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Back on Instagram after a 2 month hiatus! Yes!
Funny how sometimes you come across just the right quote at just the right moment.
Fragment of Sylvia Plathâs âTulipsâ âI didnât want any flowers, I only wanted To lie with my hands turned up and be utterly empty. â
Herstory.
"In Memory, everything seems to happen to music" Tennessee Williams quote from The Glass Menagerie
âA mighty woman with a torch, whose flame Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name MOTHER OF EXILES.â #emmalazarus #statueofliberty #acolorstory
In 2010, a sixteen-year-old boy was accused of stealing a backpack. He spent three years in Rikers Island, enduring abuse and solitary confinement, yet he was never convicted of a crime and charges were ultimately dropped.Â
How did this happen?
Find out when Spike presents âTIME: The Kalief Browder Story,â a six-part documentary event beginning tonight at 10/9c.
Help spread the word on social media using the hashtag #KaliefBrowder and these assets: http://spike.tumblr.com/kalief Â
Your integrity, grace & humanity always made me proud to call you my president, even when I didn't agree with you. For your vision, for your resolve in the face of immeasurable obstacles and detractors, and for inspiring all Americans to aspire to greatness, #ThankYouPresidentObama. You will be missed. â â â â #FarewellObama #ThanksObama #POTUS #FLOTUS #popyacolor #yeswecan #hope #minimalism_world #ihavethisthingwithpink #postitfortheaesthetic #livecolorfully #ig_color #candyminimal #ihavethisthingwithcolor #colorventures #flashesofdelight #acolorstory #abmlifeiscolorful #pinkaesthetic #myunicornlife #livecolorfully #minimalism #minimalistic #minimalove #pinktheme #pinkgrunge #amblifeiscolorful
Lost in 2016: a slew of cultural icons & heroes who spent their lives championing difference by embracing who they were. Gained in 2016: the short-fingered, orange embodiment of the worst human impulses, slouching towards Washington. Go home #2016. You're drunk. #happynewyear
Herstory.
You may not cheer at a lynching, but you sold the rope and then looked the other way, Trump voters.
The Top 10 Childrenâs Books You Should Re-Read as an Adult
We all have happy memories of the books we loved as children. Childrenâs books are gateways back in time and can remind us of the past, when we were innocent, much more creative and prepared to believe in wonders. And classic childrenâs books are classics for a reason: they have wide-ranging messages that relate to grownups as well as young children. When was the last time you re-read your favorite book from childhood? Regardless of whether you have young ones to read to, youâre going to want to get your vintage copy of these classics out of the garage and spend an afternoon re-living those enchanting moments when you were a young, innocent reader. You may be surprised at just how relevant they are to your adult life too.
10. âThe Story of Ferdinandâ by Munro LeafÂ
This beloved story of a bull who refuses to fight has been around since 1936. Adolf Hitler had it banned in Germany because he saw it as pacifist propaganda.
9. "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day" by Judith Viorst
The message of this classic is that, no matter how bad a day seems, there is always tomorrow. Â Things actually DO get better. Â What adult doesnât need to be reminded of that from time to time?
8. "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs" by Judi Barrett
This magical tale is peppered with quirky details (like food raining from the sky) and by somewhat morbid humor (decapitated dolls for example) that probably went right over your head as a kid, but that will make this book all the more fun when you read it as a grown-up.
7. âHarriet the Spyâ by Louise Fitzhugh
The story of an 11-year-old girl living in New York City who carefully observes and writes about the people around her was ahead of its time when it was published in 1964. Issues like negotiating dysfunctional family relationships, gender non-conformity and feeling like an outsider will resonate with adults.
6. "Pippi Longstocking" by Astrid Lindgren
Pippi Longstocking has been a hero to children around the world since she first made her debut in 1945, in Sweden. Â She is fearless but has humility, she isnât worried about what other people think of her, and she truly believes that anything is possible. Â Many small children actually believe those same things, but it seems like as we get older, we tend to forget. Read this book if you need reminding (and who doesnât?) that we are all stronger than we think and maybe we really CAN do anything.
5. âThe Little Princeâ by Antoine de Saint-ExupĂ©ry
This worldwide bestseller has been beloved since it was first published in 1943. If you read it when you were a child, you may have loved the illustrations and the fantasy of it, but as an adult you will notice all of the lessons it can teach us even as we get older: about looking beyond the surface, about expressing our feelings and about allowing ourselves the freedom to explore.
4. âIn the Night Kitchenâ by Maurice Sendak
When you read this as a child, you probably wished you could be Mickey and stay up making cake all night. As an adult, you will be just as envious, and just as entranced by Sendakâs illustrations. Â But now that youâre all grown up, maybe you really can stay up late doing something completely unexpected, like making a cake.
3. "Eloise" by Kay Thompson
Eloise is the gutsy little girl who lives in a fancy hotel with her parents and her dog. When you read it again, itâs hard not to be struck by Eloiseâs feistiness, and by what a glamorous life she leads. The writer, Kay Thompson, based much of the story on her own life and many of the characters on the real people she met while working as an actress and lounge singer around New York City.
2. âAlice in Wonderlandâ by Lewis Carroll
Children are delighted by the outrageous characters Alice encounters, and by her adventures in a world that seems upside down. Â Immerse yourself in this book again and you will find yourself carried away by the settings and descriptions and after a while, you may just find yourself believing in the fantastic and unreal. Just like you did when you were a kid. Â
1. Â "Charlotteâs Webâ by E.B. White
If you remember how this one ends, you know that re-reading it is an excersise in having your heart torn out. But the tale of the friendship that develops between a pig and the spider who saves his life, only to die herself contains lessons that most adults need to be reminded of. Lessons about friendship, altruism, about the natural cycle of life and about the importance of leaving a legacy of kindness after we are gone.
Today is International Day of the GirlÂ
Child marriage impacts girls and women around the world. It violates girlsâ rights to health, education and opportunity and traps them in the cycle of poverty. We can end it together.
Learn how you can help:
http://www.girlsnotbrides.org/about-child-marriage/
http://www.unicef.org/protection/57929_58008.html
http://www.icrw.org/what-we-do/adolescents/child-marriage
"The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those who speak it." - George Orwell
Hero.
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Why are we championing diversity and inclusivity when it comes to race and gender, but not class?
Shannon M Houston writes about television like nobody else. If youâre not reading her, youâre an idiot.