Not Roommates ❤️🧡🤍🩷💜
Happy Pride to All the Girls!!! 🌈🏳️⚧️🥰

JBB: An Artblog!
cherry valley forever
hello vonnie
Stranger Things
No title available
Cosimo Galluzzi

@theartofmadeline
we're not kids anymore.
h
RMH
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Xuebing Du
Misplaced Lens Cap
Today's Document
YOU ARE THE REASON

oozey mess
Three Goblin Art
Keni
No title available

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Mexico
seen from Azerbaijan
seen from Türkiye

seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from France

seen from France

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia
@justdanicalifornia
Not Roommates ❤️🧡🤍🩷💜
Happy Pride to All the Girls!!! 🌈🏳️⚧️🥰
This moment is so SO impactful for a number of reasons.
In any other show, wearing a mask would be shown as something toxic that Hunter needed to move away from, and rejecting the mask would be a sign of him healing. Him using it would be considered a crutch, something he should look past and learn to be confident without. And while that’s good symbolism for his journey of healing, growth, and separation from his trauma… I like this a lot better for the messages it teaches.
Hunter doesn’t feel safe in this moment, and so Luz looks around and tries to find a solution that would make him more comfortable. And it helps! Tactically speaking it won’t actually do anything to hide their identity or protect their faces, but it makes Hunter less afraid. Needing to wear a kids halloween mask might seem silly and childish, but it isn’t played for laughs in the show and Hunter isn’t judged for it. Luz even wears a mask as well so he won’t be alone or feel self-conscious.
As much as being the Golden Guard hurt him, it’s what he’s used to and an identity he could feel confident in.
The message I took away most from the Owl House is that sometimes people need to do things differently in order to get the same results in a comfortable and safe way. This is shown everywhere. Luz uses glyphs and paper to do magic, Gus flies his staff in a different way, Eda takes her Elixir, Principal Bump uses his palisman to help see- and Hunter needs to wear a mask to help him feel confident enough to fight Belos.
Hunter finds things difficult, and so Luz offers a creative solution to accommodate his PTSD and make him feel safe.
This is a great metaphor for disabled and specifically neurodivergent people, and can be applied to things in the real world like mobility aids, medicine, and access arrangements. A kid shouldn’t be judged for needing extra time in an exam, or needing headphones or earplugs in loud spaces, or needing to wear certain clothes and do certain things to make them feel safe and confident.
It’s just such a great moment that didn’t necessarily need to be included to make the story work, but felt realistic for the characters. This scene felt so comforting for me as someone who has in the past worried about being judged and seeming childish and silly for needing accommodations, and has struggled with letting myself do things that make the world more accessible- and make me feel more safe.
trust that everything will fall into place without you forcing it there.
I hope you all get laid soon, for your own mental health
nonchalance turns me off so badly. give me obsession on the brink of depravity or give me nothing
Ah yes, the 3 genders. Male, female, and “what the fuck are you, a cop?”
More of these green lesbians please
OH MY GOD IT ACTUALLY HAPPENED MITSUAYA HAVE FINALLY KISSED AFTER 116 CHAPTERS LETS GO LESBIANS LETS GOOOOO
The Guy She Was Interested In Wasn't a Guy At All 💚 Anime Announcement PV
NEW MITSUAYA CONTENT VIA INSTAGRAM!!! 💚🤍
sumiko's says they're inspired by Maddy + Rue, can't get enough of those two lovebirds (by agu_knzm)
genuinely me and who man
"something finally goes right for him" guys we are getting that endgame TRUST like there is no fucking way we aren't
Sara Ramirez In Grey's Anatomy: The Impact Of Their LGBTQ+ Representation
Sara Ramirez Overview
Sara Elena Ramírez, known Sara Ramirez, was born in Mazatlán, Sinaloa, Mexico, in 1975. By the age of eight, they moved to the US, specifically San Diego, California. Their personal journey includes embracing a queer identity in their twenties and subsequently identifying as non-binary. They were also a celebrated American actor and singer, who recently came into the limelight due to their role as Che Diaz in And Just Like That… Beyond their screen presence, they were also known for their fierce advocacy for the LGBTQ+ community.
When it comes to LGBTQ+ representation, the B or bisexual, was often overlooked in movies and television and as Sara Ramirez’s Dr. Callie Torres said it best in Grey’s Anatomy, The actor impacted television when the network television character opened up an often overlooked narrative before Sara Ramirez later came out as bisexual and nonbinary in the public eye. Following the character’s exit from Grey’s Anatomy, they were reflecting on their journey. As the years went on, Sara Ramirez said to the creator, Shonda Rhimes, that they had never seen a bisexual character played on TV, not in a way that embraces bisexuality, but they thought that their chance to speak up. Read Full Article
Carina DeLuca | Grey's Anatomy - Season 14 Episodes 1 & 2
SOPHIA BUSH as CASS BECKMAN Grey's Anatomy (Season 21 Episode 8)