Acquired Stardust
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

ellievsbear
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Not today Justin

Discoholic 🪩

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roma★
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Jules of Nature
Keni
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Peter Solarz
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
art blog(derogatory)
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Sade Olutola

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@faces-for-equality
Please link your aces by places list because I need that in my life.
Here you go!
The Planned Parenthood community is made up of people from all walks of life – including immigrants and refugees. An attack on immigrants and refugees is an attack on our people. We will not stand by and allow our immigrant family to be stripped of their rights, that’s why we are so proud to be a part of the national mobilization efforts on January 14 to stand with them.
Love is Love, the comics anthology honoring the victims of the shooting at Pulse, came out on Dec. 28, and it sure is beautiful.
The anthology, an ambitious undertaking that includes more than 300 writers and illustrators, is both a tribute to the victims of last year’s Pulse nightclub shooting in Florida ― the worst mass shooting in U.S. history ― and a therapeutic outlet for those living in its aftermath.
The 144-page comic offers vignettes ranging from personal essays and poems sharing grief, to more lighthearted strips reminding readers that being in the LGBTQ community is something worth celebrating. In one comic, writer Teddy Tenebaum makes the case that LGBTQ love is in fact different from straight love ― not because it’s less than it ― but because despite hatred that the LGBTQ community faces, their love endures. It’s “super-love.”
All proceeds for the comic book go to the LGBT organization Equality Florida, if you want to pick one up before your local comics shop runs out. (via the Huffington Post)
gentle reminder that bigender doesn’t just mean male and female, it can mean any two genders.
Also those genders don’t have to be simultaneous and static, they can be fluid and a bigender person can switch between two genders
Can someone please recommend me some wlw books with happy endings?
Allllllways. In YA, Of Fire and Stars by Audrey Coulthurst, Georgia Peaches and Other Forbidden Fruit by Jaye Robin Brown, Labyrinth Lost by Zoraida Cordova, Everything Leads to You by Nina LaCour, You Know Me Well by Nina LaCour and David Levithan, Ash by Malinda Lo, Under the Lights by Dahlia Adler, Style by Chelsea Cameron, Girl Mans Up by M-E Girard, and make sure you read Our Own Private Universe by Robin Talley when it comes out next month!
In NA, The Good Girls by Teresa Mummert, Treasure by Rebekah Weatherspoon, Out on Good Behavior by Dahlia Adler, The Belle vs. the BDoC by Amy Jo Cousins, Looking For a Complication by Tamsen Parker, and Black Iris and Cam Girl by Elliot Wake w/a Leah Raeder.
In Romance, Roller Girl by Vanessa North, The Final Rose by Eliza Lentzski, Certainly, Possibly You by Lissa Reed, and I have to pass along a friend’s favorite rec that I haven’t read yet, Poppy Jenkins by Clare Ashton!
pastel wlwoc moodboad for anon
“I am my own muse, I am the subject I know best. The subject I want to know better.” -Frida Kahlo
On the Washington, D.C. street where Mike Pence will be living before Inauguration Day, his new neighbors have begun displaying rainbow flags in protest.
According to one resident, Ilse Heintzen: “[It’s] a respectful message showing, in my case, my disagreement with some of his thinking. I have no idea what [the Vice-President Elect] will think about, but I hope he will change his mind.” So far, there are six flags and counting. Good on ya, D.C. (via WJLA)
I was able to see many parts of the quilt created in memorial of those who died of AIDS-related complications. Although AIDS itself is not a “gay disease” like many people assume, it did kill an incredibly large amount of gay people, and my community was greatly affected by it. Today there is a higher chance of survival for those diagnosed with HIV/AIDS because of different medications and funding for AIDS research, but we won’t ever forget those who lost their lives to AIDS.
Embracing your nonbinary gender is at least as much about joy as it is about relieving pain.
It’s about living a better life by being who you are.
Allow yourself to feel your emotions. You can feel pain when others expect you to be fine. You can feel happiness when others want you to feel misery.
Allow yourself to live your own life.
are you a:
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ nonbinary, (ง •̀_•́)ง nonbinary, (ง ᐛ )ง nonbinary, or (ू•ᴗ•ू❁) nonbinary
Kate McKinnon won the Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for SNL, and was the absolute cutest ever about it. She’s the first female SNL cast member to win since Gilda Radner in 1978.
support bi people who have a “type” that they’re attracted to
support bi people who have a different type for each gender
support bi people who don’t have a type
support bi people who fall in love easily
support bi people who are “picky”
support bi people who are serial monogamists and are always in a relationship
support bi people who like being single
support bi people who have sex
support bi(romantic) people who are ace or demi and bi(sexual) people who are celibate
support all bi people
My mother responded to me coming out with “oh, well, you’re bi, you should just choose to be straight, then. It would be a lot easier and you wouldn’t have to face any homophobia.” I think that my mother probably intended to be compassionate: after all, she’s a nice liberal who doesn’t consider herself to be homophobic in any way. But this still was, mm, not exactly a great way to respond to me coming out. And I’ve met quite a few other bisexuals whose parents responded similarly. I put the blame for that response squarely on “no one would choose to be gay” discourse. If you believe sincerely that gay people should be accepted because they didn’t choose it, because no one would live a gay life if they had another option, what happens to those of us who could be straight, if only we lied and repressed part of ourselves? Why would the compassionate response to us coming out be anything other than shoving us back in the closet as quickly as we can, for fear we might experience the tremendous suffering that is being queer? If no one would choose to be gay, then when we choose to be gay, we must be misinformed or simply making a mistake.
‘Born This Way’ Narratives Hurt Bi People | Thing of Things (via brutereason)