary declaration of devotion
Anteeks mutta mun on pakko saada lukee tää
MÖLKKY MANGA MÖLULULU
not everything is getting worse. at least you don't hear high hopes by panic at the disco every day anymore
guy currently hurtling toward a migraine at a rate that would impress most astrophysicists: i wonder wgat is happening in my beautiful telephone
at work right now and i had to escape to the bathroom because next to me sat someone who keeps slurping his coffee and eating with his mouth open
AND he does the thing where everytime he sees something mildly amusing he breathes out through his nose instead of laughing and he does this ALL. THE. TIME.
now someone put on very strong smelling perfume and i can't escape it
at work right now and i had to escape to the bathroom because next to me sat someone who keeps slurping his coffee and eating with his mouth open
AND he does the thing where everytime he sees something mildly amusing he breathes out through his nose instead of laughing and he does this ALL. THE. TIME.
at work right now and i had to escape to the bathroom because next to me sat someone who keeps slurping his coffee and eating with his mouth open