âTurn around.â
Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019) dir. CĂ©line SciammaÂ
Three Goblin Art

Kiana Khansmith
Show & Tell
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

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blake kathryn
noise dept.
KIROKAZE

Jules of Nature
d e v o n
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
wallacepolsom
Xuebing Du
Not today Justin
AnasAbdin
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

shark vs the universe
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seen from Vietnam
seen from Brazil
seen from Canada
seen from China
seen from Japan

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United Kingdom
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seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from TĂŒrkiye
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seen from United States
seen from Indonesia
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seen from Italy
seen from Nigeria
seen from Canada
@iamtheroyal
âTurn around.â
Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019) dir. CĂ©line SciammaÂ

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6 Signs You May Be Too Hard On Yourself | psych2go
This video calls me out to an unbelievably personal level because literally all the points explained are correct and relatable for me
Letâs all take a moment and thank modern family for this
Are you a woman of color who needs money for college or grad school?
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source
The list with more art scholarships â here: http://www.scholarshipsforwomen.net/art/
Iâm so happy more opportunities are coming up! Scholarships are in effect a gift of free cash. Free cash is very popular in every society and nation. So the applicant and recipient of scholarship money has worked very hard and has much to offer our society and is a deserved winner. It is still a free cash gift⊠GET IT!Â
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application:http://www.thefreeschool.education/scholarships.html
#BlackGirls #EducatedBlackÂ
I need this
Needed
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Reference
For my babes in or wanting to go back to school
RIP Katreese Barnes, the absolute legend. She just died of breast cancer at 56.

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Reblog if you need this energy
Like a Much-Needed Hug From a Loved One đ€
The Issue: Anxiety is the fastest-growing mental illness in America, affecting approximately 40 million American adults, according to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America. Women are twice as likely as men to be affected. Many factors can lead to a generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) diagnosis, and three of the most common risk factors are genetics, personality, and life events.
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THE MOVIEâS OFFICIAL POSTER
IS THAT JENNY FROM MY LIFE AS A TEENAGE ROBOT??????
Donât you guys understand??
Iâve tried to kill myself like 10 times. Iâm heavily dissociative and dysphoric and have no sense of self.
I have massive seizures.
Iâm already dead my punishment is dealing with you idiots on the daily.
You saying youâre suicidal and have mental illnesses and then turn around being disrespectful to a man that died not even 2 days ago isnât gonna stop me from saying youâre a disgusting person. Youâre a shitty person and there are no excuses.

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The fans shouting "f*ck trump" in the background live on fox news. Happy Sunday yall
I take back everything I said about this show
God I love Gumball.
đđđđđđđđ
The Little Mermaid (1989) Live Action References | Behind the Scenes
Important
Whoooooooo ⊠93 days âŠ. damn!!
When she said âanybody else wanna go? You can go tooâ I was living

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Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
This moved me.
The author of the writing below is Dominique Matti she is a writer from Philadelphia and this was originally posted on Those People. The author is also pictured in this post:
Because when I was five, my kindergarten classmate told me I couldnât be the princess in the game we were playing because black girls couldnât be princesses. Because I was in third grade the first time a teacher seemed shocked at how âwell-spokenâ I was. Because in fourth grade I was told my crush didnât like black girls.
Because in sixth grade a different crush told me I was pretty â for a black girl. Because in 7th grade my predominantly black suburban neighborhood was nicknamed âSpring Ghettosâ instead of calling it its name (Spring Meadows). Because I was in 8th grade the first time I was called an Oreo and told that I âwasnât really blackâ like it was a compliment.
Because in 9th grade when I switched schools a boy told me he knew I had to be mixed with something to be so pretty. Because in 10th grade my group of friends and I were called into an office and asked if we were a gang, or if we had father figures. Because in 11th grade my AP English teacher told me that I didnât write like a college-bound student (though I later scored perfectly on the exam).
Because when I volunteered in Costa Rica that summer, I was whistled at and called Negrita. Because when I asked my host father if that was like being called nigger, he said, no, it was a compliment because black women are perceived to be very good in bed.
Because I was a kid. Because I watched from the bleachers while the school resource officer didnât let my brother into a football game after mistaking him for another black boy who was banned. Because the school resource officer maced him for insisting he was wrong. Because I was suspended for telling the school resource officer he didnât deserve respect.
Because my senior year boyfriend said nigger. Because I was one of two black girls in the freshman class at my college. Because at meetings to talk about how to attract more black students, someone suggested that the school attracted a certain demographic (sustainable living, farming, general hippiness) and that maybe black people âjust werenât interested in things like that.â
Because my college boyfriend called me a âfiery negressâ as a joke when he ordered for me at a restaurant. Because the boyfriend after that cut me off for saying he was privileged. Because I canât return to my hometown without getting pulled over.
Because when I got married people assumed I was pregnant. Because people who know Iâm married call my husband my âbaby daddy.â Because my pregnancy with my son was plagued with videos of black lives being taken in cold blood. Because their murderers still walk the streets. Because the nation sent me a message that my sonâs life didnât matter. Because when Tamir Rice was murdered I curled up on the bed and sobbed, cupping my belly.
Because my son heard me sobbing from the inside. Because they donât care about us. Because when I was 7 months pregnant my neighbor asked me to help him move a dresser up a flight of stairs. Because I am not seen as a woman. Because I am not allowed to be fragile. Because the nurse that checked me in at the hospital to deliver wouldnât look my husband in the eye. Because the vast majority of people wonât look my husband in the eye.
Because when the doctors put my son in my arms and I saw that he was as dark as his father, I knew life would be even harder for him. Because he will be regarded the same way I was. Because he will be forced to grow up before he is grown. Because strangers at the store think itâs okay to reach into my sonâs stroller and touch him without a word to me. Because we arenât entitled to boundaries. Because they think we are here for their enjoyment. Because people donât think we are people.
Because my nephew told me he couldnât be Spider Man like he wants to because Spider Man is white. Because when he was four he said that he wants to be white so that he can go on a boat like the people on TV. Because I couldnât save him from that. Because I canât protect my son. Because I canât protect myself. Because my stomach sinks whenever I see a police car.
Because when my husband leaves the house at night I am afraid heâll be killed for looking like somebody. Because I worry that if I went missing like the 64,000 other black women in this nation, the authorities wouldnât try hard to find me. Because I am disposable. Because I am hated. Because we keep dying.
Because they justify our deaths. Because no one is held accountable. Because I am gas lighted. Because I have been told that by speaking about being oppressed I am victimizing myself. Because our murders are filmed and still pardoned. Because I donât know what it means to let loose. Because doing the things that my white peers do with ease could cost me my life â trespassing in abandoned buildings, smoking joints, wearing a hoodie, looking an officer in the eye, playing music loudly, existing. Because I am afraid to relax. Because I am traumatized.
Because there isnât a place in the world White Supremacy hasnât touched. Because I am trapped here. Because the playing field isnât leveled. Because I love my skin. Because I love being a woman. Because not hating myself is considered radical. Because Iâve been called racist for defending myself.
Because all the major protests are for cis black men. Because Iâve been told that talking about the women whoâve died is taking away from the real issue. Because I get no break from fighting. Because everything is a struggle. Because my anger isnât validated. Because they donât care about my pain. Because they donât believe in my pain. Because they forgive themselves without atoning.
Because Iâm not free. Because the awareness of it permeates everything. Because itâs not ending. Because they teach the children that itâs already ended. Because someone will assert their supremacy over me today. Because theyâll do it tomorrow. Because I want more. Because I deserve better.