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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
YOU ARE THE REASON

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Stranger Things
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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Cosimo Galluzzi

izzy's playlists!
sheepfilms
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Sade Olutola
DEAR READER
Keni

Andulka

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One Nice Bug Per Day

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@kikkigylden
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Attic apartment
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Her (2013), dir. Spike Jonze
JOIN THE INTROVERTNATION MOVEMENT
Loving yourself is not (necessarily):
Thinking youâre gorgeous
Not wanting to change anything about your body, personality, or life
Loving yourself is:
Knowing you have inherent worth regardless of your physical appearance or life circumstance
Knowing you deserve good things
Wanting to take care of yourself because you deserve good things
Scandinavian apartment
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âI type out a thoughtful, long text or an honest, revealing status but then donât send it, or delete it after 2 minutes because Iâm embarrassed. And afraid. What would people say! No one wants to tell the truth so instead we reveal it in small ways, maybe letting it all spill when weâre drinking or naked or sleepy or too sad to hide it anymore. I want people to accept me but I donât want to tell the truth. I want to have my needs met (and grow bitter when theyâre not) but am too afraid to lay them out. My life has always revolved around others validation so itâs easy to forget that I am totally ok without approval. To be unapologetic to me is not to live above terror. It is to not let it control me. To push myself to say what is hard and honest, even when it feels potentially self-shattering. Or relationship crumbling. My affirmation for this month is: Let what may be ruined by the truth shatter. I am open and attentive to critiques, but I do not need to make everyone like me. The only way to do so is to be watered down & I have no interest in being anything but my full self. Audre Lordeâs "the power of language into actionâ was close to my heart while writing this. Hereâs to basking in terror and in honesty. Thank you for the shirt, @babe.wear âą #unapologeticbabe #babewear â - @lora.mathis One of my very favorite IG-ers sporting the #unapologetic jersey đ #shinetheory #feminism #loramathis #girlssupportinggirls # (at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma)
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Book of the week:Â The Opportunist by Tarryn Fisher
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Are you a TEXTROVERT?
JOIN THE INTROVERT NATION MOVEMENT
nobody talks about how ugly taking care of yourself can be
yes, sometimes itâs taking a warm bath and texting memes to friends and keeping an aesthetically pretty journal.
sometimes itâs crying silently on your couch at 3am, hugging yourself and reminding yourself that youâre a good person.
self care is not always âaestheticâ and cuteâŠand thatâs ok. donât be embarrassed, just do what you need to do.
iâm tired of âhow to help a partner with [x mental illness]â guides that assume that the other partner has no issues of any kind; i want more discussion of how to balance the differing mental health needs of multiple people in a relationship
So my partner and I have been together almost two years, and we both suffer from anxiety, BPD, and a handful of other mental illnesses, and hereâs some things that help us out immensely.
communication is key. Tell your partner if youâre having a bad day. Listen when your partner says theyâre having a bad day. Itâs easier to be careful with someone when you know theyâre already having a bad day. I canât stress this enough - communication is always important in relationships; but itâs doubly so when one or both of you has a mental illness. You have to trust your partner to be able to be honest with you about what theyâre feeling and how their illness is affecting them, and you need to be honest with them, too. ask questions. If your partner is struggling, asking them questions to help you understand how to help them can be good. Remember that âI donât knowâ is a valid answer, and it is one that you can also give. be reminders for each other. It can be super hard to remember to do simple things for yourself; it can be easier to remember to remind your partner to do them. My partner reminds me about medication, food, etc., and I do the same for him - it helps a lot. use safewords. And I donât mean in the kinky sense. My partner and I have a series of words that mean different things, because sometimes it can be hard to say âIâm swingingâ or âIâm having a panic attackâ or âthis subject is upsetting me for x y zâ reason. Itâs easier to say one syllable - âswingâ for rapidly cycling emotions, âcountâ for panic attacks (so one of us can count breaths for the other). We have words that mean âdrop this subject nowâ and words that mean âplease donât touch meâ. We also have hand signals for days when one or both of us are nonverbal, and we revert to texting on those days. be willing to give each other space.  But donât necessarily go far. If you need your space, tell your partner; if your partner needs their space, make sure they can still access you. acknowledge each otherâs illness. Donât pretend it isnât there. Ignoring it doesnât make it go away. Acknowledge that theyâre there, acknowledge that sometimes they may come in conflict with each other, and learn how to take a step back when it becomes a problem. call each other out. If your partner is repeatedly doing things that are detrimental to themselves/your relationship/you, call them on it. Donât do it in an asshole way - just sit down with them and be like âhey, youâve been doing this thing that is really sucky lately, and it needs to stop.â Likewise, listen when youâre being called out. Itâs really easy to get stuck in shitty loops when your brain is sick, and sometimes you donât know what youâre doing âtil someone points it out. This hurts! And it sucks! But itâs part of acknowledging your illnesses. It doesnât do any good to let bad habits continue, even if thereâs a reason theyâre happening. learn to forgive. When youâve both got brain issues going on, itâs inevitable that people are going to say things they donât mean, and that is going to hurt. The important thing is being able to recognize when youâve messed up and apologize sincerely, and accept it when your partner apologizes. These are just some things that work for us. Add to the list if you can and I hope this helps.
Attic apartment with industrial glass wall
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If you see beauty in something, donât wait for others to agree.
Sherihan Gamal (via wordsnquotes)
âThe narrative surrounding us against them does not ever work. Violence does not work. Aggression does not work. Anger can be transmuted into fuel so that we can show up with passion. But that passion has to be grounded and rooted in compassion, and love, and prayer.â â Shailene Woodley speaks onstage during the We Stand United NYC Rally outside Trump Tower on January 19, 2017