trish-makes-awesome.tumblr.com
I just felt like starting over. I’m not going to use this one anymore. i’d really dig it if you’d check it out. I already followed most of the people I was following so it will be mostly the same. just kinda new i guess.
trish-makes-awesome.tumblr.com
I just felt like starting over. I’m not going to use this one anymore. i’d really dig it if you’d check it out. I already followed most of the people I was following so it will be mostly the same. just kinda new i guess.
trish-makes-awesome.tumblr.com
I just felt like starting over. I’m not going to use this one anymore. i’d really dig it if you’d check it out. I already followed most of the people I was following so it will be mostly the same. just kinda new i guess.
| — | Anne Sexton, from A Self-Portrait In Letters (via agypsysoultoblame) |
how to dress for your shape: are you human-shaped? play up your natural sex appeal by wearing whatever the fuck you want
Life Tip: As the weather gets warmer, continue to wear whatever the fuck you want. Flaunt everything or keep it cool under cover. Dress to make yourself feel rad.
how to get a bikini body:
put a bikini on your bodyWant to look great naked? Take all your clothes off.
“Preferred” Pronouns Gain Traction at US Colleges.
and I couldn’t help but think
even when we get a victory
we’re still prisoners of punctuation.
Trapped in quotations, like the air-quotes
that mocked me in seventh grade
when I wore boy’s clothes to school
and no one said I wore “boy” clothes to school.
No one mocked the gendered shoes.
No air-quotes around my flannel button-down shirt
marketed for males only. The quotes go around
things like “normal” instead. Punctuation trapped
words I chose for myself. Like normal.
Like my name.
Quotes around words like “intersectionality”
and “genderqueer” and “pansexual” in the newspaper
because even when they concede to using our words
they have to make sure we know
they don’t really believe it.
The little red line on my computer screen reminds me
they’re just humoring “us”
and our made-up “words”
highlighted with quotations
that point and laugh so everyone knows we aren’t real
and fenced in on either side by punctuation
so we can’t escape.
I want my words to be like everyone else’s.
I want feminism in a sentence like your morning coffee
and genderqueer in the spellcheck dictionary like lamp and courage.
I want my words to be no different than the ones you already use
and I want you to stop putting air quotes around normal.
| — | “Quotation” by Mik Everett (via mikeverett) |
I don’t get these posts that go like “part of me wants to be a hot girl at the bar and the other part of me wants to read and sip tea in a bookstore”
like you can wear red lipstick and a leather jacket and sip tea and dance in the rain and go to the gym and curl up in bed and get turnt the fuck up and go to church
you can literally have it all sis
the world is yours
This is the most inspiring thing I have ever read
| — |
Portia de Rossi in a recent interview detailing her struggles to live as a closeted gay actress. Remind people of this statement the next time someone tries to dust off the old “celebrities coming out is an attention-seeking waste of time because we don’t need their sexuality shoved into our faces” chestnut. (via modernwatershed) ^^for the longest time I thought I couldn’t like girls because I just couldn’t conceive of how it would look, as opposed to how it would feel (via sheepyshavings) This resonated with me. (via mscoolcat) |
If you look at a fat girl who has a boyfriend then proceed to ask “why don’t I have a boyfriend?!?!”
That’s probably why….
A FUCKING MEN.
Fancast Meme: seven canon locations that have yet to be shown (2/7) ~ Bear IslandBear island is beautiful, but remote. Imagine old gnarled oaks and tall pines, flowering thornbushes, grey stones bearded with moss, little creeks running icy down steep hillsides. The hall of the Mormonts is built of huge logs and surrounded by an earthen palisade. Aside from a few crofters, my people live along the coasts and fish the seas. The island lies far to the north, and our winters are more terrible than you can imagine, Khaleesi. — Jorah Mormont, ACOK



