srdiecko:

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from haunted homes by dahlia schweitzer

(via appsa)

infatuationthetrenches:

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(via mens-rights-activia)

cod:

textposttropes:

63:

cod:

cod:

My dinnar šŸ’ŖšŸ’Æā—šŸ’„

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This is one of your worst posts yet man

Poverty Food

Visual Innuendo

You called me dirt sucking poor and told me my carrot looks like a cock

(via metalmachinemusicpt2)

mishproductions:
“James Baldwin, Photo by Sedat Pakay
”

mishproductions:

James Baldwin, Photo by Sedat Pakay

(via heavensghost)

marlbororeds100s:
“““BY ‘83 HE WAS LIVING ON A STEADY DIET OF UPPERS, DOWNERS AND ALCOHOL, AND THINKING ONCE AGAIN THAT IT MIGHT BE A GOOD TIME TO DIE.” ”
from Johnny Cash’s box set The Legend
”

marlbororeds100s:

“BY ‘83 HE WAS LIVING ON A STEADY DIET OF UPPERS, DOWNERS AND ALCOHOL, AND THINKING ONCE AGAIN THAT IT MIGHT BE A GOOD TIME TO DIE.”

from Johnny Cash’s box set The Legend

(via evilboytoy)

sethrogensmohel:

“Cultural familiarity with gay stereotypes (cis men, promiscuity, circuit parties, and HIV) are not because that’s what gayness is or what gay experience is, but because that’s how the category was constructed in order to uphold myths about straightness, purity, and monogamy. In other words (and this also from Foucault) homosexuality wasn’t invented in order to give gay people better healthcare or more respectful employers, it was invented (perhaps analogously to the way Columbus “discovered” the American continent) in order to increase the reach of power, to map out, identify, taxonomize, and regulate what exists, what is known, what can be.

This idea, that these categories are historically and culturally dependent, is important to me.

One reason it’s important to me is because we are in the century-long process of the categorical invention of the trans woman. Hannah Arendt wrote (I actually can’t remember where or I would cite it, maybe somewhere in Between Past and Future) that it was fundamentally different to be a Jewish person before the foundation of the state of Israel. She didn’t mean better or worse, more fucked up or more liberated, but just that there was a shift in consciousness for people with this identity around this historical event. And I wonder about this with transness, what was it like to be a transgirl in the 50s, or the 1850s, and how did girls then feel and act, how did they relate to their bodies, how did they think about ideas we have now like passing or dysphoria. Did they feel like girls, or like women, or like ghosts, or like some other thing I wouldn’t think of off the top of my head because I live in a particular historical time, such that my parents rented the Crying Game on VHS and watched it with me when I was 10, and so I already knew before I knew the word “trans” that if I fooled a man into thinking I was a girl and tried to have sex with him he would think I was disgusting. I bet 1950s or 1850s girls like me didn’t think of dysphoria as Cartesian, as a bad map drawn by a sick mind on a healthy body…but they might have.”

— hannah baer, trans girl suicide museum

(via 666coyotewoman666)

weezeryuri:

shut the fuck up its tdick tuesday. get real

a-doctor-not-a-fangirl:

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Autoclave by The Mountain Goats // Love Slowly Kills by Adrian Borda

(via juliens-bakery)

mercutihoe:

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I’m

(via manywinged)

saimaaringedseal:

florence welch and ethel cain sound like two bingo nemeses at the nursing home

(via transsexualbloodlust)

thatsbelievable:

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(via 420bunnies)

192929020202020:

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Jesus christ?????

(via misspiggyforvogueitalia)

discodeerdiary:

I went to Tautology Island and I was there

(via sisyphusshrugged)