welcome to my horny sideblog <3
lesbian, 33, white, tme
styofa doing anything
Xuebing Du

★

roma★
Game of Thrones Daily

⁂
Claire Keane

Janaina Medeiros

blake kathryn
occasionally subtle

Discoholic 🪩
Sade Olutola

shark vs the universe

Kiana Khansmith
noise dept.
ojovivo

Kaledo Art
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
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@tonguesalt
welcome to my horny sideblog <3
lesbian, 33, white, tme
dramatically doubles over and coughs into my fist really hard.. no dont worry ill be fine i just miss my girlfriend abit..
takes one step before stumbling and falling over.. you can see blood streaking my hand and i look deathly pale.. heh.. looks like i missed her more than i thought.. youll have to go on without me kid..
ghost_artistry_ on ig
let’s all be grown women together❤️
let’s all get old and have wrinkles and sun damage and facial hair ❤️
Fish bracelets
[“When everything runs smoothly, the housewife fades away—becomes the background. Cleanliness maintains the ghostly character of women’s work, keeps it systematically hidden. Even critics of capitalist work have failed to take note of the labor that takes place beyond the factory gates. The political philosopher Hannah Arendt pointed out, for instance, that Karl Marx, following public opinion at the time he wrote, characterized the work that took place in the home as unproductive labor, which left “nothing behind.” Arendt noted that Marx and many other male philosophers exalted work performed outside the home as the only real form of work, while they characterized domestic work “as parasitical, actually a kind of perversion of labor” because it “did not enrich the world.”
Arendt saw this hierarchy of work as a fundamental misunderstanding of what happens in the home—a misunderstanding that arose from the unique temporal features of care work and housework: the labor performed in the home moves so quickly, and produces so rapidly, Arendt wrote, that “its effort is almost as quickly consumed as the effort is spent.” Ancient political philosophers, Arendt writes, at least recognized the vital productivity of their servants, who, they believed, left behind “nothing more or less than their masters’ freedom or, in modern language, their masters’ potential productivity.” In antiquity, the work performed in the home was understood as constant, life-sustaining work that always produced: indeed, it produced the very possibility of public productivity; it created the possibility of shared communal life outside the home.”]
amanda montei, from touched out: motherhood, misogyny, consent, and control, 2023
everytime i wear an outfit like this i think about this tweet
HAPPY PRIDE MONTH HONEYS!👩🏾❤️💋👩🏾🏳️🌈✨
Minami Gessel
SOPHIE for Garage Magazine photographed by Torbjørn Rødland
“If I have one message to give to the secular American people, it’s that the world is not divided into countries. The world is not divided between East and West. You are American, I am Iranian, we don’t know each other, but we talk together and we understand each other perfectly. The difference between you and your government is much bigger than the difference between you and me. And the difference between me and my government is much bigger than the difference between me and you. And our governments are very much the same.”
― Marjane Satrapi, Iranian graphic novelist
Goodnight, and rest in peace, Marjane Satrapi. Thank you for your work and your voice. May we hear you.