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@prayandgay
When I realize im officially an RM 😱🤢 || NOT CLICKBAIT !!!
You are not immune to shrinking Jesus down to your specific pet virtues and ignoring the parts of Him you don't like.
Saw a kid at breakfast here at FSY and they were making a lesbian flag bracelet. I complimented it (clocked the nonbinary and rainbow flags, and another lesbian one) and they were like "I was going for a sunset vibes"
Literally me:
(Disclaimer for my job I did not discuss "sensitive topics" with a youth I just said "oh trust me I get it" and walked away)
like at least 50% of internet lgbt discourse would evaporate if people quit using the term "spaces" when they mean "discord servers" or "tumblr blogs" because we would collectively realize how stupid that shit is
“this is a lesbian-only space” no this is the tiktok comments on a chappell roan video
A HANDY CHART FOR THOSE OF YOU WONDERING WHAT THE FUCK IS UP WITH THESE. NOTE THAT THESE ARE ALL THE INFORMAL AND YOU IS THE FORMAL SO LIKE YOU WOULD ALWAYS ADDRESS YOUR SUPERIOR/ OLDER PERSON/ SOCIAL BETTER WITH YOU BUT WITH YOUR BUDS YOU CAN USE THESE.
I’m not sure I knew the thy/thine distinction. Thanks for this!
THINE IS ALSO GRAMMATICALLY EQUIVALENT TO YOURS.
“It is yours” and “It is thine” differ only in their level of formality.
FACTS!
On 'Ritual Rest' in Religion...
I have been thinking lately about a practice I've begun to label 'ritual rest.'
Years ago, while I was a wee Lullabyes studying at a Catholic school (a long but fun story for later), the Mother Superior told me that women used to be 'churched' after childbirth - and in many cultures still are. When I asked why, she got this conspiratorial twinkle in her eyes and whispered that it was partly so their husbands would not pressure them for sex immediately after giving birth.
At the time, wee Lullabyes filed this away under 'quaint Catholic things,' and went on with her wee life. But age, time and circumstances have made me think about it again and again over the years.
Last year, having spent an extended time in rural Turkey (another long and very fun story), I noticed similar rhythms around women’s bodies. Menstruating women do not pray or fast. Postpartum women are treated as being in a protected forty-day state. There are rules, exemptions, customs, taboos, aunties with soups, warnings, and general fussing.
Some of it is religious. Some of it is folk belief.
Most of it is women enforcing on other women the wisdom of what my Gran Madda used to call 'siddown before ya fall down.'
While wee, I also spent time around Orthodox Judaism (equally long story) and grew up familiar with the other version. Under the laws of niddah, husbands and wives abstain from sexual relations during menstruation and for a period afterward, and childbirth carries its own postpartum restrictions until ritual purification.
Three religions that, news cycles would have you believe, disagree on almost everything - yet nevertheless they've converged on remarkably similar rhythms around women's bodies.
As an atheist, I do not believe the metaphysics of it. I do not think blood makes someone spiritually dangerous. Nor do I think divine bureaucracies require menstrual leave from prayer.
However I am increasingly interested in what these rituals do socially.
On paper, a lot of these customs read as exclusion. The woman is set apart. She cannot do certain things. She is marked as being in a different state from everyone else.
And yes, that can absolutely become humiliating depending on the family, the community, and the temperament of whoever is enforcing it.
Religion has never struggled to find ways to make women feel watched, and more importantly, diminished.
Still, there is another layer here that I find harder to dismiss.
In many societies, historically but also in the present day, women are not always afforded the legal, social, or financial protections that can spare them from the consequences of refusal.
They cannot always say, "No, I am bleeding," or "No, I just gave birth," or "No, I am exhausted and my body hurts."
In these instances, the ritual can say it for them.
A husband might ignore a wife's discomfort. He might dismiss her pain. He might expect dinner, sex, ceremony, guests, childcare, obedience, compliance, enthusiasm-
Normalcy.
But a husband is less able to argue with an entire institution comprised of: God, local customs, his mom, her mom, her extended kin, his friends' wives, the neighbors + the entire ancestral machine of "Nope."
That is the part I keep circling back to.
Not in the sense of romanticization; a cage with cushions is still a cage. But sometimes, in a world that already cages women in every aspect, a ritual pause may have been one of the few bars they could lean against.
There is also something grimly practical about it. Speaking from experience, after childbirth, the body needs time. Blood loss needs replenishment. Birth needs recuperation. The torn, leaking, fever-prone, milk-swollen body needs a sense of respite. Modernity likes to pretend people should be productive immediately. Older cultures, for all their purported superstition, often seemed to understand that a body crossing certain thresholds had to be handled carefully.
And yes, they wrapped that understanding in purity language. Many cultures, faiths and rituals called it pollution / danger / filth / unfitness/ uncleanness. All of those meanings got tangled together with vulnerability / restoration / healing / protection until nobody could separate theology from common sense.
Yet the double nature is precisely what fascinates me.
A menstrual exemption can be misogyny. It can also be mercy.
A postpartum taboo can be control. It can also be convalescence.
A woman being set apart can mean she is being shamed. It can also mean she is being guarded.
The same custom can be oppressive in one house and lifesaving in another. It depends who holds the rule, who benefits from it, and whether the woman herself is allowed to experience it as rest rather than punishment.
I do not believe in ritual purity.
But I am starting to understand why women across cultures may have preserved some of these practices even when the official explanation sounds, to modern ears, insulting, diminishing or absurd.
Sometimes the stated reason is not the whole reason. More tellingly, sometimes women inherit a crippling religious rule and deftly turn it into labor law.
In those cases, "God says no" may become the only socially acceptable way to say, "My body is not yours today."
Fodder for the Curious
Boyarin, Daniel. Carnal Israel: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture. University of California Press, 1993.
Buckley, Thomas, and Alma Gottlieb, editors. Blood Magic: The Anthropology of Menstruation. University of California Press, 1988.
Cohen, Ilana. "Menstruation and Religion: Developing a Critical Menstrual Studies Approach." The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies, edited by Chris Bobel et al., Palgrave Macmillan, 2020. NCBI Bookshelf, www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK565592/.
Douglas, Mary. Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo. Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1966.
Dunnavant, Nicki C., and Tomi-Ann Roberts. "Restriction and Renewal, Pollution and Power, Constraint and Community: The Paradoxes of Religious Women's Experiences of Menstruation." Sex Roles, vol. 68, no. 1–2, 2013, pp. 121–31, doi:10.1007/s11199-012-0132-8.
Gottlieb, Alma. "Menstrual Taboos: Moving Beyond the Curse." The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies, edited by Chris Bobel et al., Palgrave Macmillan, 2020. NCBI Bookshelf, www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK565616/.
Koren, Sharon Faye. Forsaken: The Menstruant in Medieval Jewish Mysticism. Brandeis University Press, 2011.
Before Pride Month ends I just want to say thank you religious and spiritual Queer people for existing! You're so awesome and so so loved
Remember the world is better with you in it
(This post is inclusive of non-Abrahamic beliefs!)
Basically it doesn't matter what religion it is, some people in it are going to be really kind and compassionate, and some people are going to be the worst fuckos on the planet. You just gotta learn to expect that range no matter which religion you're thinking of.
how am i supposed to love a world that killed the perfect man
That's the thing, you don't love the world, you love the people in it.
You love all the imperfect sinners, cheaters, and liers, but you don't love the world that created them.
You love the Earth and its people and natural beauties, but you don't love the world.
Hope this makes sense! 😁
By asking for His heart.
His is the only heart that perfectly loves all. Ask Him to let you borrow it. Ask Him to teach you how. He wants you to learn, so you can love every one just like He does.
The Fifth of July Fast
I think it's a very obvious reason that the Religious Freedom thing next week is a Fast, and not a Feast (the typical event for celebration). It's because Religious Freedom is on the decline
Religious Freedom isn't merely the Freedom to Practice (although that is an important part), it's the Freedom from Undue Religious Influence
So, we're not just fasting so that people in other countries can be free to practice their faith. We're Fasting to make sure the Freedom of Religion we have in this country isn't collapsed, and people will still have the Freedom to Practice their faiths (especially if they're not considered Christians, because they're the ones who are at risk here)
Starting off my essay long religious rambles with Y’all so that everyone knows I’m a hick southern leftist Christian Witch.
I've been really struggling recently with finding time/ remembering to spend with God both through prayer or anything else. My brain is bad with time and while I want to be closer to my Heavenly Parents I just have trouble convincing my brain to focus on Them instead of whatever shiny thing has my attention at the time.
But I had a small win today and I feel really proud of myself. My mental health was not doing great this evening and I made the mistake of opening social media which just made things worse and my brain was spiraling a bit. I planned to rewatch a hyperfixation show and play video games when I realized why would I do that? That is not going to help, just tire me out until I am too tired to keep my eyes open. Instead I opened my gospel library app and watched the suggested video: "Never Along Through Jesus Christ" which was a lovely reminder that Christ is always there for us when we are at our worst. Next, I went to listen to a conference talk and decided on "Jesus Christ and Your New Beginning" by Elder Kearon. It was the reminder I needed that I can restart every day and to not let my past mistakes speak for me now. While the anxiety still lingers I am doing so much better than I would have with the alternative and I'm so grateful for the prompting I got to choose the better part.
Anyway I just wanted to yap into the void about this and just how grateful I am for the peace that comes through Christ. I often forget that while earthly things are wonderful and can provide us with so much joy during hard times, nothing comes close to the joy and comfort that the gospel brings.
I've been really struggling recently with finding time/ remembering to spend with God both through prayer or anything else. My brain is bad with time and while I want to be closer to my Heavenly Parents I just have trouble convincing my brain to focus on Them instead of whatever shiny thing has my attention at the time.
But I had a small win today and I feel really proud of myself. My mental health was not doing great this evening and I made the mistake of opening social media which just made things worse and my brain was spiraling a bit. I planned to rewatch a hyperfixation show and play video games when I realized why would I do that? That is not going to help, just tire me out until I am too tired to keep my eyes open. Instead I opened my gospel library app and watched the suggested video: "Never Along Through Jesus Christ" which was a lovely reminder that Christ is always there for us when we are at our worst. Next, I went to listen to a conference talk and decided on "Jesus Christ and Your New Beginning" by Elder Kearon. It was the reminder I needed that I can restart every day and to not let my past mistakes speak for me now. While the anxiety still lingers I am doing so much better than I would have with the alternative and I'm so grateful for the prompting I got to choose the better part.
Anyway I just wanted to yap into the void about this and just how grateful I am for the peace that comes through Christ. I often forget that while earthly things are wonderful and can provide us with so much joy during hard times, nothing comes close to the joy and comfort that the gospel brings.
i was reading in 2 Nephi 5 and i wanted to share what i learned about Nephi and how God takes care of His kids
Nephi has just buried his father and is now moved away from his brothers and their kin; as the head of his family, it is up to him to make sure him and his folk are gonna last. Among the rest of their efforts, I noticed these verses. In 2 Nephi 5:14-15, we read, "And I, Nephi, did take the sword of Laban, and after the manner of it did make many swords, lest by any means the people who were now called Lamanites should come upon us and destroy us; for I knew their hatred towards me and my children and those who were called my people.
And I did teach my people to build buildings, and to work in all manner of wood, and of iron, and of copper, and of brass, and of steel, and of gold, and of silver, and of precious ores, which were in great abundance."
Historians speculate that Lehi was most likely a scribe or a merchant. Nephi was taught "...somewhat in all the learning of [his] father..." (1 Nephi 1:1). So where did Nephi get the skills to teach his people carpentry, mining, metalworking, and blacksmithing (and whatever other skills are involved in the building of a civilization)?
Let's flash back to 1 Nephi 17. Nephi is instructed to build a boat to get them to the promised land. In verses 8-16, among other things, we learn about Nephi learning
Where/how to find ore
Carpentry
Toolsmithing/Blacksmithing
Metalworking
etc.
Laman and Lemuel were super reluctant to help Nephi build the boat and missed these steps of the process. God could have plopped the tools in front of the tent just like He did with the Liahona. Why didn't He? My thought is that it was so Nephi knew enough to set up his people to be spiritually reliant and temporally self-sufficient. We should note that later down the line, it is often the different in weapons and armor (the Nephites' being superior) that protects the Nephites from the Lamanites.
Even the swords and armor that are described in The Book of Mormon are patterned after the Sword of Laban, which was acquired in 1 Nephi 4.
In conclusion, I believe that sometimes God makes us do/experience life the long way 'round so we can be teachers. We are all learning to be more like our Father in Heaven, and self-reliance is a part of that. He sometimes prepares us so in advance that we don't understand why we are being asked to do what we're being asked. But just like the Nephites, it is going to one day help us "...[live] after the manner of happiness," (2 Nephi 5:27).
Like I always say, there's nothing gayer than a bunch of straight girls at the church function