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styofa doing anything
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Claire Keane
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Xuebing Du

titsay
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Kaledo Art

roma★
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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dirt enthusiast

Love Begins
KIROKAZE

PR's Tumblrdome

Origami Around
taylor price
YOU ARE THE REASON
Three Goblin Art
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@smileysheddles
having crazy chemistry with someone and then having to move on & forget about it like it never happened is truly wild to me
In many cultures, ethnic groups, and nations around the world, hair is considered a source of power and prestige. African people brought these traditions and beliefs to the Americas and passed them down through the generations.
In my mother’s family (Black Americans from rural South Carolina) the women don’t cut their hair off unless absolutely necessary (i.e damage or routine trimming). Long hair is considered a symbol of beauty and power; my mother often told me that our hair holds our strength and power. Though my mother’s family has been American born for several generations, it is fascinating to see the beliefs and traditions of our African ancestors passed down. We are emotionally and spiritually attached to our hair, cutting it only with the knowledge that we are starting completely clean and removing stagnant energy.
Couple this with the forced removal and covering of our hair from the times of slavery and onward, and you can see why so many Black women and men alike take such pride and care in their natural hair and love to adorn our heads with wigs, weaves, braids, twists, accessories, and sharp designs.
Hair is not just hair in African diaspora cultures, and this is why the appropriation and stigma surrounding our hair is so harmful.
Get Out (2017) directed by Jordan Peele
Houston,TX photo by Ricky Walter Molnar
me_irl
You don’t owe anybody the traumatic details of your life as a bonding tool