
Love Begins
Sweet Seals For You, Always
styofa doing anything

PR's Tumblrdome
Claire Keane

Discoholic đȘ©
Xuebing Du
Show & Tell

romaâ
NASA
ojovivo

Janaina Medeiros
Cosimo Galluzzi
we're not kids anymore.

No title available
noise dept.
trying on a metaphor

Kaledo Art
No title available

No title available

seen from United States

seen from Algeria

seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Colombia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Spain

seen from Malaysia
seen from Indonesia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from Czechia
@dis-aj
"The garbage does NOT want to mess with this flare boat."
I took my girlfriend to an improv show the other night and during intermission we were passionately arguing over whether half a 5 Hour Energy shot would give you 2.5 hours of energy or 5 hours of half-assed energy so we turned around to ask the opinions of the three people behind us and one of them said âAre all your arguments like this because we heard you in the lobby earlier fighting over the right way to pronounce âeggâ?â
Luke Cage was created in 1972. Four years earlier, in 1968, Martin Luther King, Jr. was shot and killed. Five years before that, in 1963, Medgar Evers was shot and killed. Eight years before that, in 1955, a young Black man named Emmett Till was tortured, then shot and killed. These events, and numerous others with frightening similarity, happened in a line, and in the early years of the first decade to reap the social benefits of the Civil Rights Movement, Marvel Comics gives the fans (and the world) a Black male superhero whose primary superhuman aspect⊠is that heâs bulletproof. Not flight, or super speed, or a power ring. The superhuman ability of being impervious to bullets. Superheroes. Action heroes. Fantasy heroes. Power fantasies. Is there any doubt the power fantasy of the Black man in the years following multiple assassinations of his leaders and children by way of the gun would be superhuman resistance to bullets? In American society, the Black man has come a long way from the terrors of the past handful of centuries, only to crash right into the terrors of the 21st century. Some of those terrors being the same exact ones their grandparents had to face and survive â or not. There are Black men who are wealthy, powerful, formidable and/or dangerous. They can affect change undreamt of by their parents, and their parentsâ parents. Their children will be able to change the world in ways we can intuit and others we can barely begin to try and predict. But a bullet can rip through their flesh and their future with no effort whatsoever. And so we look at Luke Cage, a man who gets shot on a regular basis, whose body language is such that he is expecting to be shot at, prepared for the impact â because he knows he can take it. And maybe, in the subconscious of the uni-mind of Marvel Comics, is the understanding that Luke Cage may unfortunately always be a relevant fantasy idea for the Black man. 2012 â Trayvon Martin is shot and killed. 2013 â Jonathan Ferrell is shot and killed. 2014 â Michael Brown is shot and killed. 2015/2016 â Luke Cage premieres on Netflix. I look forward to seeing if the Luke Cage of that show will have a true understanding of his power and what he symbolizes.
Real Life Proves Why Luke Cage Endures (via comicberks)
Reading that was like getting kicked in the gut. And yet it feels like thatâs not enough.
(via optimysticals)
nepeta + catmom
I cried out to the universe, "Release me Release Me RELEASE ME!â
The Universe gently whispered, "Let go let go let go.â
Of course itâs unhealthy to be fat. If youâre fat, youâre going to have a rough time getting health insurance. You probably wonât get regular checkups and preventive care, and any health problems you might have (completely unrelated to your weight) will be a lot worse whenever you finally do see a doctor. Even if you have health coverage, you probably avoid going to the doctor if youâre fat. So youâre in the same situation. Why do you avoid going to the doctor? Every time you walk into a doctorâs office, the first thing they want you to do is step on a scale. Then you get the lecture, or the belittling remark, or worse, the weight loss advice. You figure, as long as you feel okay, why risk it? You donât pay for abuse in any other setting, right? You value your mental health, so you stay away. If youâre fat and you do visit the doctor, he or she might decide to treat your weight, rather than your symptoms. You get a diet, rather than a diagnosis. The doctor says all your ills are caused by your fat. Six months later, you still have sharp pains in your heel or nasal congestion or shooting lights in your vision. So you find a new doctor. This time you actually get treatment for your plantar fasciitis or your sinus infection or your brain tumor. (These examples are based on actual cases.) Your doctor may not like fat people. A recent study found that fat women are a third less likely to get breast exams, gynecologic exams, or Pap smears. An exception: Fat and thin women get mammograms equally often. (The authors said that doctors may do exams more readily if they donât have to touch fat patients.) Fat women are at increased risk for certain scary cancers (breast, cervical, endometrial, ovarian). Getting less preventive care, researchers concluded, may âexacerbate or even account forâ this increased risk. Itâs not the fat that kills us, itâs the fat hatred. this is so powerful. itâs fatshaming/phobia masqueraded in âhealth concernsâ. is misogyny, women are valued for their bodies.
But What About Your Health?
By Marilyn Wann
From Fat!So? Because You Donât Have to Apologize For Your Size
(via firstwavefeminist)
Tromsö, Norway James Binder
The difference between cat people and dog people, as explained by Tumblr.
Hey what do you do when you have to choose between sleep and meditation?
Sleep. Always sleep.Â
Namaste :D