Category: General

  • Describe your writing process in three words or less.

    shadesofmauve:

    songscloset:

    prideandpen:

    holyromanempress:

    ninjacookiexd:

    ryttu3k:

    thatpersonrightbehindyou:

    glitchboygirlidek:

    periegesisvoid:

    jewishzevran:

    turbomun:

    under-the-bed-tales:

    octoblets:

    prismportrait:

    frankpanioncube:

    papyrusthegreatskelenton:

    older-and-more-determined:

    demmyguard:

    ask-shadowknight-of-the-stars:

    smollizardandrobot:

    therealshootingstar:

    toastyhat:

    fatal-blow:

    g-g-freak:

    cameoappearance:

    thegladhatter:

    casketscratcher:

    blackcrowcalling:

    “Well, fuck.”

    “USE THE SPOONS”

    “oops okay nevermind”

    “throw things together”

    There we… are?

    “Just fake it”

    “Someone should cry.”

    “I’m very tired”

    “Ok gotta scribble…”

    Okay, which ship?

    “goodbye, lettuce friend.”

    “This is shit”

    “Writers block why!?”

    Undergrads will SUFFER

    Long winded, commas

    “Where’s the eraser”

    How do ending

    DONT STOP ME

    what middle?

    fuck fuck fuck

    Not enough smut

    needs more plot

    LOUD FRANTIC SCREAMING

    So much sin

    Stream of consciousness

    Organized chaos

    Short Term Plan

    FIX WITH EXPLOSIONS

  • h0thpotato:

    YOU GUYS

  • Untitled post 11718

    gazztron:

    animatedamerican:

    misandryprime:

    mutster101:

    classic-calypso:

    And the award for #cutest #cosplay goes to #BB8 ???? #starwars #c2e2 #rollerderby (at C2E2)

    This kid tho.

    SQUEEEEE

    AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA *FLAILYARMS*

    ROLLERSKATES

  • rememberwhenyoutried:

    90% of anti-PC and anti-NP articles in the UK: “I am owed a platform from which to broadcast my unoriginal and ignorant opinions; also stop being mean about me on twitter”

  • introvertofsorts:

    Tatiana Maslany everyone.

  • Untitled post 11723

    camwyn:

    leeshajoy:

    sitcorn:

    *basket of kittens happens*
    *dogs stop what they’re doing to watch kittens*
    *humans stop what they’re doing to watch dogs watching kittens*

    *tumblr users stop what they’re doing to watch humans watch dogs watch kittins*

    *NSA stops what it’s doing to watch tumblr users watch humans watch dogs watching kittens*

  • As I’ve worked to dismantle my own internalized racism and the ways that I privilege whiteness, I’ve learned to resist being ‘othered’ through the use of language. So when someone says, ‘Oh, they did that to you because you’re black,’ I quickly correct them with, ‘No, they did that because they are bigots.’ This often shocks people. I can see the panic in their eyes. Sometimes, their eyes dart about. If there are lot of people, they may get quiet.
    Sometimes, someone will try to lessen the blow of my words with some clever deflection. I then come back with, ‘No. They are bigots.’ I name the problem. Trayvon and Michael’s blackness wasn’t the problem. The problem was the negative perceptions of that blackness and what spaces that blackness was ‘allowed’ to occupy. These perceptions are supported, funded, and reinforced by institutionalized racism. Matthew Shepard wasn’t murdered because he was gay. Sakia Gunn wasn’t murdered because she was a lesbian. Matthew and Sakia were murdered by people who made a choice to exercise their bigotry within a culture that deemed Matthew and Sakia ‘others.’

    Toni Bell, “I’m Not Your Token” via The Body Is Not an Apology

    How one uses language can be so constructive for their (hopefully just) cause.

    RWSWJ/RAWJ

    (via theblacknonblackdivide)

    This is a good and sobering point that hadn’t occurred to me before.  But it’s true, most people tend to summarize an incident of bigotry or aggression by saying what the victim did or is.  The speaker may not intend to imply that the person had it coming (for one reason or another), but that is in fact what we’re implying when we focus an explanatory phrase on who or what the victim is.

    (via mresundance)

  • 15 Trans People who Have Made History

    journeyintomanhood:

    I feel it is extremely important to know about the people in our community who came before us. From the 1800s to today trans people have made history by acting as activists, advocates, and just by being themselves in a world at that against them. This list is by no means complete but the point is to highlight some of the trans people who have made history for our community.

    1) Frances Thompson: Frances was most likely the
    first trans person to testify before a congressional committee in the US. In
    1866 she was a victim of the Memphis Riot. The riot occurred when a group of
    white men went into a neighbourhood where former slaves, such as Frances,
    lived. They burned buildings and attacked the former slaves. It was on this
    matter that she testified before the committee. Ten years later she was
    arrested for “transvestism.”

    2) Lucy Hicks Anderson: Lucy was born in 1886 and began living as a woman a young age. She was first married in 1929 and then attempted to get married again in 1944.However, in 1944 her marriage was denied and she was accused of perjury for saying that she was a woman. After then she became one of the first fighters for marriage equality in America.

    3) Marsha “Pay it No Mind” Johnson: Marsha is most
    known for being of the leaders at the Stonewall Riot in 1969 however her
    involvement in the LGBT community stretches beyond that. She was the co-founder
    of S.T.A.R. which provided support and resources for homeless trans youth. She
    was also heavily involved in the Gay Liberation Front. She fought for LGBT
    rights and for people living with HIV and AIDS. She supported the community until her life was cut short in 1992 under suspicious circumstances.

    4) Sylvia Rivera: Sylvia was also one of the
    leaders at the Stonewall Riots at only seventeen years old and co-founded S.T.A.R. with Marsha P. Johnson.
    She was also a founder of the Gay Liberation Front. She spent a lot of time
    advocating for trans people, drag queens, and other people who were not included
    in the mainstream gay rights movement including fighting against the exclusion
    of transgender people from the Sexual Orientation Non-Discrimination Act in New
    York. She was an advocate for the community until her death in 2002.

    5) Miss Major Griffin-Gracy: Miss Major was another
    leader at the Stonewall Riots in 1969 and the community in New York at the
    time. In the late 1970s she moved to San Diego and started grassroots movements
    such as working with a food bank to serve trans women who were incarcerated,
    struggling with addiction, or were homeless. During the AIDS epidemic she
    provided people with healthcare and organized funerals. In 1990 she moved to
    the San Francisco area where she worked with many HIV/AIDs organizations. In
    2003 she began working at the Transgender GenderVariant Intersex Justrice
    Project where she works to help transgender women who have been imprisoned. She
    continues to work as an activist to this day.

    6) Hirosama Ando: Hirosama was a professional
    speedboat racer in Japan and publically transitioned when he was given
    permission to start competing as a male in 2002 becoming the first openly trans
    person in the sport.

    7) Aya Kamikawa: In 2003 Aya made history when she
    became the first openly transgender person to be elected into office in Japan. She has also worked for the LGBT community both as a politician and before as a committee member for Trans-Net Japan.

    8) Trudie Jackson: Trudie Jackson is a long-time
    activist and Navajo woman. She has worked with the ASU Rainbow Coalition, the
    Native American Student Organization, The National LGBTQ Task Force, and the Southwest
    American Indian Rainbow Gathering. She has been the recipient of numerous
    awards including the Equality Arizona Skip Schrader Spirit of Activism Award, one
    of the 2013 Trans 100, and Echo Magazine’s 2013 Woman of the Year. She is a
    huge advocate for the Native American trans community.

    9) Kim Coco Iwamoto: When elected to the Hawaiian
    Board of Education in 2006 she held the highest office of any openly trans
    person in America. She served two terms on the Board of Education and is now a
    commissioner on the Hawaii Civil Rights Commission.

    10) Diego Sanchez: Sanchez was the first openly
    trans person to old a senior congressional staff position on Capitol Hill in
    America when he was appointed by Barney Frank in 2008.

    11) Kylar Broadas: Broadas is an attorney,
    professor, and the first openly trans person to testify in front of the U.S.
    Supreme Court when he spoke in support for the Employment Non-Discrimination
    Act in 2012. In 2010 he founded the Trans People of Color Coalition.

    12) Isis King: She became the first openly trans
    person to be on America’s Next Top Model in 2008.

    13) Blake Brockington: Blake first made headlines
    when he became the first openly transgender high school homecoming king in
    North Carolina. He was also an activist for the LGBT community, transgender you
    and fought against police brutality. Sadly, Brockington lost his life at the
    age of 18 in 2015 after committing suicide.

    14) Diane Marie Rodriguez Zambrano: She has been a
    human rights and LGBT rights activist in Ecuador for many years. In 2009 she
    sued the Civil Registry to change her name and set precedent for other trans
    people to be able to change their names. In 2013 she became the first openly
    trans person, or LGBT person, in Ecuador to run for office.

    15) Ruby Corado: She is an activist born in El
    Salvador but living in American. She was involved in the Coalition to Clarify
    the D.C. Human Rights Act which was changed the act to include gender identity
    and expression. In 2012 she opened Casa Ruby which is the only bilingual and
    multicultural LGBT organization in Washington, D.C. She has been working for
    human rights for over 20 years.

  • Untitled post 11728

    Given that I had buttercup perched on the back seat of my car for about 15 years (she’ll go back there when she’s unpacked), I’ve shown great restraint in waiting this long to post it :)