my counselor: how are you doing?
me: good, how are you?
my counselor: good, what brings you in today?
me: im doin real bad karen
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Peter Solarz

blake kathryn
trying on a metaphor
tumblr dot com
d e v o n

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
h
we're not kids anymore.

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taylor price
almost home
will byers stan first human second

Origami Around
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if i look back, i am lost
Sade Olutola
wallacepolsom

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Spain

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
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@terrorteri
my counselor: how are you doing?
me: good, how are you?
my counselor: good, what brings you in today?
me: im doin real bad karen
Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion (1997) - Heather Mooney
I am alive if alive means to be a moth caught in the hands of some childish grief.
Donte Collins, from Autopsy (via buttonpoetry)
Anjelica Huston photographed by Bob Richardson || 1971
ABBA- Chiquitita
Two estranged sisters learn a surprising truth about their mother and see how the old neighborhood has changed in the half-hour drama.
PASADENA, Calif. — Tanya Saracho had trouble containing her glee at a Television Critics Association panel for her new Starz series, Vida (due May 6), a half-hour drama about two Mexican-American sisters who return to their old neighborhood in East Los Angeles.
“We don’t get to do this,” she said of presenting a show told from the perspective of “brown, queer femaleness.”
Saracho, whose credits include HBO’s Looking and Girls and Lifetime’s Devious Maids, said Vida is “Latinx, but it’s a queer show.” The show’s story “is my vida, my life.”
She praised Starz for the creative freedom she has been given with the show, which includes such timely topics as “Chipsters” (Chicano hipsters) and gentrification or the return of upwardly mobile Latinos to their old neighborhoods.
“I wanted an all-Latinx writers room. All the directors are women of color or Latinx,” she said. “My (collaborating) executive at Starz has a ‘z’ in her last name, Fernandez. There, I don’t have to be a cultural ambassador.”
Vida is another step toward more representational programming, but there is still a long way to go, Saracho said. “We make up almost 20% of this country,” but are represented on only a tiny fraction of TV shows.
Despite the specificity of the story, Saracho said, “There is a universality to two sisters coming home,” where they learn a surprising truth about their mother’s identity.
Melissa Barrera (right) who plays one of the estranged sisters, said Vida is timely when people with a dual identity, such as Mexican-Americans, are being reminded “they are not home.”
“If you abide that this country was made up by the children of immigrants, that’s what this show is,” Saracho said.
song: japanese breakfast - boyish
happy lesbian visibility day
I run for the bus, dear While riding I think of us, dear I say a little prayer for you
over coffee with my mom this morning: “sometimes we hesitate to invite people into our life because we feel like our space isn’t good enough yet. things are a little messy, or our place settings don’t match, or our situation isn’t quite what we want it to be. don’t let that stop you. invite people in anyway.”
This hit me a little too hard.
There is no actual, tangible reason why we allow people to starve, to be homeless, to suffer and die needlessly. Food is plentiful. Empty homes are plentiful. Medicine is plentiful. It’s hidden away behind constructs and we pretend those constructs mean something. There is an empty home and a homeless family, give them it. There is a sick child and common medicine to treat it, give it to them. There is a starving person and so much food wasted by corporations or hidden behind a dollar sign, feed them.