Chicago Public Library and CPS announced the expansion of The 81 Club, building on a pilot launched in 2022 to give students access to the l
noise dept.

ellievsbear
Today's Document
wallacepolsom

tannertan36
ojovivo
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Kaledo Art
NASA
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Show & Tell
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

⁂
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
DEAR READER
KIROKAZE
Claire Keane
d e v o n

if i look back, i am lost
Sweet Seals For You, Always
seen from Italy
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@cloverboyblue
Chicago Public Library and CPS announced the expansion of The 81 Club, building on a pilot launched in 2022 to give students access to the l

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I love dandelions!
*puts a dandelion in your hair*
Reblog to put a dandelion in prev's hair
omg… like to charge reblog to cast etc etc
did you receive abstinence only education in school? (and please say where your school is located in the tags)
yes
no
every time i bring up my hot take that how someone treats bugs and spiders is a political litmus test some ugly bitch always gotta be like "but i HAVE to kill every spider i see because i have arachnophobia 🥺" you're literally proving my fucking point
rbing with the tags just so we're all on the same page of what the litmus test is exactly. it's not about how you feel it's about how you act. and for extra clarification here's a poem by nikki giovanni who said that this poem was meant to connect to how black people were killed at the hands of whites because of supposed fear
& '10 legs, 8 broken' by an unknown author that explores the connection between conditioned acceptability and violence towards those outside of those borders

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being black in any art community is such a strange feeling cause you’ll see just blatant racism being expressed in others art and you have to just casually ignore it, for your sake if anything, colorism being something that’s just fundamentally there in every artist and you deal with it cause it’s not worth it in the end to even think of it too hard let alone even mentioning it, it’s definitely something
Hello nonblack reader of this post, I think you ought to share this one so that you and your peers can actively remind yourselves 1) of how your Black peers feel when you tolerate antiblack racism in your art spaces for entertainment and 2) that we notice it, but don't believe it is secure around enough of you to bring it up 🙏🏾
By Gerda Wegener, 1925
irritating as fuck when people get mad at Black people existing in premodern historical fiction/fantasy media. like first of all, you're racist. and second of all, you are acting as though Black people didn't exist in premodern Europe which is simply false. especially when we're talking about the Mediterranean, like what the fuck do you people think is along the southern half of the Mediterranean Ocean?? everyone's on boats, there are GOING to be interactions with Black people in Northern Africa, and there are GOING to be Black people in Mediterranean Europe. stop being stupid. your imagined homogeneous white European past is not historical reality, get over it you massive losers
playing a ttrpg your partner gms is dangerous but you Can fight back by getting all the other players to talk about werewolf mpreg while they watch in horror
in hindsight sending the number one digit at a time created the funniest half second of either of our lives

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I spent the first 30 years of my life assuming I was allistic. For almost all that time, the possibility that I might be autistic was not even one I considered. I had autistic friends and family members, and often I got on better with those people than I did with allistic people, but for some reason the idea that I could be autistic too just wasn't one that crossed my mind.
There were several autistic kids at my school. Their autistic traits, like stimming and echolalia, often got them bullied by allistic kids. The bullying was horrific, but there was something of a support system in place - teachers and some of the nicer kids would sometimes intervene to stop the bullying, saying, "Don't be mean, they can't help it, they're autistic." There were clubs where the autistic kids could hang out together without the pressure of allistic kids watching them. It absolutely sucked to be autistic then, but there was a modicum of support.
I also displayed all the same autistic traits, but I didn't have a diagnosis. I didn't even know a diagnosis was something I could get. Nonetheless, if I had known, there was no way my mother would've allowed me to get a diagnosis - she was always emphasising how "normal" I was, not as a statement of fact but as a kind of incantation, a spell that would make me be normal if she said it. The way she talked about my autistic cousin made it clear that she wouldn't countenance having an autistic child.
I grew up in a world where autism wasn't something you could just have, rather it was something a doctor assigned to you. You could flap your hands when stressed and look at the ground when talking and cry whenever a police siren went past, but whether that was "autism" or "being a weirdo" depended entirely on whether you had a piece of paper from a doctor with the magic words on it. That paper granted you access to what limited support existed, and without it you were left with nothing, just being bullied constantly with no defenders at all. Even the subset of teachers who defended autistic kids would bully "allistic" kids with exactly the same behaviours.
When I discovered I was autistic at the age of 30, I felt really relieved to have an explanation for so much of my personality. But I also felt resentful that I had been left for so long blaming myself for things like social exclusion when that social exclusion was really ableist bullying, something that others had a duty not to do to me. It wasn't me who kept fucking up, it was everyone else who kept failing me time and time again.
I was autistic the whole time, the fact that I (and everyone around me) thought I was allistic only made my life harder, by denying me access to support and self-understanding.
I spent the first 26 years of my life assuming I was a man. For almost all that time, the possibility that I might be a woman was not even one I considered. I had female friends and family members, and often I got on better with those people than I did with men, but for some reason the idea that I could be a woman too just wasn't one that crossed my mind.
There were several girls at my school. Being girls, they often got bullied by the boys. The bullying was horrific, but there was something of a support system in place - teachers and some of the nicer boys would sometimes intervene to stop the bullying, saying, "Leave the girls alone." There were places where girls could hang out together without the pressure of boys watching them. It absolutely sucked to be a girl, but there was a modicum of support.
I also displayed all the same behaviours the girls did, but I didn't have the right birth certificate. I didn't even know a girl was something I could be. Nonetheless, if I had known, there was no way my mother would've allowed me to be a girl - she was always emphasising how "masculine" I was, not as a statement of fact but as a kind of incantation, a spell that would make me be masculine if she said it. The way she talked about my girl cousins made it clear that she wouldn't be happy with a daughter rather than a son.
I grew up in a world where gender wasn't something you could just have, rather it was something a doctor assigned to you. You could be the most feminine kid imaginable, but whether that was "girl" or "f-slur" depended entirely on whether you had a piece of paper from a doctor with the magic words on it. That paper granted you access to what limited support existed, and without it you were left with nothing, just being bullied constantly with no defenders at all. Even the teachers who defended girls would bully "boys" with exactly the same behaviours.
When I discovered I was not a man at the age of 26, I felt really relieved to have an explanation for so much of my personality. But I also felt resentful that I had been left for so long blaming myself for things like social exclusion when that social exclusion was really misogynistic bullying, something that others had a duty not to do to me. It wasn't me who kept fucking up, it was everyone else who kept failing me time and time again.
I was a girl the whole time, the fact that I (and everyone around me) thought I was a boy only made my life harder, by denying me access to support and self-understanding.
This is an analogy to (hopefully) demonstrate the idea that a girl who grows up believing herself to be a boy is as privileged by that upbringing as an autistic person who grows up believing themselves to be allistic. That is to say, it is no privilege at all. In fact, it's just the opposite.
*farseers your fool*
This may be the best Pride merch I've seen from a major corporation.
Levi's said yes, actually. Assless chaps and a biker vest. Happy Pride.
And the assless chaps sold out on June 1.
They also specifically contacted members of the leather community, used them as models iirc, and donated $100k to Outright International. They talked the talk and walked the walk and put their money on it too. I don't really care that I can't afford and don't want this merch, I love to see my community getting the respect it deserves. Levi's said, "We make jeans which gays wear lots of jeans? Oh leather daddies? Let's call them."
*farseers your fool*
Im glad they made up romance for stories and music but can you imagine how scary it would be to deal with all that for real
this is a certified AROMANTIC POST!!!!!!!!!!! NO yearning on my shit..... GO ON . GET
official aromantic post

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Hey, you, cis girl that's very (correctly) vocal about women being allowed to talk about their periods, do you include trans women in that?
I ask because every single time I've tried to talk about it to anyone that isn't a trans woman they get fucking angry. Which has caused me to have to just suffer in silence every single month. So I really relate to cis women when they talk about literally the exact same thing; being shamed by everyone around them their whole lives for talking about their periods, so they just suffer in silence every month as it negatively impacts their work and social lives. But I don't even feel like I can voice that I am literally dealing with the same exact thing because most of y'all react like you want to throw me in front of a bus for saying it, even those of you who act like your such big great transfem allies.
I guess I'll take this opportunity to talk about trans women periods. The first thing any tme person thinks when they hear this is always "how can trans women have periods? They don't have uteruses!"
The answer is: the uterus isn't what causes your period, it is effected by your period. What causes your period and what causes trans women's periods is the same thing: the endocrine system.
HRT changes the sex of your endocrine system. Feminizing HRT makes it a female endocrine system, giving us a 28-day hormone cycle just like cis women. At the end of that cycle, the hypothalamus floods the body with prostaglandins. Those are what cause all but one of the period symptoms, because they make muscles inflame and contract. They are what make the uterus shed its lining, they are what cause intestinal cramps, they are what cause body aches, they are what cause headaches and migraines. The only period symptom not causes by the release of prostaglandins throughout the body is depression, and that is caused by your endocrine system simply not processing as much estrogen and from simply feeling like shit.
So, the only symptoms trans women don't get every 28 days is menstrual cramps, because yes we do not menstruate since we don't have uteruses. But migraines, depression, body aches, intestinal cramps, and the infamous "period shits" don't exactly add up to us having any better of a time. Except we have to pretend that we're fine and nothing is different because no one believes that we get periods, not even cis women.
"But you can't call it a period then because that refers to MENSTRUATION!" is another one I hear all the time. This is incorrect. You use the word "period" instead of just "menstruation" because it doesn't just refer to menstruation. It refers to a period at the end of the hormone cycle where we experience a host of symptoms. And not all cis women experience all of the symptoms that encompass the period. Not all cis women get migraines, or body aches, or have severe depression. If a cis woman gets a hysterectomy she doesn't menstruate either! In that instance she experiences an identical period to what trans women experience. Yet, I doubt you'd insist that cis women who've had hysterectomies don't have periods.
Oh, another thing that I personally discovered after bottom surgery: vaginal odor changes for trans women during our periods too. I was not expecting that because I always thought it was just from menstruation. But nope, the ph levels of a trans woman's vagina are the same of as a cis woman's vagina, and it changes during our periods just the same.