Princess Nokia - Big Sister (2017)

if i look back, i am lost
Monterey Bay Aquarium
I'd rather be in outer space đž
cherry valley forever
YOU ARE THE REASON

ç„æ„ / Permanent Vacation
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Xuebing Du
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Kiana Khansmith

PR's Tumblrdome
Sade Olutola
Acquired Stardust

Discoholic đȘ©
Peter Solarz

JBB: An Artblog!
occasionally subtle
wallacepolsom
styofa doing anything

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@sometimesrandomalwaysawesome
Princess Nokia - Big Sister (2017)
Crystal Frasierâ - âOne of the most high-profile beauty companies in the US is running free classes and video tutorials aimed specifically at offering practical advice to trans women and femme NBs. This is⊠this is a point I never imagined weâd get to in my lifetimeâ
Sephora Is Launching In-Store Beauty Classes for Trans People
You, an intellectual: 9+7=16
Me, with ADHD: if you take 1 from 9 and give it to 7 thats 8+8 and 8x2 is 16
Someone, usually a Teacher: NOT LIKE THAT YOU HEATHEN
This is literally how I would have done it
9 is a hungry bitch and takes one from 7, making it 10+6=16
VALID
âI came to America when I was six years old. Mom said she brought us here so that weâd have opportunities in life. She said that back in the Bahamas, itâs only the âhavesâ and the âhave nots.â She wanted us to have more choices. But I donât think she fully understood how things work here. She was a news reporter back in the Bahamas. But the only job she could get here was taking care of oldpeople. My dad could only work construction. We moved to four different states just so they could find work. They always told me, âJust study hard in school and everything will work out fine.â So that was my plan. I got all Aâs up until the 11th gradeâ except for one B in math. My goal was to get top twenty in my class, then go to college, then get a degree, and then get a job. I realized the truth my senior year. My guidance counselor told me I couldnât get a loan. I couldnât get financial aid. Even if I could find a way to pay for school, I probably couldnât get a job. I felt so mad at everyone. There were some kids who completely slacked off in school, but even they were going to college. I started having panic attacks. My dad told me not to worry. He called me a âdoubting Peter.â He invited all his friends over to a fish fry to help raise money. And he did get $3,000. But that wasnât enough. So I searched really hard on the Internet and found the Dream.us scholarship. My mom was so excited when I got it. Theyâre paying for me to go to Queens College. Now my momâs really scared again because DACA got revoked. Sheâs crying all the time at work. I try to tell her that no matter what happens, weâre not going to die. We just might have to start over.â
âIt was a tsunami. In April of â82 there was an article in the New York Times about a new gay cancer, and everyone thought âoh well.â I was in my twenties. I wasnât worried about a thing. But then every week you started to hear about somebody becoming ill. My boss was one of the first. He was a famous florist. He went into the hospital on Thanksgiving and was dead by Easter. I lost most of my friends. A lot of the first men to die were privileged. They were closeted, corporate white men. During the day they were bankers but at night theyâd hit the leather clubs and bars. But they learned their privilege didnât matter after they got sick. They were just âgay.â We had to fight for AIDS to be recognized by the government. We joined together with people of color, and junkies, and prostitutes. It was a beautiful thing, really. Our feminist lesbian sisters taught us how to protest because theyâd been doing it for decades. They showed us how to organize meetings, and bring people together, and force the government to the tableâthings weâd never had to think about as white men.â
âYou know how when you see a group of geese in a field, and thereâs always one with its head up, looking around? Thatâs me. I was always afraid. Just anxious. Itâs like my mind was a heat-seeking missile, always honing in on what could possibly go wrong. My first daughter got the brunt of it. I was so worried about everything. Her first plane ride. Her first day of school. Her first sleepover. I thought if I anticipated every little thing that might go wrong, then maybe I could fend things off. But thatâs never possible. Things will always go wrong. The best you can do is give your kids self-confidence. But Iâm afraid I passed on my anxiety instead. Because when Mom is always afraid of the world, the world becomes something to fear.â
Find me on Instagram @americansquares
It could only be fate to have found this at Goodwill.
That is tooo cute
âEven if we have equal rank, a man always tries to take charge of the situation.â (Buenos Aires, Argentina)
The psychiatrist who wrote the criteria for narcissism just made an extremely important point about whatâs wrong with diagnosing Trump with mental disorders
Dr. Allen Frances says in speculating about Trumpâs mental health, we are doing a disservice to those who do suffer from mental illness. In a series of tweets, he explained why he doesnât think Trump is a narcissist â and how harmful it can be for us to keep assuming that he is.
I am guilty of this and am glad to have read this.
Princess Nokia
Paris 2016