getting teary eyed thinking about gerda gottlieb's paintings of her wife after she transitioned
RMH
macklin celebrini has autism

izzy's playlists!
we're not kids anymore.

blake kathryn
đŞź
dirt enthusiast
will byers stan first human second
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
Today's Document
AnasAbdin

#extradirty
Game of Thrones Daily
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

tannertan36

romaâ
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oozey mess
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titsay
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@catcher-inthe-rye
getting teary eyed thinking about gerda gottlieb's paintings of her wife after she transitioned
In honor of bisexual visibility month, here are some high quality anime bicons.
Haru Sohma-Fruits Basket
Ash Lynx-Banana Fish
Yuuri Katsuki-Yuri on Iceďżź
Utena Tenjo-Revolutionary Girl Utena
Touya Kinomoto-Cardcaptor Sakura
Shinji Ikari-Neon Genesis Evangelion
Bonus because no hetero woman reacts to meeting pretty girls the way she does
Usagi Tsukino-Sailor Moon
Everyday schedule
e n t e r
âCo-respondent course for summerâ in Vogue UK april 1974 Steve Hiett.
People be like oh youâre in your 20s you have a whole life to live but I already feel as if Iâve missed every opportunity and made all the wrong decisions and itâs just fucked now
How do you fall back in love with life?
clean your room. Â clean space, uncluttered space, space that doesnât have miasma clinging to it can work wonders. Â clean the dishes. Â sweep. Â take out the trash. Â peel the clothes off the floor and wash them, and then actually fold/hang them. Â take a long shower. Â scrub behind your knees. Â brush your teeth. Â (this can be utterly exhausting, but try to get it done in a day, if you can. Â the end result is worth it.)
pull out your notebook. Â it doesnât need to be a new notebook, but preferably one that you donât usually write in, or that you havenât touched in a while. Â fuck moleskins. Â the yellow legal pad will work fine. Â sit in your room, or in the park, or in the library, and write a list. Â count clouds. Â describe all the colors that you see, and note patterns that arise. Â sketch the cracks in the walls. Â note the shape light makes when it enters a space. Â talk about what the air tastes like, smells like. Â what sounds are there? Â even the white nose, break that down: air planes, fans, cicadas, anything. Â remind yourself that you are sitting in the middle of a space brimming with detail. Â remind yourself that you are not in nothingness and emptiness. Â your world is fathomless. Â it has potential.
drink cold water and try to eat something that isnât processed. Â it does not need to be fancy. Â buy yourself an apple with the change between your couch cushions. Â eat it outside. Â if youâre someone who walks, walk somewhere afterwards, just to stretch your legs. Â take your fucking meds. Â remember that its a good thing that you are inside your body. Â your body is a fantastic and endlessly intricate machine, and even though society has smacked a bunch of poisonous ideas on it, that doesnât change its inherent worth and splendor. Â take care of it.
read a novel. Â underline your favorite lines, and write phrases that twist your heart inside your chest on the back of your hand with an ink pen. Â read a novel like itâs poetry. Â read poetry, something decadent but unpretentious. Â watch a movie you havenât seen before. Â if there are free art galleries near you, walk through one. Â take your time. Â let yourself bask. Â if there are patterns in what makes your soul ache, write those patterns down â marbles arches or soot crumbling bricks or dandelions or descriptions of dresses or whatever it is, write them down.
your chosen family is important. Â remember, they picked you as much as you picked them. Â the love has no obligation. Â it is given freely and it is given from a place of compassion. Â you are not a burden. Â if you need to breathe, take a minute by yourself and just exist, but remember to go back to your people. Â when they need you, listen and be gracious. Â always be gracious. Â the universe sometimes remembers things like that.
listen to new music. Â link jump on youtube or related artist jump on spotify or ask the chap beside you in the cafe what their favorite band is, and listen to that. Â listen to something that you donât usually listen to. Â we tend to tie up a lot of memory with music. Â we are falling in love again. Â the soundtrack needs to be specific to that. Â
allow yourself to indulge in romantics. Â press flowers in old books. Â play movies with subtitles and mouth the words. Â dance in your room. Â wear something that makes you feel good, even if you wouldnât wear it in public. Â write your chosen family letters, even if you hand deliver them. Â write poetry, even awful poetry. Â revel in its awfulness. Â eat dark chocolate and when your chosen family want to go out, try to go out with them sometimes, even if its just to the market. Â
*taking notes*
need someone to press their thumbs into my centre and prise me open like a garlic bulb until all my cloves fall out. then you can bash me with the flat side of a knife
I applied at a chain bookstore when I was 20 for a seasonal temp position, on a drunken whim. I knew Iâd never get it. I was a high school drop-out with nothing but food service, assembly line and âfreelance cable access camera personâ on my application. It was the original location of the chain, the ur-store that all the others across the world were based on. It was staffed by original employees of the indie store it had been, unreconstructed pro-labor anti-corporate problem-causers. They still had a âbook testâ then, which was about two dozen titles and you had to write in the authors name, or as close as you could recall. (This was later made illegal.)
I donât know how, but I managed to score the fourth of four positions. My family were all very excited, maybe there was a chance I wasnât a fuckup after all (they were wrong.) I attended a week of training in the nicest pants and shirt I had. It was a wonderland. The pay was better than any restaurant gig Iâd ever had, I didnât have fish juice or backwashed coffee in my socks when I got home, and they all had a good laugh at the end of my first shift when I asked about brooms and emptying the garbage. (That was just part of every job, right?)
And all day, every day, it was books. Books on subjects Iâd never heard of. Books by amazing people I hadnât even known existed. I was assigned a section to maintain, one that nobody else wanted (religion & spirituality) and I devoured it. I borrowed and spent time with all the big sellers, and then branched into the books those books had recommended. I talked to the people who came in to browse those shelves, and I learned what they shared. I took on a second section (humor & occult) and began cross-shelving. I shared smokebreaks with choreographers and cartoonists and organizers and musicians and so many lost souls searching for their doctorates and people from my age to 80.
And while a lot of the customers were, you know, customers, sometimes people would come in with quests. This was pre-search-engine, pre-Wikipedia, and if you needed to know everything about the US Naval Academy or the childhood of president Taft or the migratory habits of the swallow, you went to the library or the bookstore. And while I certainly didnât know any of that stuff, I learned how to find out.
At the end of the season I was let go with thanks. There were three permanent positions and four seasonals... soooo... so I went back to the deli and asked for my barista gig back. A week later I came in to pick up my last check and the on-desk AM was frantic. âTheyâve been looking for you! Thereâs another position open and they want to hire you! But your phone doesnât seem to work?â (The phone didnât work because I didnât like paying my phone bill and constantly abused the voice mail system with five-minute long outgoing messages from various unconventional books.)
I stayed there for about three years, and it was my education. I jumped around from section to section, department to department, gobbling down books and music and film like a black hole, like Pantagruel, like the toxic forest. It shaped me in so many fundamental ways.
And I learned about corporations. I learned how easy it becomes to shrug and say âIâm just a cog! What control do I have?â I learned that if they can fuck you for another dollar, theyâll do it. I learned about contracts and distribution and logistics, I learned that itâs easier and cheaper to destroy books than store them, when you can just reprint. I learned about waste and shrink and volume discounts and how selling the hot new title at a deeper discount than anyone else could afford would guarantee shoppers would always come to you first. I learned that itâs âgood businessâ to lose money and wreck the industry for whatever you could grab. I learned about corporate toadies who would go into other book and music shops and ask to see merchandise that was behind a sale date, so they could contact the publisher and get the indie store fined, or blacklisted. (I never did this, and I bullied the managers who did.) I learned that a CEO could take all his compensation in stock, hire all his buddies and pay them in stock, drive up the price and then all quit on the same day and cash out, tanking the benefits of tens of thousands of employees, costing people their homes and their childrenâs educations.
I started shopping exclusively at co-ops and small businesses and owner-operated shops. I might have started to forget to charge customers for their purchases. I may have started leaving locked display cases for high-end items unlocked. It was a long time ago, itâs hard to be sure.
Eventually I quit. I loved being there, among the co-workers and the customers, the thousands of books and albums, but I just couldnât keep taking their checks while my friends at the indies were getting ground into the dust. I took a job assembling patio furniture and glazing windows, and later moved to the city where I had some other book and publishing and printing adventures, but Iâve always wished I could go back and visit that place, the way people go back to visit their old schools. It was a splendid moment that we wonât see again.
The takeaway is that while I treasure the time I spent there and the education it provided, I also got to see a preview of where capitalism leads and how glaringly unsustainable and cruel and stupid and short-sighted the whole goddamn endeavor is. A*mazon isnât some cruelty inflicted on us by aliens, itâs a totally predictable outcome of the âmust grow at all costs must dominate must wipe out every other competitorâ mentality.
So fuck the algorithm and fuck the voluntary surveillance state and fuck making it easier for them to categorize you and quantify you and profile you. Donât cooperate.
i always carry a book out in public in hopes that someone attractive will notice and compliment my taste in literature so we can then get married
Christopher Street Liberation Day, New York City, June 24, 1978
some weird dreams iâve hadÂ
self reflection is a good thing but too much self analysis is so exhausting. constantly questioning your own motives and how you're being perceived and whether or not you're being real and what's authentic leads to such a convoluted mentality like. u don't even know who you are cause you just end up being a case study and not a person. i just want to let myself move through the world for a moment