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Please I rele need one I broke Go fund me
One Nice Bug Per Day
occasionally subtle

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Sade Olutola

ellievsbear
Misplaced Lens Cap
Keni
RMH

#extradirty
Cosmic Funnies
YOU ARE THE REASON
sheepfilms
DEAR READER
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Jules of Nature
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

if i look back, i am lost
todays bird

Janaina Medeiros

shark vs the universe
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@ethicalbuttplug-blog
Someone should but me a laptop
Please I rele need one I broke Go fund me

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Hello. I'm a femme nonbinary person, and am in the process of getting my doula certification. I'm getting discouraged by how overwhelmingly cis-centric, gender essentialist, heterosexual and monogamous birth work is. I'm catering towards queer, nonbinary, and polyamorous people in my own practice, but am feeling a little shunned by the birth community at large. Do you have any resources for the groups that I mentioned? Or words of encouragement for me?
So true and so hard!!!
In order to best answer your question, I turned to a friend of mine, Jaqxun Darlin, an awesome queer and trans*-identified midwife. Jaqxun became a midwife with the goal of serving the trans* and queer communities, and is now providing preconception, conception, prenatal care, birth and postpartum care to his community in Portland, OR. Read more at his website here.
Jaqxun: Well first off, @aspersaperastra, check out some of these resources:
Milk junkies - blog by a breastfeeding trans dad
Birthing and Breast or Chestfeeding Trans People and Allies Facebook group
Birth for Everybody
LGBTQIAPD+ Doulas and Birth Workers Only - Facebook group
Queer Birth Project - Facebook group
Gender and the Childbirth Professional - Facebook group
You should definitely start by putting together a resource list of queer/trans birth workers in your area and try to create some localcommunity by reaching out, either to attend their events, to get coffee together, or to host events of your own. Some folks, like Krystel Viehmann at Taproot Midwifery have started local Queer Birthworker Alliances.
I know you might not guess it, but there are a lot more gender queer andnon-binary birth workers than it seems like. Even though birth is heteronormative by default, a lot of people who are genderqueer or trans are drawn tobirthwork because holistic approaches to health are in harmony with holisticapproaches to gender.
However, I don’t want to make it seem like it’s as easy as just reaching out, but it IS important for you to know that you’re not alone. It feels like a miracle that I’ve finished my midwifery eduction. Even the most supportive people have said transphobic things to me. I had people tell me “You should never be a midwife,”“People will never be comfortable with you.” I’ve been asked not to participate in births after presentingambiguously in the clinic. “It’s anenergetic thing,” they might say, and yeah, that’s code for transphobia.
My advice to you? Reach out to those of us who have done it, we’re allreally friendly, we’re all willing to talk to people!
Remember: You’re not alone! Over 2000 people signed the Birth is for Everybody letter, and a lot of those people are cis gender! There is space for us out there, and not everyone in the community feels otherwise.
I absolutely do not think that you would be intruding. If you are really called midwifery, and feelinspired to provide gentle, compassionate care to women, you should totally do that. There’s absolutely a place for men and trans peoplein midwifery.
Because here’s the thing: Women are smart and they find the right provider forthemselves. While you, as a trans man, might not be the right provider for everyone, neither would any other cis woman. You’re definitely the right provider for someone out there, and that’s the beauty of having options and a diverse work force.
And what’s more, I don’t think that midwifery has always been womenattending women. We don’t know the whole history of the world and which people had which genders. I can say for a fact that non-binary people and transmen have had babies previously, we just don’t have it documented. Trans people and NB people often ended up in supportive roles where they help others through transitions (especially in healthcare and birthwork). That’s because we understand what it means tohave transitions in ones life, and we are more comfortable with things thataren’t black and white, things that are complex, that are in a liminal space. That’s the work of midwifery. The idea that it’s a new thing that trans people are having babies or working in birth is false. It’s newlanguage that we’re using now, but there’s no time or era of history that is free of complexityaround gender.
Being a woman does not necessarily mean that someone is betterequipped to hold the space for the complexity of peoples transitions. And why would we want that to be something that’sexclusive to womanhood? Why would wewant masculinity to be barred from being able to provide gentle and compassionate care?
Feminism hasn’t come so far that centering women and womenshealth isn’t important. But I care deeplyabout womens health - there can be men and trans people that care aboutwomens health. We, as humans, are more complex - weneed to give humanity more credit for its capacity to grow.
Anyone, cis or trans men, cis or trans women, or nonbinary and genderqueer people who feel called to midwifery should go for it. Become a midwife - we need more midwives! Learning to provide care in the midwifery model is an experience of learning to provide gentle, compassionate care, centering the needs and desires and autonomy of the client, and supporting them to achieve their best health. That is something that everyone can, and should, do.
- Jaxqun Darlin, LM, CPM
I'm trans gender non conforming and I just finished my training with Doula Trainings International. They are super trans inclusive and even offer scholarships! I wa so comfy there!!
Cattoos
Photo by Kitten Lady
my latest 2016 aesthetic includes baby cows standing in fields of flowers

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Just reminding you all that YOUR DREAM JOB IS HIRING! Head on over to http://explosm.net/careers/ to see what we’ve got to offer. Bring what -you’ve- got to offer and maybe we can mash them together to make some sick cartoons!
Tiger cub Debbie isn’t a fan of bath time. Photo Mike Wilson
They had not been seen together in the museum galleries for quite a while. Monet’s “Women with Umbrellas” are once again side by side in the Impressionist gallery.
AND THEN THEY LIVED HAPPILY EVER AFTER THE END!!!!
omg perfect
A new squad of superheroes: In the dark shadows of the night where women’s screams were unheard, and evil crept silently through back alleyways and hidden streets, four super heroes emerge to fight injustice and crime against women.
The idea came because I like to display how strong women are in pretty much anything. My company, Fanm Djanm focuses on the strength of all women through African inspired fashion and headwraps. But I wanted this to focus on the modern black woman in today’s world, and to make it fun, I wanted us to have super powers! When I come up with a story or a message I want to work on, the people always come first. Who can play this role? What do they mean to me and the story? Why them? I admire Cacsmy with all of my heart. I’ve loved her the very first time I met her at one of my pop up shops downtown Manhattan. Kristia became my muse before she even knew it. I used to shop at a store she worked at, and every time I saw her, I would tell her how beautiful she is! And Nichole contacted me through my website to photograph me for her “Be the Queen You were Born to Be” photo project, and she also became a muse in my mind during our photo session. These women are inspiring bad ass dream catchers. They make me feel better just being around them. And we all accidentally had similar hair cuts! It was just meant to be. I’m grateful to have friends who support my work and crazy ideas.
About our mission as super heroes:
We fight for those who are told their tears don’t matter. Where the police hurt more than serve, and eating establishments are built just to shorten the lives of the community. We fight for the strong who have been stripped of their powers. We fight for the invisible. [h/t]
I love this so much. I absolutely adore this!
Oh. My. Gods. The most beautiful kick-ass ladies, ever.
Kill the whole damn game then
Yesssssss
😍😍😍😍🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾
yes gawd

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he go wab wab
oh. mygod.
@nyoromanoh wab wab
Aphrodite - amazon tree boa (Corallus hortulanus)
This kid is just incredible! She finally shed and got some gross stuck shed off.
i thought were a flower
story time: i taught my little cousin her first longer word when she was very young. i taught her to say “tax benefits”. and to this day my aunt still doesn’t know where she got it from, but it was a hilarious sight to see a little toddler waddling around the house, wearing a big diaper, all the while yelling “TAX BENEFITS!!!!”
My parents did this with me and “nuclear disarmament”.
I taught my little brother to say “micro-surgical vasectomy reversal” (saw it on a billboard) on a road trip, and he didn’t stop saying it for literal years.
My parents taught me to chant “Get your laws off our bodies!” for a pro-choice rally when I was like four and I went to preschool and taught all the other kids the chant and led them on a mini-parade around the playground and the teachers were like ?????????? ?????????? ????????????
whenever my brother threw a tantrum as a baby my parents would chant “live free or die” until he calmed down it was fuckin weird
when i was a kid whenever we got stuck in traffic my dad would say “what the fuck?!?” in a very comic voice and i would repeat it and then he would say it with a slightly different inflection and i would repeat that too and so forth and so basically my poor mother would be stuck in standstill traffic listening to her husband and 4 yr old daughter swearing at each other without end
i’m a preschool teacher and we like to joke around using radical vocabulary with the children, the other day i overheard one kid say ‘this is my truck’ and the other one said ‘no, this truck belongs to the collective’; they all say it now
Rho Ophiuchi Nebula (IC 4604) region - Tony Hallas

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Excuse me?