i hope you always have enough money to pay your rent on time, to buy your favorite groceries, and to invest in your art.
w love.
I woke up this morning to thank the most high for continuing to make this happen.

oozey mess
Claire Keane
macklin celebrini has autism
YOU ARE THE REASON
Jules of Nature

#extradirty

Kiana Khansmith

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Janaina Medeiros
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
cherry valley forever

ellievsbear

tannertan36
almost home
will byers stan first human second
🪼

★

shark vs the universe

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@xxpressingkatt
i hope you always have enough money to pay your rent on time, to buy your favorite groceries, and to invest in your art.
w love.
I woke up this morning to thank the most high for continuing to make this happen.
S/o to all my black beautiful queens ✊🏿
Kerrice Lewis
About quarter till 12 on a Saturday, I scrolled fast through my facebook Newsfeed as an article caught my eye, As I read each word in the headline, I felt my heart break. It read “Kerrice Lewis-Lesbian Murdered & Burned Alive- Say Her Name”
Her eyes, young like mine, I saw myself in her. A Black queer young woman. She not much older than I. “…just days after Christmas, in Washington DC” I felt my throat tighten, and my stomach knotted up. As today is only the 6th day in the New Year, I was confused and distraught. I had been reading post about love, unity, turning over new leafs in 2018- yet this article proved to me that people have not aimed to break our own fatal cycles within our communities
I read on. I read how neighbors heard her scream as she tried to escape from a trunk of a car that was lit on fire. Tears welled in my eyes. How could people be this cruel?
I like many other “woke” Black individuals often spend my time critique systematic oppression and the ways it engenders our academic, workplace environment as well as our quality of life as We have read about both segregation dejure and defacto about the genocide of black folx through the cutting off and the poisoning of resources (Flint Michigan). We have read about both old and new Jim Crow, about W E B Dubois, pan africanism, Willie Lynch, MLK, Malcolm X, black unity, black upward mobility, black love, Maya Angelou, code switching, about soul food everything “Black”.
Yet too often our lenses are pointed outward not seeking Introspection.What can we do for Us? Who is going to love us, BUT us? Who is representative of Us? Oppression has caused Black people to redefine themselves based off of projections of perceived Blackness. Blackness is portrayed as being entertainers, fried chicken, grape soda, dancing, being loud. Blackness being portrayed as hiding trauma, broke and broken families, homophobia. But like any portrayal, it contains some truth.
It’s 2018 and we as Black people are still seperating ourselves by class, by shades, by features, by clothes, by sexuality and appearance? WE are still killing each other over these things. We chant we pray we cry Black Lives Matter, but do we mean disabled black lives? LGBTQ lives? Non conventionally attractive black Lives? Fat Black lives? What about, Black lives that don’t agree with your way of life?
In 2018 I ask Black people: How far does your Black love extend and for whom?
Stop being pussy and shoot your shot. You miss, you miss 🤷🏾♀️
Rihanna for Savage x Fenty ✨
He should run for President and I am not joking
Spotlight on James Baldwin
Over the course of the 1960s, the FBI amassed almost two thousand documents in an investigation into one of America’s most celebrated minds. The subject of this inquiry was a writer named James Baldwin. At the time, the FBI investigated many artists and thinkers, but most of their files were a fraction the size of Baldwin’s. During the years when the FBI hounded him, he became one of the best-selling Black authors in the world. So what made James Baldwin loom so large in the imaginations of both the public and the authorities?
Born in Harlem in 1924, he was the oldest of nine children. At age fourteen, he began to work as a preacher. By delivering sermons, he developed his voice as a writer, but also grew conflicted about the Church’s stance on racial inequality and homosexuality.
After high school, he began writing novels and essays while taking a series of odd jobs. But the issues that had driven him away from the Church were still inescapable in his daily life. Constantly confronted with racism and homophobia, he was angry and disillusioned, and yearned for a less restricted life. So in 1948, at the age of 24, he moved to Paris on a writing fellowship.
From France, he published his first novel, Go Tell it on the Mountain, in 1953. Set in Harlem, the book explores the Church as a source of both repression and hope. It was popular with both black and white readers. As he earned acclaim for his fiction, Baldwin gathered his thoughts on race, class, culture and exile in his 1955 extended essay, Notes of a Native Son.
Meanwhile, the Civil Rights movement was gaining momentum in America. Black Americans were making incremental gains at registering to vote and voting, but were still denied basic dignities in schools, on buses, in the work force, and in the armed services. Though he lived primarily in France for the rest of his life, Baldwin was deeply invested in the movement, and keenly aware of his country’s unfulfilled promise.
He had seen family, friends, and neighbors spiral into addiction, incarceration and suicide.He believed their fates originated from the constraints of a segregated society.In 1963, he published The Fire Next Time, an arresting portrait of racial strife in which he held white America accountable, but he also went further, arguing that racism hurt white people too.In his view, everyone was inextricably enmeshed in the same social fabric. He had long believedthat “People are trapped in history and history is trapped in them.”
Baldwin’s role in the Civil Rights movement went beyond observing and reporting. He also traveled through the American South attending rallies giving lectures of his own. He debated both white politicians and black activists, including Malcolm X, and served as a liaison between black activists and intellectuals and white establishment leaders like Robert Kennedy.
Because of Baldwin’s unique ability to articulate the causes of social turbulence in a way that white audiences were willing to hear, Kennedy and others tended to see him as an ambassador for black Americans—a label Baldwin rejected. And at the same time, his faculty with words led the FBI to view him as a threat. Even within the Civil Rights movement, Baldwin could sometimes feel like an outsider for his choice to live abroadas well as his sexuality, which he explored openly in his writing at a time when homophobia ran rampant.
Throughout his life, Baldwin considered it his role to bear witness. Unlike many of his peers, he lived to see some of the victories of the Civil Rights movement, but the continuing racial inequalities in the United States weighed heavily on him.
Though he may have felt trapped in his moment in history, his words have made generations of people feel known, while guiding them toward a more nuanced understanding of society’s most complex issues.
This month, TED-Ed is celebrating Black History Month, or National African American History Month, an annual celebration of achievements by black Americans and a time for recognizing the central role of African Americans in U.S. history.
From the TED-Ed Lesson Notes of a native son: the world according to James Baldwin - Christina Greer
Animation by Gibbons Studio
may you get a sign this week that shows you that you’re on the right path and that things are flowing and moving in your favor. may the sign be evident, clear, and direct
YES YES YES
YES
YES
Need help finding employment in Atlanta!! Can someone point me in the right direction 😟😟😟
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“Just remember that sometimes, the way you think about a person isn’t the way they actually are.”
— John Green, Paper Towns (via amargedom)
#Knowledge
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