i thought we were going to fix me together
but i didn’t know you were the one who broke me
will byers stan first human second

blake kathryn
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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One Nice Bug Per Day
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JBB: An Artblog!

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@julihelms
i thought we were going to fix me together
but i didn’t know you were the one who broke me
Yes
“When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, “Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.” -Fred Rogers Donate to the ACLU
Tulsa Elementary School Teacher Rebecca Lee:
”Today at school, our staff decided we needed to press pause and create a space for kids to share their thoughts and feelings in response to the killing of Mr. Crutcher. I was part of facilitating three small group discussions throughout the day: a fifth grade group, a sixth grade group, and a seventh/eighth grade group. I want to share what I experienced with the kids today, because I am convinced that if you can put yourself in the shoes of a child of color in Tulsa right now, you will have a clearer understanding of the crisis we’re facing and why we say black lives matter. —
1. I look at the wide-eyed faces of the fifth graders surrounding me: 10 and 11 year olds, waiting to hear what I had to say. I tell them we will read a news article about the shooting together so we can all be informed. As I read, the students busily highlight and underline parts that stand out to them: Fatally shot. Hands raised. “Bad dude.” Motionless. Affected forever. I finish and I ask them, “What are your thoughts?”
They answer with questions. Why did they have to kill him? Why were they afraid of him? Why does [student] have to live life without a father? What will she do at father daughter dances? Who will walk her down the aisle? Why did no one help him after he was shot? Hasn’t this happened before? Can we write her cards? Can we protest?
As the questions roll, so do the tears. Students cry softly as they speak. Others weep openly. I watch 10 year olds pass tissues to each other, to me, to our principal as he joins our circle. One girl closes our group by sharing: “I wish white people could give us a chance. We can all come together and get along. We can all be united.” Let me tell you, these 10 year olds are more articulate about this than I am.
We agree to love one another, to take care of one another. I tell each of them that I am white and I love them and they matter to me.
2. The group of sixth grade girls that surround me are either red-eyed or withdrawn. They sit next to Mr. Crutcher’s daughter in class. They are her friends. Nearly every student has a tissue as we read the article together. When I open the floor for discussion: silence. It hurts to talk about. It hurts to think about. It hurts.
I fight the urge to fill the dead air with my voice. A few quiet words are whispered about sadness and unfairness, but the rest of the time is spent wiping eyes and hugging one another. It becomes clear that no one else is in a place to speak. I give them the space to process silently. Then I tell them, “We have different skin colors. I love you. You matter. You are worthy. You are human. You are valuable.” Shoulders shake harder around the circle. I realize that this is the first time all year I have affirmed my love for them.
The rest of the cafeteria is hushed. The sixth graders are quiet. The tragedy lives and breathes among them. It could have been their father. Boys are scattered across the cafeteria with their heads buried in their shirts. A girl who just moved to Tulsa from New Orleans because her father wanted to “escape the violence” is choked up as she speaks in the group next to mine. When we come back together whole group, one boy is still crying as another rubs his hand on his back soothingly.
3. These students are older– thirteen and fourteen. They are hardened. They are angry. Some students refuse to hold or look at the article. The speak matter-of-factly. One says she feels like punching someone in the nose.
Another student says, “I used to read about this happening and think, oh that’s sad, and then kind of forget about it. But this happened so close to home. It feels real now. I take 36th St N to and from school everyday. It happened right by my house.”
“What made him ‘a big bad dude?’” a boy asks. “Was it his height? His size–” I look at the boys in my circle, all former students of mine. They have grown inches since their first day in my class. Their voices have deepened. Their shoulders broadened. They all nod their heads in agreement at the student’s last guess– “The color of his skin?”
—
I share this story, because Mr. Crutcher’s death does not just affect the students at my school. I share this story, because we are creating an identity crisis in all of our black and brown students. (Do I matter? Am I to be feared? Should I live in fear? Am I human?) We are shaping their world view with blood and bullets, hashtags and viral videos. Is this how we want them to feel? Is this how we want them to think?
I share this story because I spent the last two years teaching kids that we write to interact with and understand the world, that our voices matter and that our voices deserve to be heard.
I share this story, because while I could never capture the articulate things kids said or the raw emotions students shared today, my privilege requires that I speak. I ask that you read. I ask that you use whatever privilege or platform you have to speak. I ask that you put yourself in the shoes of black and brown children growing up in a world where they see videos of their classmate’s father shot and bleeding in the street.
I ask that you love and love hard.”
See Ms. Rebecca Lee’s original post here.
Currently, Letters to Strangers is reblogging and sharing words related to the fatal Keith Lamont Scott and Terence Crutcher shootings as well as other similar incidents in the United States. In a world trembling with fear and division, we hope to let humanity shine through by sharing these often painful but just as often necessary stories. Sometimes it’s important to just listen, not to media exacerbating yellow journalism but to those who’ve been trying for so long to be heard that their voices are now hoarse.
We do not claim ownership of any stories we reblog/share, and will always strive to give due credit. Please contact us if you have any concerns or questions.
“When song itches my throat I rip down window shutters and turn off the lights so no one can hear my voice but the dust dancing in sunlight. When I have a dream I cradle it gingerly in the smoke whistling out of my ventricles and it's spiked there, restless and fidgeting until eventually the smoke swallows it or I do. When I think about things I plaster my thoughts to the walls of my brain like peeling paint until they drift in flakes onto my tongue, waiting to be melted into streams gushing out of my lips but I’ve never known snow, I’ve never known how to turn flakes into streams and thoughts into words.”
excerpt from
Conquering Depression: My Letter to a Braver Self
Sharing because fuck it so I’ll pixelate myself for something real (so ironic)
I think the last time I went on tumblr was forever ago
Here’s to all my boys with love handles, stretch marks, ribs that show, who feel they are too big or too small, who feel “unmanly,” who have cellulite, who can’t grow facial hair, who can’t seem to gain weight or lose it, who feel “too short” or wish they looked like a male model. Y'all matter. Love you. 💕
This reassures me very much. :D
Sarah McBride just shut down Clint Eastwood’s defense of Donald Trump’s racism.
The National Press Secretary of @humanrightscampaign and first openly transgender speaker at a national party convention, wasn’t willing to let Eastwood’s comments slide.
See the rest of her list here.
Alexandra kern - http://portfolios.collegeforcreativestudies.edu/kernalexandra - https://www.behance.net/kernalexandra - https://society6.com/zandraart - http://zandraart.tumblr.com - https://www.facebook.com/pages/ZandraArt/603985163053480 - http://www.redbubble.com/people/zandraart/shop - https://twitter.com/zandraartt - https://www.instagram.com/zandraart - http://zandraart.deviantart.com - https://www.facebook.com/pages/ZandraArt/603985163053480
it absolutely could be!
Haiku to an ex-lover
My dear, I will not collapse constellations for your entertainment
I found a pun that works in both English and Spanish
Where do cats go when they die? Purrgatory.
¿De dónde van los gatos cuando mueren? Purgatorio.
Dude it works also in Italian! ‘Dove vanno i gatti quando muoiono? Nel purGATTOrio’
could also work in french: “où vont les chats quand ils meurent? Au purCHATtoire”
The ultimate pun
IT ALSO WORKS IN PORTUGUESE
“Para onde os gatos vão quando morrem? Para o purGATOrio”
WE HAVE ACHIEVED PEAK PUN
The pun heard ‘round the world.
This is what we’ve all been waiting for.
Long time, no see! Dorothy and I kept on having schedule conflicts on shoot days. :( But we’re back! This time with some tips on how to transition from winter to spring fashion. Here is ¼ outfits! [Read the post here]
Black Blazer: Kenzie (Nordstrom) // Magenta Peplum Tank: American Eagle // Boyfriend Jeans: American Eagle // Initial Bar Necklace:Nectar // 3 Triangle Necklace: Forever 21
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Happy belated Holi! Want to learn all about this colorful Indian tradition? We feature Ambika on the blog today to tell us all about the origin and celebrations of Holi, [link here]
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It’s gross and disturbing that the judge referred to Kesha as an investment. She’s a human being for fucks sake. And she’s a victim. Today is another sad reminder that courts rarely protect victims. Fuck Sony. Fuck Dr. Luke. And fuck any artist who works with him and puts money and fame ahead of being an ally for survivors.
I’ve been grated down to just about zero faith in our justice system for rape survivors. I often hear people demand survivors to report/press charges to handle their sexual assault; these people want to believe that justice will be served if only victims would just go through the system. But the system doesn’t work. It does. Not. Work.
Our system repeatedly, consistently, faithfully protects predators and abusers. Very rarely is there justice. And in the grueling process of pressing charges, we ask survivors to relive their trauma over and over - not just to a court of law, but to a court of public opinion. We ask survivors to undergo character assassination, victim blaming, moralizing, and to go up against people who care more about preserving wealth, status, and power – for months and sometimes years while the case is open. And after all that, they get nothing. Or worse, in Kesha’s case, a ruling that contractually binds you to your rapist for 6 more albums.
#FREEKESHA (petition here)