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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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@lucerotumbles
the overwhelming grief of losing an entire year to sickness, violence and pandemic fatigue is settling in so id like to remind everyone that: you are not a failure, yes there is still a happy future for you, and wearing a mask is very sexy
what if we could connect our spotifys to tumblr like we can to discord. i could see what my mutuals are listening to. wouldn’t that be absolutely fucking terrible. worst idea ever.
i dont really… WANT… to leave tumblr. ive been here since 2011
no other platform has the right format for me to just randomly barf actual thoughts, joaks, and genuine creative content all in the same breath. i dont know how to compartmentalize
every other platform you gotta be a real person. Here you are you’re icon and username and whatever your hyperfixation is at the current moment
sometimes,,, we eat ONE of every flavor of OTTER POPS to COPE because the cold, sweet, cylinder is comforting
I have no idea what the fuck I was on when I posted this but;;; mood!
when the Yearning hits you hard
sometimes,,, we eat ONE of every flavor of OTTER POPS to COPE because the cold, sweet, cylinder is comforting
This, though. This is exactly what’s wrong with white people.
This is why shit like Trump happens.
You don’t “agree to disagree” with a rapist, or a racist, or fascist, or a white supremacist.
You agree to disagree about if banana bread is better with or without walnuts.
You agree to disagree if Venus or Serena Williams is the greatest.
You agree to disagree if a sunrise is more beautiful than a sunset.
You don’t agree to disagree about hurting people.
You just don’t.
So fuck your “agree to disagree.”
I am no mans dream girl. No man could ever imagine and create a woman as complex and beautiful as me.
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) | Captain Marvel (2019)
It had been long enough since I had seen the former that I hadn’t picked up on the similarities. Even the exit from the parking lot!
“But Carol’s a villlaaaaaiinnnn thoooooouuugh”
You know, that scene in Captain Marvel and how some men are reacting to it? Is the first time I’ve ever seen so clearly a part of the population who are so far from the target audience that they have no clue what’s going on.
Putting aside the obvious call backs to Terminator 2, what that scene was set up to be is so clearly obviously that you’d be hard pressed to find a woman who doesn’t understand exactly what type of fantasy was being expressed.
That entire scene? It’s a power fantasy. It’s aimed directly at women who get often targeted by men who choose victims that they know won’t make them face consequences for their obnoxious behaviour and actions. Carol, in that scene, looks exactly like an easy target for that man, it’s why he chooses to behave that way. It’s a scenario that many, many women have had to live through - have had to smile and pretend we’re okay with through. And so Carol flipping the script on that man, forcing him down, forcing him to be as scared as WE have been…
It’s such an obvious power fantasy - a very nice pandering that we only occasionally get in films. Which is why seeing it go straight above the heads of some people (men, it seems to have gone above the heads of men, lets just say that out right) is so hilarious.
I guess it’s hilarious because everybody else have watched male power fantasies for so many years that even if it never related to us, we still knew what it meant and the first time these people have had to see a female power fantasy they tripped before they even get to the starting gate.
I’m putting this reaction next to the “Women don’t enjoy sex” tweet and the “Captain Marvel is over powered” (doesn’t blink at Thor and his ability to literally move an entire space station or withstand the blast of a dwarf star) reactions. Like you don’t often see people self burn and show you how deeply, deeply bad they are in bed, in life and in human interactions. So when you do, you should treasure it (and avoid those people).
i said, NOTHING fucks with my baby *chainsaw revving sound*
The biggest problem with every single bad review of Captain Marvel coming from a man is that none of them seem to comprehend a narrative that isn’t meant for them.
They see Carol finally breaking free from being gaslighted by the Kree as “emotionally underwhelming,” never realizing that a climactic, emotional showdown with her abuser would be giving him exactly what he wants. Being in control of her emotions? Choosing not to react to a provocation? That’s strength most male comic fans don’t understand. They see masculine-coded strength as the only valid kind. Carol not being angry and putting Yon-Rogg down in a shonen-esque battle doesn’t make sense to them because it’s not what they would have done.
They see a woman struggling to work through lies she’d been told as “bad narrative structure,” when in reality the movie was never about building Carol up from nothing, but about her realizing her true potential through seeing past those lies. Carol’s character arc parallels many women attaining social consciousness, throwing off patriarchal lies they’d been conditioned to accept about who they are and what they can do. Her story isn’t about attaining power, but about embracing her true potential that had been deliberately hidden from her.
They see Carol’s emotions not lining up with the lies her abusers told her about being too emotional as “bad writing” or “bad acting,” never realizing that that was exactly the point. They only understand defiance as impassioned, outward battles of will and pride, not understanding that quiet, steadfast refusal to bend to others’ designs of who you should be is strength too.
Brie Larson was absolutely right. Carol’s story is not for men. And nothing proves that more than all the fanboys who didn’t understand it throwing fits on the internet.
No Plan by Hozier but you’re sitting on an empty beach, looking out on the sea
(best with headphones)
my new favorite hobby is looking at fucked up easter lamb cakes.
those were supposed to be lambs?
I thought these were all misshapen dogs
These are only ever beaten by the terrible attempts at hedgehog cakes that I so often google to feel better about my baking ability.
cursed
WHY do they think TEETH will save it?
oh my fucking god that last one sent me into a fit
Black Maternal Health Week: Why We Can’t Be Silent
One patient’s Black maternal health journey taught her that her personal experience was actually systemic.
This post is by Neatrice Holmes, a Planned Parenthood volunteer in Baltimore. We’re sharing it as part of Black Maternal Health Week — an initiative spearheaded by the Black Mamas Matter Alliance (BMMA) in which Planned Parenthood is joining patients, providers, and advocates across the country in lifting up the need for maternal health research that centers Black women.
Last June, I found out I was seven weeks pregnant. I’d always been told by doctors that I couldn’t have children, so this was completely unexpected. I was excited to embark on this new journey, and to raise a child with my partner. My first meeting with my obstetrician seemed normal and routine. We went through all the regular tests and I was told that my pregnancy was considered “high risk” because of my age. Though I had wanted a Black doctor, like my usual primary-care physician, I still left feeling confident that I was in good hands.
By the second appointment, everything had shifted.
Though my obstetrician was great, it was clear that other people in the hospital didn’t care. Suddenly my prenatal visits were rushed, tense, and demeaning. Despite being a pregnant patient over the age of 35, nurses weren’t taking my concerns seriously. Questions I had about aches and pains were dismissed. They didn’t treat me as a high-risk patient and I didn’t get the care I deserved.
When I went to get genetic testing, I was told there was an abnormality and if I had a baby, it might not live. It was only when I started asking questions and advocating for myself that the counselor admitted there was a margin of error and there were other, more precise tests we could do.
I was also subject to pre-judging. They automatically assumed I did not have insurance or used Medicaid, even though I have a full-time job as an insurance manager, working with patients with kidney disease, and have medical coverage through my employer. When I started wearing scrubs in an effort to be more comfortable, the assumption was that I didn’t have a college degree and worked in a hospital as an assistant. Of course, if any of those things were true, I would have still deserved competent medical care –– what stung was that they didn’t take the time to ask about my situation or experiences. They took one look at me and wrote my story themselves. That’s not how health care should work.
They didn’t take the time to ask about my situation or experiences. They took one look at me and wrote my story themselves. That’s not how health care should work.
Near the end of the first trimester, I was sent to another hospital for a fetal echocardiogram. My partner and I arrived anxious and excited to hear the heartbeat. We couldn’t have imagined what was to come.
As I took my clothes off, the doctor noticed a scar I have from a medical procedure and screeched, “what is THAT?” I’m very sensitive to touch and when I recoiled slightly as she was touching me, she coldly asked why I was flinching –– completely oblivious to the fact that every patient is different.
The ultrasound showed there was no heartbeat, and my heart sunk. There was no compassion in the doctor’s voice when she gave me the news and none when I frantically asked if they could check again.
My head spun as my partner started crying and my body had an immediate physical response to the trauma: I began vomiting on the table.
All the doctor said was, “Why are you throwing up? Are you sick?”
As I dragged myself to the bathroom, my doctor made no move to assist me, no move to console my partner.
The doctor called for three nurses and as they peered in on me in the bathroom – by now throwing up and dealing with diarrhea –– all they said was, “what’s wrong?”
What’s wrong? What’s wrong?
The ultrasound showed there was no heartbeat, and my heart sunk. There was no compassion in the doctor’s voice when she gave me the news.
I had just found that the future I had imagined with my baby was over. My body was convulsing. My partner and I were being treated like we were worthless, without an ounce of compassion. And they were asking me what was wrong.
I was told I would need to have a dilation and curettage procedure, and sent home with medication to soften my cervix. I was told I’d experience some minor cramps that could expel some fetal tissue. They said to call the on-call nurse if I had any issues.
What they didn’t say was that there was a possibility I could have labor-like cramps that would cause me to expel nearly all the fetal tissue at home. At 3 a.m. the next morning, I began bleeding.
Completely unprepared, I woke my partner and made my way to the bathroom. I waited at first to call the on-call nurse, even as the pain of my cramps grew and grew. I had no idea that this wasn’t normal. I waited as long as I could, until the cramps became so acute that it felt like labor — until I had a miscarriage.
Distraught, I finally made the call but the nurse said to only come in if I couldn’t control the bleeding, adding: “… but it doesn’t sound like you need to come in.”
I felt like me and my child were thrown away –– and no one should have to feel like that.
I expected that I could have a service, to honor the life I had planned to bring into this world. But I never even got the option. When I brought the remains of my pregnancy in the next day, the hospital lost them during routine lab work. To this day, I don’t understand how that could happen but I was too depressed to push the issue.
I felt like me and my child were thrown away –– and no one should have to feel like that.
It wasn’t until I had this experience that I started learning more about Black women’s maternal health. I kept buying books and researching –– and learned that what I thought was a personal experience was actually systemic.
Black women are dying at a rapid rate, and even more are having traumatic maternal health experiences. In too many cases, racism and implicit bias are to blame. There’s a long history of medical mistreatment of Black people in this country, rooted in slavery. Doctors and nurses think we have a superpower for pain; they think we’re workhorses; they even used to experiment on us.
It’s hard to put into words just how I was treated. So much of it was in the little details that are felt so clearly but impossible to prove. I’m sharing my story because as horrifying as it is, I know that some women have even died from poor maternal health care. It’s crucial that we shine a light on this and hold health care providers accountable.
Black women and Black mothers deserve better. And we won’t be silent until we have the health care we deserve.
Neatrice Holmes is a storyteller from Baltimore, Maryland, where she volunteers with her local Planned Parenthood. Currently she is an insurance counselor, community healing advocate, community activist, Reiki practitioner, and LEAP (Listen, Empathize, Agree, Partner) trainer with the LEAP Institute. She was inspired to share her story and fight for reproductive health care when Senator Kamala Harris introduced a bill aimed at reducing racial disparities in maternal mortality among Black women.
remember when you were a kid and whenever your parents came into the room while you were doing something for pleasure like looking at something on the computer or watching tv and you’d immediately close the thing like you’d just been caught watching porn when you were actually doing nothing wrong this post was made by strict parents with no boundaries gang
Some people 👀 have no faith 🙅🙏 but not us 😤😤 reblog if YOU ✊ are not afraid to have Jesus ✝️ on your blog 🙏