does anyone know how to get the light back in my eyes?

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@evolisk
does anyone know how to get the light back in my eyes?

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not even kidding be SO earnest. Be so honest and forthcoming about your life, your feelings in the pursuit of connection with others, and know being as earnest as possible in your experience is what quells loneliness in those who feel the same way as you do. Is what helps us feel seen. And builds community and resolve within the fact it doesn't have to feel so lonely and insurmountable. we need community and connection. You really are not as alone as you think, we're all scared. we need to hold each others hands
some of my favorite tags on this post:
The identity of OP is unimportant because Iβve seen this sentiment all over the place. But when I saw this post I just felt compelled to talk about this mentality.
Most likely this same logic is not applied to, say, politicians. Letβs put aside the fact that there is (unfortunately) no concrete delineation between a person who is merely a βprivate citizenβ and a person who might be in the βpublic interest.β Thatβs the kind of distinction that everyone has to subjectively make for themselves.
The βnobody can criticize anyone for any reasonβ outlook is a childish, hyper-individualistic outlook that contributes to Missing Stair type social dynamics.
Have you ever been in a house that had something just egregiously wrong with it? Something massively unsafe and uncomfortable and against code, but everyone in the house had been there a long time and was used to it? "Oh yeah, I almost forgot to tell you, there's a missing step on the unlit staircase with no railings. But it's okay because we all just remember to jump over it."
Some people are like that missing stair.
When I posted about a rapist in a community I belonged to, although I gave almost no details about the guy except "he's a rapist," I immediately got several emails from other members of that community saying "oh, you must mean X." Everyone knew who he was! Tons of people, including several in the leadership, instantly knew who I meant. The reaction wasn't "there's a rapist among us!?!" but "oh hey, I bet you're talking about our local rapist." Several of them expressed regret that I hadn't been warned about him beforehand, because they tried to discreetly tell new people about this guy. Others talked about how they tried to make sure there was someone keeping an eye on him at parties, because he was fine so long as someone remembered to assign him a Rape Babysitter.
(Please go on to read the whole βMissing Stairβ blog post. It reflects some experiences Iβve had as well!)
I understand that rape accusations and βcallout postsβ can be used as vectors of harassment. It can also be really annoying for some rando who youβve never talked to to send you a callout post for some other rando youβve never talked to. Iβve seen a lot of that on tumblr especially in the late 2010βs. But there has to be some kind of reasonable position on this issue for people who actually want to live in community with other people instead of completely eschewing any kind of responsibility for the community youβre in. And at the same time itβs unsustainable to foster a culture of hypervigilance and paranoia.
You have to use your critical thinking skills, no matter what. There is no easy one-size-fits-all principle you can adopt.
I canβt help but feel like the current hyper-individualistic social climate is also partly due to the failure of the #MeToo movement to change the cultural paradigm, which I do feel it had the potential to. But moreover I think that a hyper-individualistic culture is at least partly a product of the capitalist mode of production. We are atomized from each other, even as we attempt to reach out (sometimes digitally).
formative years? arenβt they all?
show me a permanent self and i will show you a facade or a corpse
Song offering: Carloman - Brigandage Road
~~~ May was so busy I didn't find time for a monthly piece, so I wanted to make something quick and simple now, to leave me time for June's experiment (hence the simple composition and heavy use of photo background). Honestly, this turned out way better than I expected!

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"it's just stress" oh thank god, it's just the silent killer that slowly kills you, perfectly harmless, no need to worry
sunday again i guess
actually pigs shouldn't be at pride even outside of uniform. fuck those guys
if you decide to become a police officer then that outweighs any other marginalised identity you can rustle up like. not sorry, who asked you to willingly become a pig
I have heard of black people warning their kids that the race of a police officer is cop and you should not expect solidarity from them. The same applies to other types of minorities.
The sexuality of a police officer is cop.
The gender of a police officer is cop.
When you become the enforcer and protector of capital, you are making the deal to be slightly favored by the system over others like you, in exchange for being its servant. Your solidarity is with the system that you serve, even if it hates you.
If you want solidarity with those the system hates, you cannot be the system's servant and defender.
you have to love trans women more than you hate transmisogyny, you have to love jews more than you hate antisemitism, you have to love Black people more than you hate white supremacy, you have to love Indigenous people more than you hate colonialism, you have to love the disabled and mentally ill more than you hate ableism, you have to love. you have to love.
Everybody in the club Yield to my will

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Iβm tired of βgoonersβ Iβm tired of 4chan terms Iβm tired of casual racism Iβm tired of all this shit we have to pretend is normal so we donβt upset like the few people who conflate their identities with being edgy, racist and insufferable
Iβm not a real person. Iβve never been one. Iβve been faking it this entire time and I just know theyβre going to find out soon and Iβll lose everything
Herbert Bayer - Chromatic intersection, 1966, acrylic on canvas, 101 x 101 cm
who are your parasocial enemies, like mine are andrew lloyd webber and butch hartman

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Common Words & Phrases from AAVE
Gullah & Early AAVE
Gumbo β From Bantu kingombo (okra), brought by enslaved Africans and became the name of the Creole stew thickened with okra.
Goober β From Kikongo nguba, the Bantu word for peanut that entered American English via enslaved Africans.
Yam β From West African languages (e.g., Wolof nyami, "to eat"), brought over during the slave trade and adopted into Southern cuisine.
Banjo β From a Bantu root (mbanza), the instrument was crafted by enslaved Africans based on West African string instruments.
Bogus β Likely from Hausa boko-boko (deceitful, fraudulent), entering American English through African American speech in the 19th century.
Juke (box/joint) β From Gullah juke (rowdy, disorderly), derived from Wolof dzug (to live wickedly), later attached to roadside bars.
Tote (to carry) β From West African languages (e.g., Kikongo tota, "to pick up"), recorded in Gullah before spreading to mainstream English.
Dig (to understand) β From Wolof degg (to understand), popularized by jazz musicians in the 1930s after entering English through AAVE.
Jazz β Possibly from West African or Creole slang for energy/sex, first documented in AAVE in Chicago around 1912.
Okay (OK) β Though its origin is debated, strong evidence traces it to West African languages (e.g., Wolof waw kay) via enslaved Gullah speakers.
Hip/Hep β From Wolof hipi (to open one's eyes, to be aware), entering jazz slang in the early 1900s before going mainstream.
Hepcat β A compound of "hep" + "cat" (jazz slang for a person), literally meaning "one who has his eyes open" in West African-influenced jazz culture.
Jazz, Blues & 1940sβ60s Era
Cool (as in fashionable/calm) β Originated in jazz circles, likely from saxophonist Lester Young, and entered mainstream via West African aesthetic concepts of composure.
Cat β A jazz-era term for a skilled musician or cool person, derived from West African-influenced jive talk.
Crib β Jazz slang for a house or apartment, popularized in the 1940s before becoming mainstream in the 1990s.
Hokum β AAVE slang for nonsense or BS, used in blues and jazz before being adopted more widely.
Diss β Short for "disrespect," coined in AAVE and popularized through hip-hop in the 1980s and 1990s.
Bad (meaning good) β From AAVE, where inversion of meaning creates emphasis (something so "bad" it's actually good), used since early jazz era.
Jive β AAVE slang for deceptive talk or a style of jazz dancing, used by Cab Calloway in his 1930s Hepster Dictionary.
1970sβ90s (Hip-Hop & Pre-Internet Era)
Homeboy/Homegirl β AAVE for a close friend from one's neighborhood, popularized in hip-hop and later shortened to "homes" in casual speech.
Dope (meaning great) β Shifted from "stupid" in standard English to "excellent" in AAVE during the 1980s hip-hop era.
Props β Short for "proper respects" in AAVE, used in hip-hop to acknowledge skill or achievement before entering mainstream slang.
Word (as in "I agree") β AAVE interjection ("Word!" or "Word is bond") meaning "I'm telling the truth," derived from Nation of Islam teachings.
Phat (meaning cool/great) β AAVE acronym believed to stand for "Pretty Hot And Tempting," though likely an invented backronym; popularized in 90s hip-hop.
The Bomb β AAVE phrase for something excellent or top-quality, widely used in hip-hop lyrics before mainstream adoption.
Def β AAVE slang for "excellent," popularized by Run-DMC's "King of Rock" and 80s hip-hop culture.
Fresh β AAVE for stylish or excellent, used in early hip-hop and 80s pop culture before spreading globally.
Wack β AAVE for "bad, inferior, uncool," popularized in hip-hop and later mainstream youth speech as the opposite of "cool."
Hella β AAVE intensifier meaning "very" or "a lot of," originating in Oakland/Bay Area AAVE in the 1970s-80s.
Cap / No Cap β AAVE meaning "lie" and "no lie," popularized by Bay Area rap in the 2010s, derived from "capping" (exaggerating).
1990sβ2000s (Internet Adoption & Ballroom Culture)
Slay β From AAVE and Black ballroom culture (Paris is Burning, 1990), meaning to do something extremely well, now mainstream via social media.
Spill the Tea β From AAVE (originally "spill the T," with "T" meaning truth), popularized by drag culture and Black queer communities.
Shade (as in insult) β From Black ballroom culture (documented in Paris is Burning), meaning a subtle insult, now used broadly in pop culture.
Reading (as in insulting) β From ballroom culture ("reading" someone), meaning to publicly insult with wit, immortalized in Paris is Burning.
Kiki β AAVE from ballroom culture meaning a casual gathering for gossip or chatting, later mainstreamed through pop music (e.g., Kesha).
Fierce β AAVE and ballroom term meaning exceptionally good or intense, applied to fashion, performance, or attitude.
Woke β From AAVE meaning socially and politically aware, first used in 1940s Black activism before resurging with Black Lives Matter.
Shook β AAVE meaning startled or upset, used in 1990s New York hip-hop (e.g., Mobb Deep) before mainstream adoption in the 2010s.
On Fleek β AAVE phrase meaning perfectly executed, coined in a 2014 Vine by Peaches Monroee, one of the last pre-AI viral AAVE innovations.
Finna β From AAVE contraction of "fixing to" (preparing to), documented in Southern AAVE for decades before wider use and dictionary recognition.
Chile β A phonetic spelling of "child" in Southern AAVE, used as a term of endearment or exclamation since at least the 1970s (The Wiz, 1978).
2010sβPresent (Social Media & Gen Z Slang Pipeline)
Lit β AAVE meaning exciting or excellent (originally "intoxicated" or "on fire"), popularized in hip-hop before becoming a Gen Z staple.
Bae β AAVE term of endearment meaning "before anyone else" or just a shortened form of "babe/baby," mainstreamed in the 2010s.
Ratchet β AAVE originally meaning a rowdy, aggressive woman (from "wretched"), later used to describe anything wild or out of control.
Turnt β AAVE meaning excited or intoxicated, from "turned up" in hip-hop lyrics, mainstreamed in early 2010s party slang.
Clap Back β AAVE for a sharp, witty comeback or retaliation, popularized in hip-hop (e.g., Ja Rule's 2003 song "Clap Back") before internet slang.
Bussin' β AAVE meaning delicious or excellent, applied to food or anything great, popularized on TikTok in the 2020s.
Sus β AAVE shortening of "suspicious" or "shady," used for decades before Among Us made it a global meme in 2020.
Snatched β AAVE originally describing flawless hair/makeup or a tight waist, now used to praise anything perfectly executed.
Periodt β AAVE emphatic form of "period" (meaning "end of discussion"), with a hard "t" for emphasis, popularized on Black Twitter before global use.
Bonus: My personal favorite AAVE term that I see used online religiously is receipts! AAVE meaning the proof shown to back up an accustation