I have a empty chest so i had do swallow whats inside of yours.
If a had a heart i would like to have such a delicious one, like you used to have before meeting me.
Claire Keane
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@dead-girlwalking
I have a empty chest so i had do swallow whats inside of yours.
If a had a heart i would like to have such a delicious one, like you used to have before meeting me.
wayne booth @ ashish ss17
In the land of gods and monsters, I was an angel.
just a one time payment of $50 for a My Keeper tier/lifetime subscription to my private snap! get personal interaction that goes beyond my explicit shows on my snap! nudes, sexting and begging for your attention! <3
on top of my multiple daily shows throughout the week and you get to see all the porn i film first!
venmo/cash app: $casseejoseph
Anyways gay people who try to put other gay people down for fitting stereotypes instead of questioning why that behavior offends straight people so much are boring and need to do some self evaluation
Why do some of y’all take so much pride in not being like other gays (hint: it’s homophobia)
there’s this moment of awareness for a girl when she realizes her legs (and/or arms, armpits, upper lip…) are unacceptable.
she’s just minding her own business, bopping along, when maybe a classmate starts mocking her for having visible body hair. or she goes to a sleepover and someone points out that her legs look different from all the other girls’. or she walks in on her mom shaving and asks why, and the answer is “because a woman’s body looks nicer this way.” or maybe her mother or sister actually approaches her and says, “looks like it’s time you learned to shave that jungle.”
the point is, the day before that realization, however it happened, the girl didn’t give a shit about her hair. she put on shorts and tank tops without a second thought. she didn’t feel unclean. she didn’t feel like a monster when she looked in the mirror (at least not because of body hair). her hair didn’t stop her from riding a bike or climbing a tree.
only after someone draws her attention to it does she start feeling self-conscious and wanting to remove it. removal, in this culture, is never a choice made free of coercion. it’s never born of a girl’s own naturally occurring desires. the seed of shame was planted in her by someone else (family, friends, bullies, magazines, razor commercials) and chances are that seed will stay with her forever- a sinking realization that her body can be wrong, that she can look ugly or dirty even when clean, that a thing she never even noticed about herself before should be a source of retroactive humiliation.
that feeling is like a scar. every time we look at it, the humiliation and judgment we experienced as kids comes rushing back and the little nasty patriarchal voice in our heads (the same one that says shit like “jesus you’re getting fat,” “ugh why did you think you could pull off this outfit,” “god who would ever want to touch THOSE boobs,” etc) says “ugh, looks like it’s time I shaved that jungle.” and it’s just parroting back what we’ve already been told.
whoa, this is so on point holy fuck
Es magia.
Porque me tocó, sin tan siquiera rozar mi piel.
Y porque mis miedos ya no asustan desde que usted, amor: me acaricia el alma.
- Manuel.
~click here xo
no touching 😇
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Mascara, 1917