DEAR READER
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
trying on a metaphor
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

titsay

@theartofmadeline
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Show & Tell
Three Goblin Art

JBB: An Artblog!
cherry valley forever
hello vonnie
Stranger Things
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Cosimo Galluzzi
we're not kids anymore.
h
RMH
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
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@corporealphantom
Okay, but what if there was an alliance of intelligent alien crab species that all evolved independently in different solar systems...
And the popular culture within this alliance believes that any intelligent species that are not crabs are at best flawed, and at worst heretical abominations.
🦀🦀🦀
"All must be crab! Crab is perfection!"
I’ve seen so many threads debating the merits of rayon and whether it’s a plastic or a “natural fibre” going around, and y’all, the problem with rayon is not whether or not it satisfies some technical definition of synthetic fibre.
The problem is that the most common method of manufacturing rayon is so ridiculously toxic that it’s literally killing the people who work in the facilities where it’s produced, and is illegal to carry out in much of the world as a result – but instead of using better (more expensive) methods, everybody just imports the stuff from places where killing your workers for the sake of a buck isn’t effectively regulated.
#I don’t think ive ever seen rayon sold irl (via @thebusylilbee)
Most commercially available bamboo fibre is produced using the viscose method (i.e., the one that sprays neurotoxins everywhere). If you see any mass-produced item that advertises itself being made from bamboo fibre, there’s a good chance that it’s basically just rayon, though your local labelling regulations may not require it to be declared as such.
(As with conventional rayon, alternative methods of extracting bamboo fibre exist, but they’re rarely used at commercial scale because they’re more expensive.)
Cicada voices
They will serenade me soon
When I see my love
Dear Healthcare Professionals Who Have Decided to Stop Masking At Work Now That It’s Been Made Optional By Your Employer,
Fuck you.
Sincerely,
Your Immunocompromised & Disabled Patients Whose Lives You’ve Decided Are Disposable
Reminder that fat disabled people exist and have a sexuality.
Reminder that fat disabled people can be queer. They can be bi, pan, lesbian, gay, ace. They can be trans. They can be loud and provocative, or gentle and soft. Fat disabled people can be desired and can also desire. They can be saucy, and flirtatious. They can feel at home in their own bodies, and they can make love to themselves. Fat disabled people can be seductive, and surprising. They can attract men, or women, or any gender beyond, combined, or in between. They can enjoy what they look like in the mirror, or in risque clothes.
Fat disabled people can love the feel of their body pressed to another's, or be turned on when their partner writes a smutty text to them. They can be bold or inhibited, they can be coy. Fat disabled people can feel sexy when they move from their mobility devices to the bed. They can feel hot in their sex swings, and on their wedges, or using their canes. They can feel sexy when their partners fingers sink into the flesh of their thighs, and bellies, and buttocks. Fat disabled people can be kinky. They can be dominant, submissive, or switch.
Fat disabled people have the full spectrum of sexuality, because fat disabled people are human beings with agency over their bodies.
“i don’t want topless girls or leather daddies at pride” well i don’t want wells fargo or facebook at pride but we don’t always get what we want
I wish I could tell you how I feel inside
Like a billion universes expanding
Or the electricity of new lovers longing to embrace
So enormous it feels as if I need to shed my skin
and release my soul
#poetry
I don't know how to write anymore.
I'm a ball of emotion swirling and churning
Each feeling struggling for the surface
I can't connect them into a cohesive flow
Each one dominates for a fleeting moment before the next takes over
I want to express my inner experience with words
But I find it so difficult now
For 25 years I've been unwrapping
My queerness
A gift buried deeply inside
Those around me tried to destroy it
They taught me it was something to hide
For years I wasn't sure it existed
It was something I tried to deny
But I carried it with me forever
A gift buried deeply inside
I believed that love was important
I didn't want others to feel this shame
So I put on the face of an ally
Pretended the gift wasn't mine to claim
I went through all of the motions
Pretended I was average and whole
But the emptiness pervaded reality
A life of playacting took it's toll
Strong was this gift that I carried
It fought against my attempt to control
I cried, and I anguished, was harried
The gift's edges were tearing a hole
In the place where I grew my compassion
For others, the world, now my soul
Time passed and this box that I carried
became so heavy, it caused pain
I couldn't hide the gift any longer
I began to accept the joy it could bring
The freedom of living unburdened
Of knowing who you're truly to be
The voices of the church grew quiet
I hear them less as I begin to break free
I pull carefully on the end of the ribbon
Tied tight to the gift buried within me
I loosen it's box from the trappings
Of sinew and muscle and bone
Queerness hiding for more than two decades
My heart sings, I'm no longer alone
I can't make the words come again
The twisting pain creeping through my body
Upwards to entangle my mind
I want to press the words to the page
Like my trauma presses upon me
The pressure so great
I want to make the paper feel all the things I feel
But the words won't come
How do you speak truth through the pain
How do you make the words dance on the page when they are sharp fragments unable to be organized
When each time your hand grasps the pen a hundred tiny fragments cut your fingers
When the depth of meaning you need to convey is too great for language to encompass
And you feel pain from this too, the trauma has taken away your self expression only adding to the distress
I want to share, to assuage, to commiserate but the pain refuses me the task
So I remain, in hibernation, waiting for the day I can blossom again
Thoughts on Lunarpunk
As I have fallen more and more in love with Solarpunk, I am searching to find where I fit with the aesthetics. I've always been drawn to the dark aesthetics, goth and cyberpunk, the nighttime and death. As I know Lunarpunk is an emerging aesthetic, I'd like to explore what it means, and what it could be. To me, Lunarpunk cannot be divorced from Solarpunk, it is the Moon to Solarpunk's Sun. It is the decay after the growth. It is nighttime in the community, when all are resting and off to bed. It is our dreams, and our quiet reflections. It is blues, purples, blacks. It is starlight, and the silvery moon. It is contemplating your innermost thoughts and feelings--that moment of stillness and comfort when you're finally alone with your thoughts. Lunarpunk is recognizing the individual cannot be separated from the group, and vice versa. Lunarpunk is working on your feelings; it's therapy; accountability. It's recognizing the truths of the individual, and how they affect the collective. It is sex, spirituality, tears, and rebirth. Lunarpunk is bioluminescence; it's mycology; it's fermentation. It is the vastness of the ocean and the starlit night sky, as well as the energy of the tides. It's the deep thoughts shared after passionate lovemaking. It is remembering to rest, and tending to our emotions. Lunarpunk is remembrance and honoring our ancestors; it is ritual. It is magic and wonder. Lunarpunk is one half of making the collective whole.
I wish I had taken more photos of the signs that proliferated around our cities in 2020. I remember driving past one for the first time, and suddenly being catapulted out of my closeness to the situation, into the role of an outside observer. "COVID- 19 is still spreading. Wear your mask"
It was dystopian, a freeze frame from a horror movie-- it was cinematic. This was real, I was suddenly projected into reality that I only experienced through characters in film and fiction. But this was my reality, this was my dystopia.
As time went on the powers at be tried to remove these reminders that we were living through something unprecented, they began to push the narrative that it was all over. No more false attempts at togetherness, no more collective unity, this was over. Everyone go back to work, go back to normal. Meanwhile more and more people are suffering. They're getting evicted, they're being denied care, doctors and nurses are quitting in droves--but the signs are gone. So if you're not evicted, suffering, sick, or overworked, you get to turn up the music and pretend the world is perfect from within the confines of your car.
For the rest of us, it's still dystopia.
Sometimes I wish the void would say something back.
Tear gas cannisters hit your feet, all around you is the rumble and sound of your comrades running gasping for air. Everything is burning.
Before you know it a cop is breathing down your neck baton in hand--you run--adrenaline screeching through your veins. You didn't know you could go this fast, your chest hurts, every breath becomes a struggle. Your lucky to get out of the cloud of gas without total incapacitation. But they're still on your heels, no time to rest.
Then abruptly they stop running. It's some sick cat and mouse game, most of their intent is to attempt to reassert their power over you.
Your comrades regroup, there is slightly less of you but still many. There is still resistance.