Submit to lavendwritermagazine.com today!

No title available
Three Goblin Art
taylor price
Misplaced Lens Cap
Show & Tell
One Nice Bug Per Day
I'd rather be in outer space šø
No title available

blake kathryn
hello vonnie
Claire Keane

Love Begins
h
wallacepolsom
No title available
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć

romaā
ojovivo
trying on a metaphor
Monterey Bay Aquarium
seen from United States
seen from Belgium
seen from Bulgaria
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from Indonesia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Peru

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from India
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
@spoopywitchboy
Submit to lavendwritermagazine.com today!
i will never be against piracy ever but i also need physical media to remain
the average blockbuster carried about 3x as many films than that that are streaming on Netflix or any other streaming service, physical media along with piracy is more important than ever.
I thought this wasnāt true, because how could it be true? How could one small store have more movies than an online database? So I googled it.
I am surprised and depressed to learn itās 100% true, according to google. A Blockbuster store was required to have a minimum of 7000 titles, but most averaged about 10,000. Netflix has 4000 movies. (And 1800 tv shows if you want to count those, but even included, itās still less)
Now Iām even more depressed about the collapse of physical rental stores.
BONUS: They weren't beholden to Who Owns What IP Right Now. They got videos from everyone. You didn't have to pay separately for the rights to rent from the Disney Shelves and the WB Shelves and bler bler bler, and they only STOPPED having those movies when the tapes broke or someone never returned 'em.
friendly reminder that your local library will have lots of physical media and if they don't have what you're looking for you can most likely ask them to purchase it or order it from another library through interlibrary loan
Shoutout to Scarecrow Video- they have over 148,000 titles, most of which you can rent by mail. Rentals have been down in the last few years so they're asking for support!
boosting this for Scarecrow Video. It's also now a non-profit.
-AnaĆÆs Nin, 1939
Is anyone actually being hired for any of the job postings or do employers enjoy just putting them up for funsies like aesthetic pictures on your Facebook page or something?
fuckable bumper sticker in the appalachians
WHY are titles so hard what the fuck man
Hi everyone!
I've been posting about my new literary magazine a lot. Well, I kinda want to mesh some of my other loves into it.
So I have a question.
For a YouTube channel, I wanna make videos of narrations of the work I publish on Lavendwriter Magazine. What else should I post on there?
What kind of videos should I include on Lavendwriter Magazine's YouTube channel?
Wax Sealing
Wax Sealing with poetry/fiction narrations
Tarot readings
Other (message me)
Narrations w/ black screen and rain for sleep
Writing stuff like book reviews
Lavendwriter has published its first work!!!!
Congratulations and much thanks to Claudia Wysocky for being our first author! Please click the link to our website and check out her poem or visit Lavendwritermagazine.com/poetry-1
Hey all! I run a new Literary Magazine now! Please share! If you're a writer or artist, submit today to get published!
Our first publication is set to post on Friday the 10th of January 2025! You can submit your work today at Lavendwritermagazine.com
New kinda guy just dropped and Iām here for it
i hauve a cold
chilling with a sloppy style
So today I want to talk about puberty blockers for transgender kids, because despite being cisgender, this is a subject Iām actually well-versed in. Specifically, I want to talk about how far backwards things have gone.
This story starts almost 20 years ago, and itās kind of long, but I think itās important to give you the full history. At the time, I was working as an administrative assistant for a pediatric endocrinologist in a red state. Not a deep deep red state like Alabama, we had a little bit of a purple trend, but still very much red. (I donāt want to say the state at the risk of doxxing myself.) And I took a phone call from a woman who said, āMy son is transgender. Does your doctor do hormone therapy?ā
I said, āGood question! Let me find out.ā
I went into the back and found the doctor playing Solitaire on his computer and said, āDo you do hormone therapy for transgender kids?ā It had literally never come up before. He had opened his practice there in the early 2000s. This was roughly 2006, and the first time someone asked. Without looking up from his game of Solitaire, the doctor said, āIāve never done it before, but I know how it works, so sure.ā
I got back on the phone and told the mom, who was overjoyed, and scheduled an appointment for her son. He was the first transgender child we treated with puberty blockers. But not, by far, the first child we treated with puberty blockers, period. Because puberty blockers are used very commonly for children with precocious puberty (early-onset puberty). I would say about twenty percent of the kids our doctor treated were for precocious puberty and were on puberty blockers. They have been well studied and are widely used, safe, and effective.
Well. It turned out, the doctor I worked for was the only doctor in the state who was willing to do this. And word spread pretty fast in the tight-knit community of āparents of transgender children in a red stateā. We started seeing more kids. A better drug came out. We saw some kids who were at the age where they were past puberty, and prescribed them estrogen or testosterone. Our doctor became, Iām fairly sure, a small folk hero to this community.Ā
Insurance coverage was a struggle. I remember copying articles and pages out of the Endocrine Society Manual to submit with prior authorization requests for the medications. Insurance coverage was a struggle for a lot of what we did, though. Growth hormone for kids with severe idiopathic short stature. Insulin pumps, which werenāt as common at the time, and then continuous glucose monitoring, when that came out. Insurance struggles were just part and parcel of the job.
I remember vividly when CVS Caremark, a pharmaceutical management company, changed their criteria and included gender dysphoria as a covered diagnosis for puberty blockers. I thought they had put the option on the questionnaire to trigger an automatic denial. But no - it triggered an approval. Medicaid started to cover it. I got so good at getting approvals with my by then tidy packet of articles and documentation that I actually had people in other states calling me to see what I was submitting (the pharmaceutical rep gave them my number because they wanted more people on their drug, which, shady, but sure. He did ask me if it was okay first).
And hereās the key point of this story:
At no point, during any of this, did it ever even occur to any of us that we might have to worry about whether or not what we were doing was legal.
It just never even came up. It was the medically recommended treatment so we did it. And seeing whatās happening in the UK and certain states in America is both terrifying and genuinely shocking to me, as someone who did this for almost fifteen years, without ever even wondering about the legality of it.
The doctor retired some years ago, at which point there were two other doctors in the state who were willing to prescribe the medications for transgender kids. I truly think that he would still be working if nobody else had been willing to take those kids on as patients. He was, by the way, a white cisgender heterosexual Boomer. I remember when he was introduced to the concept of āgenderfluidā because one of our patients on HRT wanted to go off. He said āthatās so interesting!ā and immediately went to Google to learn more about it.Ā
I watched these kids transform. I saw them come into the office the first time, sometimes anxious and uncertain, sometimes sullen and angry. I saw them come in the subsequent times, once they were on hormone therapy, how they gradually became happy and confident in themselves. I saw the smiles on their faces when I gave them a gender marker letter for the DMV. I heard them cheer when I called to tell them Iād gotten HRT approved by insurance and we were calling in a prescription. It was honestly amazing and I will always consider the work I did in that red state with those kids to be something I am incredibly proud of. I was honored to be a part of it.
When I see all this transgender backlash, itās horrifying, because it was well on the way to become standard and accepted treatment. Insurances started to cover it. Other doctors were learning to prescribe it. And now ⦠itās fucking illegal? Like what the actual fuck. We have gone so far backwards that it makes me want to cry. I donāt know how to stop this slide. But I wrote this so people would understand exactly how steep the slide is.
I think there's something to be said that saying the words "Deny, Defend, Depose, you're next" to an insurance sales rep can get you arrested for 'threats of mass homicide' or whatever with a threat of 15 years in prison
But when I was a manager in a fast food restaurant I've had customers throw food at me, demand for my personal phone number with an added threat of "Well I'll just have to FIND it", customers charging past the front counter to physically intimidate me and my coworkers, screaming and swearing, demands to know what time I get out of work, demands to know when my manager would be at work as a threat, people sitting in their car waiting for me to finish closing because they were angry at me, causing me to stay in the office watching the camera waiting for them to drive away...
But none of those incidents are arrest-able offenses, not one, any time I called the cops on any customer I would just hear excuses like " "there isn't anything illegal about calling a restaurant", that nothing physical happened and therefore there's nothing they could do, to call back and let them know if anything else happens
Idk, just think it's A TEENY TINY BIT ODD
Cop in the news goes "words have consequences" as if people don't berate and threaten fast food and retail workers every day
i hate it when i cant even write a poem about something because its too obvious. like in the airbnb i was at i guess it used to be a kids room cause you could see the imprint of one little glow in the dark star that had been missed and painted over in landlord white. like that's a poem already what's the point
you get it. you get the themes. i dont have time to do it justice. just look at it its on the ceiling
Lavendwriter Magazine is publishing soon! See your fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and art published online! Visit Lavendwritermagazine.com to submit or look us up on Chill Subs!