I’m smiling but I’m not joking 😆✊🏳️🌈💖
Keni

blake kathryn
Misplaced Lens Cap
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
YOU ARE THE REASON
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Andulka

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Monterey Bay Aquarium

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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@fobjv-not-in-order
I’m smiling but I’m not joking 😆✊🏳️🌈💖
So my high school’s drama club did The Bad Seed, a play about a child who brutally murders people. Later, the girl who played the part of the murderer was cast as a gay character and she refused to play the part because it “went against her morals”
People calling themselves hetero when they can’t even keep their morals straight
TBH if people on this website are gonna continue doing slur discourse (or TBH really any discourse on what words you can or cannot use) they really need to get a better understanding on how language actually functions in society+need to realize that there’s not just 2 sides to stuff, there’s always places you can find yourself in between 2 extremes and more often than not it’s somewhere in there that you’ll find the correct answer
Like the discourse on whether bi/pan girls can use dyke for example. Dyke is understood in larger society to mean lesbian. If someone walks up to you and introduces themselves as a dyke, then it’s reasonable to assume that they’re a lesbian, and it’d also be reasonable to be upset, angry, and/or confused if they later revealed they’re bi or pan and in fact not a lesbian. After all, if they’re going around to everyone introducing themselves as a dyke they’ll be assumed to be a lesbian by all those people, but then if they were to go and flirt with/enter in a relationship with/etc a man it could reinforce lesbophobic beliefs that lesbians can be turned straight by the right man, which then enters similar Problematic™ territory that would come if those women were just straight up calling themselves lesbians.
But at the same time, dyke is a slur used against bi and pan women. And it’s not used against them because they’re “”“mistaken for lesbians,”“” it’s used against them because they’re correctly perceived as wlw. So is it really fair to say that if a bi or pan woman says dyke she’s evil, she’s awful, blah blah whatever? Would it be that wrong for her to turn around and shout “hell yeah I’m a dyke, fuck off!”? Is it wrong for them to find solidarity with lesbians in posts we write about loving women in which we refer to ourselves as dykes? Would it be wrong to joke about being a dyke, similarly to how lesbians do, in groups where everyone is aware that they’re not a lesbian and not using dyke to mean lesbian? And if any of these things are that wrong, why?
And like, I know y'all are about to say “oh, so those straight girls who get called dykes can reclaim it now too, huh?” Because Tumblr hates nuance and can’t accept that context is important. But anyways, no, that’s not at all what I’m saying! When straight girls (or non-wlw in general) are called dykes the insult is that they’re appearing as a lesbian, which is insulting to them because the act of being a lesbian is supposed to be insulting and oh no, obviously I am not a lesbian, blah blah whatever. On the other hand, when a bi or pan woman is called a dyke what’s being insulted is her actual, present attraction to women. When a straight woman is called a dyke the insult is that she’s being compared to a monster, when a bi or pan woman is called a dyke she is the monster. Similar to the difference between a straight person calling a fellow straight person gay vs calling a gay person gay. Obviously the intent and the impact of those interactions are not the same.
And I know that this isn’t a very concise post or whatever but anyways the point is like, context for these things matters. And you can’t really make sweeping statements for every situation. We all need to think more about each other’s experiences and now they may affect our relationships to these things, and also we all need to be more respectful of each other’s spaces and pain. And like this was specifically about dyke, but honestly replace the slur and groups, and change a few things for context, and pretty similar arguments can be made for,,,,,,a lot of LGBT+ terminology
Also in general all this intracommunity fighting is,,,, how do you say,,,,,, bullshit. Stop yelling at lesbians for being wary of bi and pan girls calling themselves dyke all the time, stop yelling at bi and pan girls who do reclaim it in some situations, and just in general stop yelling at anyone about anything. If we stop doing that we can focus on what really matters, like cannibalizing the straights.
Like…where’s the lie though?? 👀☕️
whenever people say that butches are trying to act or dress like men, it makes me realize how much they don’t believe that we can exist, and how deeply people have internalized the belief that what patriarchy approves as appropriate femininity *defines* what it means to be a woman the role models I am looking to for inspiration aren’t men - they’re *butches*. butch elders who have fought and bled and died just to be able to exist, who have put in the work and the time and who have suffered and whose subjectivity is like mine not men. what do men have to do with being butch? butchness means lesbianism. at the end of the day, butchness is always only by and for and about women and their love for women.
“I will be your doom!”
Hayley Kiyoko by Jack Alexander for Gay Times (2018)
Hey I’m sure it get asked this a lot so I’m sorry but what’s your official Spotify? I just wanted to find all the playlists on your master post! (Again sorry if you’ve answered this a million times I’m just curious!) - kath
Don’t be sorry! I’m IrisSkye on there, and here’s the link. I also have google spreadsheets for Queer Musicians and Queer Animation. These are some explanations about the playlists I have:
a-ok town - satirical pop for the end of the world
american idiot - songs about american politics
big bisexual pride - songs with explicitly bisexual lyrics
dress codes for small towns - growing up different in a place where everybody seems to be the same
dysfunctional family - for those of us who will maybe never be able to figure out if their childhood was abusive or not
feminist electronic - literally just electronic girl power themed music
gay pride - my personal fav gay songs
gun control. - pro-gun control anthems
lifestyle - songs about living life the way u want
maybe atheist - music questioning god for every queer kid whos been burned by religion
misfits - (mostly queer coded) songs about not fitting in
mlm - gay music for queer men
nb/t - songs about being trans or nonbinary
out foreign - gay music not in english
subtly queer - gay music u can listen to w/ your grandma
twentydyketeen - gay songs released circa 2019
twentygayteen - gay songs released circa 2018
wlw - gay music for queer women + wlw alt, wlw hiphop/r&b, wlw pop, wlw history, and wlw rock
Sam & Rose
Hearts Beat Loud (2018)
You told me to be brave and I will remember that.
Hearts Beat Loud (2018) dir. Brett Haley
she listens to mitski for the very first time in her life and then immediately goes and writes an emotionally charged song about her girlfriend
Sasha Lane and Kiersey Clemons from ‘Hearts Beat Loud’ attend The IMDb Studio at The Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2018 in Park City, Utah
Kiersey Clemons and Sasha Lane on playing lovers in Hearts Beat Loud (2018)
“Wanna burn your memory in the back of my mind. / So I see your face when I close my eyes”?
Hearts Beat Loud (2018)
Kiersey Clemons & Sasha Lane in Hearts Beat Loud (2018) dir. Brett Haley
I don’t want to be in a band. And even if I did, I’m not going to be in one with my dad.
Hearts Beat Loud || dir. Brett Haley || 2018