Posted 11 months ago
Beautiful.

Beautiful.

(Source: picapixels)

Posted 11 months ago
Follow your dreams.
tamburina:

Seventeen-year-old Bianca Passarge of Hamburg dresses up as a cat and dances on wine bottles in June 1958. Her performance was based on a dream. She practiced for eight hours a day to do this.
Photo by Carlo Polito

Follow your dreams.

tamburina:

Seventeen-year-old Bianca Passarge of Hamburg dresses up as a cat and dances on wine bottles in June 1958. Her performance was based on a dream. She practiced for eight hours a day to do this.

Photo by Carlo Polito

Posted 11 months ago

Not even sure I remembered to hit the button.  Should get around to that.

(Source: iraffiruse)

Posted 11 months ago
This is a somewhat controversial stance, but to me queer means something completely different than ‘gay’ or ‘lesbian’ or ‘bisexual.’ A queer person is usually someone who has come to a non-binary view of gender, who recognizes the validity of all trans identities, and who, given this understanding of infinite gender possibilities, finds it hard to define their sexuality any longer in a gender-based way. Queer people understand and support non-monogamy even if they do not engage in it themselves. They can grok being asexual or aromantic. (What does sex have to do with love, or love with sex, necessarily?) A queer can view promiscuous (protected) public bathhouse sex with strangers and complete abstinence as equally healthy.

Queers understand that people have different relationships to their bodies. We get what it means to be stone. We know what body dysphoria is about. We understand that not everyone likes to get touched the same way or to get touched at all. We realize that people with disabilities may have different sexual needs, and that people with survivor histories often have sexual triggers. We can negotiate safe and creative ways to be intimate with people with HIV/AIDs and other STIs.

Queers understand the range of power and sensation and the diversity of sexual dynamics. We are tops and bottoms, doms and subs, sadists and masochists and sadomasochists, versatiles and switches. We know what we like and don’t like in bed.

We embrace a wide range of relationship types. We can be partners, lovers, friends with benefits, platonic sweethearts, chosen family. We can have very different dynamics with different people, often all at once. We don’t expect one person to be able to fulfill all our diverse needs, fantasies and ideals indefinitely.

Because our views on relationships, sex, gender, love, bodies, and family are so unconventional, we are of necessity anti-assimilationist. Because under the kyriarchy we suffer, and watch the people we love suffering, we are political. Because we want to survive, we fight. We only want the freedom to be ourselves, love ourselves, love each other, and live together. Because we are routinely denied that, we are pissed.

Queer doesn’t mean ‘don’t label me,’ it means ‘I am naming myself.’ It means ‘ask me more questions if you curious’ and in the same breath means ‘fuck off.’

What Queerness Means To Me « Tranarchism

Thank you to Asher Bauer for expressing concepts of queerness so eloquently.

Posted 12 months ago

myth | beach house

Music feels so good.

Posted 1 year ago

Margaret Cho!

(Source: screamingfemale)

Posted 1 year ago

This is real sweet; I like it.

(Source: flickr.com)

Posted 1 year ago
Posted 1 year ago

I love this.  Sort of reminds me of Kate Bornstein’s Hello, Cruel World - 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks, and Other Outlaws (which is an amazing book for young and creative people struggling with living).

Posted 1 year ago

A social construct you may fiddle with if you choose.  I hope you do.

(Source: sellerie.soup.io)