Semester 1 is finished which means I get to catch up on sleep, read books and spend a week away with @vids12 (at Adelaide, South Australia)
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ


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@fel1ne
Semester 1 is finished which means I get to catch up on sleep, read books and spend a week away with @vids12 (at Adelaide, South Australia)

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And it all comes down to the knowledge that we’re gonna die

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David Duchovny by Rex Rystedt.
Beautiful apartment renovation in Lisbon, Portugal
Depression devastates your self-esteem. I often stayed in my apartment for days at a time because I was afraid that people outside would see that I had been crying and judge me. I was worried I would be too slow and awkward in conversation if I ran into someone. But Facebook offered me a platform on which I could ensure an acceptable appearance. If I hadn’t had it, I think I would have withdrawn socially even more than I did, which in turn would have made my depression even worse. And for what it’s worth, my Facebook feed was actually a more accurate record of my life than my own depression-tinged experiences. Depression negatively affects your memory in a number of ways, including making it difficult to recall happy memories in general and especially positive memories about yourself (pdf). During my worst periods with depression, it was a struggle for me to conjure even a single happy memory. It wasn’t that my good memories were gone—only that it was hard to retrieve them when I was in such a different state of mind. Once, when a therapist asked me to list three times in my entire life that I felt happy, I was forced to go down the calendar of holidays in my head and try to remember what I did for each of them. But after an emotionally difficult 2014, I was surprised to see that my Facebook “Year in Review” looked pretty awesome. There I was hiking in the Rocky Mountains for my first anniversary. Another photo showed me touring the Grand Temple in Bangkok during a conference. There were lots of beautiful places and genuine smiles. Looking through the highlights of my year, I realized that it wasn’t my online image that had told a lie—it was my own depressed brain that had been lying to me about what my life was like. There had been so many happy moments that year that I might have otherwise neglected because they didn’t fit with the prevailing tide of my mood (pdf). When your memories and even your subjective experiences are warped by depression, it can be helpful to have a digital record to remind you of the facts.
Faking happiness on social media helped me cope with depression — Quartz
(via
brutereason
)
This is so interesting, I’ve never thought about social media in this way before!!!
(via amygambriill)

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The constant pop cultural message that women are wetting their pants to get married strategically obscures the fact that women are happier when single.
By Lisa Wade, PhD
To Post Secret, a project that collects personal secrets written artistically onto postcards, someone recently sent in the above bombshell: “Ever since we started getting married and buying houses,” she writes, “my girlfriends and I don’t laugh much anymore.”
Her personal secret is, in fact, a national one. It’s part of what has been called the “paradox of declining female happiness.” Women have more rights and opportunities than they have had in decades and yet they are less happy than ever in both absolute terms and relative to men.
Marriage is part of why. Heterosexual marriage is an unequal institution. Women on average do more of the unpaid and undervalued work of households, they work more each day, and they are more aware of this inequality than their husbands. They are more likely to sacrifice their individual leisure and career goals for marriage. Marriage is a moment of subordination and women, more so than men, subordinate themselves and their careers to their relationship, their children, and the careers of their husbands.
Compared to being single, marriage is a bum deal for many woman. Accordingly, married women are less happy than single women and less happy than their husbands, they are less eager than men to marry, they’re more likely to file for divorce and, when they do, they are happier as divorcees than they were when married (the opposite is true for men) and they are more likely than men to prefer never to remarry.
The only reason this is surprising is because of the torrent of propaganda we get that tells us otherwise. We are told by books, sitcoms, reality shows, and romantic comedies that single women are wetting their pants to get hitched. Men are metaphorically or literally drug to the altar in television commercials and wedding comedies, an idea invented by Hugh Hefner in the 1950s (before the “playboy,” men who resisted marriage were suspected of being gay). Not to mention the wedding-themed toys aimed at girls and the ubiquitous wedding magazines aimed solely at women. Why, it’s almost as if they were trying very hard to convince us of something that isn’t true.
But if women didn’t get married to men, what would happen? Marriage reduces men’s violence and conflict in a society by giving men something to lose. It increases men’s efforts at work, which is good for capitalists and the economy. It often leads to children, which exacerbate cycles of earning and spending, makes workers more reliable and dependent on employers, reduces mobility, and creates a next generation of workers and social security investors. Marriage inserts us into the machine. And if it benefits women substantially less than men, then it’s no surprise that so many of our marriage promotion messages are aimed squarely at them.
Lisa Wade is a professor at Occidental College and the co-author of Gender: Ideas, Interactions, Institutions. Find her on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
GOT DAMN
while i am both married and happy (relatively, and i was much sadder before), heterosexual marriage as an institution is pretty broken. working through the cultural expectations that marriage carries is a daily conversation in my relationship. if you don’t want to be unhappy or mired in patriarchal expectations, you have to speak up every time you notice misogyny/your labor being taken for granted. you have to constantly define and redefine the terms of your relationship. and i completely understand people who would rather just not.

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Apartment in Stockholm by Myrica Bergqvist Inredare
This stylish studio apartment located in Stockholm, Sweden, was designed by Myrica Bergqvist Inredare.