âI can be your family.â ahHAHAHAAa

oozey mess

if i look back, i am lost
almost home

â

ellievsbear
Sweet Seals For You, Always
RMH
One Nice Bug Per Day

he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
noise dept.
Monterey Bay Aquarium
sheepfilms
Misplaced Lens Cap
AnasAbdin
$LAYYYTER

çĽćĽ / Permanent Vacation

pixel skylines


seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Argentina
seen from Netherlands
seen from Argentina

seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from Australia

seen from Canada

seen from Romania
seen from United States
@parkingsons
âI can be your family.â ahHAHAHAAa

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
iâve never spoken of him until now, not to anyone, not even your grandfather. a womanâs heart is a deep ocean of secrets. but now you know there was a man named jack dawson and that he saved me. in every way that a person can be saved. i donât even have a picture of him. he exists now only in my memory.Â
âYes [the beard] was a very, very distinct choice that I made and it was a topic of conversation and discussion between me and the network and the executive producer and they ultimately did let me keep it and I know it sounds crazy but itâs a very big part of the character and it kind of hold the keys to several things. Heâs a street guy and tries to cling to that in some level and likes to remind himself of where heâs from. And he also in some way, is hiding from some things and doesnât like to show his vulnerability. â I know it sounds crazy but thatâs really the root of it and thereâs a lack of trust.â - Charlie Weber (x)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
On Asian "accents"
It started when I was in kindergarten, and I was so proud I did not have to go to Bingo class, unlike my friends, because I could speak good English -
although I had no idea what a yellow dog that could spell had anything to do with Chinese.Â
(I figure out now that it was probably called Bilingual class)
I am lucky. I speak the fluent, accentless English of newscasters, the dialect spoken by the children of immigrants, that we learned not from our parents but rather from watching Sesame Street and other things on tv.
Last year, a white facebook friend of mine posted, âIn order to celebrate Chinese New Year, me talk rike chinese man arr day.âÂ
And then told me that she was âsorry I was offendedâ and âshe didnât mean anything by itâ when I (nicely, sweetly) told her that that shit was not okay. She said that she saw it the same as doing an accent, like Irish. Or British. Or Italian. (for bonus points, she even said that she has lots of Asian co-workers and friends, and LOVES Asian people, and so is not a racist.)
And when one of my white friends gets drunk, he thinks his âAsian accentâ is hilarious.
And I was told by a coworker about the time my Asian coworker mispronounced âBarrowayâ as âBwawwowayâ and how hilarious it was.
Hereâs the thing - can you guess how many Asian people I know who actually say
me rikey
me from _____
me so solly
(or, if you like, the fetishized versions: me so horny, me love you long time)
if you said ZERO, then ding ding ding! Congratulations, you have working brain cells.
No, my misguided fb friend, the âAsian accentâ is not an actual imitation of an accent, comparable to your bad British/Irish/Italian - but rather a mockery of Asian people and their supposed inability to speak English. It is the perpetuation of the image of Asian people as perpetual foreigners in America.
Like that time when my family was at an Italian restaurant, and we were speaking to my father in Cantonese, and a drunken white lady said very loudly, âGOD when you come to this country at least learn the language!â
Or when my father was pulled over for speeding, and although he said âwhatâs the problem, officer?â the first thing the state trooper said was, âDo you speak English?â
Your fake âAsian accentsâ are not harmless and silly, because at the root of the joke, it says - you, you are stupid. You cannot speak English. You are Other. You do not belong.
my parents have been in this country for 30 years. They have been American citizens for 30 years.
And they are very self-conscious of their imperfect English, afraid that it makes them look ignorant, knowing that it marks them as immigrants. That, after 30 years, you can still be told (in not so many words) that you do not belong.
The Cultural Revolution started in China when my father was 13. He was pulled out of school and, later, sent to work in the fields. (He escaped to Hong Kong when he was 18, but that is another story for another time.)
When my father came to this country, he had a middle school education and did not speak a lick of English. He worked as a busboy at a Chinese restaurant, the evening shift that ran until 3 or 4 in the morning, and went to school during the day.
It took my father ten years to earn his bachelorâs degree. He is now an engineer.
Is this not your âAmerican Dream?â
When my mother came to this country, she spoke very little English. She got a job as an entry level clerk. Over the years she earned one promotion after another. She is now management at a large federal agency, and manages funds for the whole state.
Is this not your âAmerican Dream?â
And my father didnât understand why his coworkers said, âflied lice, flied lice!â to him over and over and laughed.
And my father is still afraid to speak in a professional setting, even when he has ideas.Â
And my mother still checks and double checks her professional e-mails with me, for fear of mockery from the same people she manages.
And people donât understand why I canât take a harmless joke. Why I donât think that shit is funny.
No, I donât ârikey.âÂ
No, I wonât âlove you long time.â
And no, Iâm not sorry.
So, please, kindly - FUCK OFF.
Reblogging this for, like, the fiftieth time because it has never stopped being relevant to my life and it always, always breaks my heart.
Itâs not funny. Itâs not okay. Itâs not harmless. Itâs alienating and hurtful.
cute first date ideas: hand-to-hand combat
Lee Soo Hyuk for Marie Claire Korea, January 2016
Fashion! Put It All On Me â  Elie Saab Fall 2015 Haute Couture

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
â MATTHEW DADDARIO GIF HUNT â
Under the cut, you will find #250, small/medium, HQ gifs of the extremely attractive Matthew Daddario. Best known for his role as alec lightwood in the shadowhunters. None of these gifs were made by me. A huge thank you goes to the awesome makers. All the credits go to them and I donât claim any of their work as my own. A like or a reblog would make me very happy because it took me hours to finish this hunt.
Keep reading
@sarcastrophic1x1 asked: Charlie Hunnam or Kit Harington?
I can fly anything.
Cupid and Psyche, Giuseppe Crespi (1707) | Savages, Marina And The Diamonds (2015)
Alicia Vikander photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vanity Fair

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
i really love our generationâs joke trend of like, very calm but incredibly inflated hyperbole. like nobody says âoh sheâs prettyâ anymore we say âi would willingly let her murder meâ and everyone is just like âlol sameâ
i think âsameâ is also great and âme,â i love when somebody reblogs a picture of like, a lizard, and just says âmeâ and we all know exactly what they mean. the current online Humor Discourse is remarkable because we trade exclusively in metaphors and implications and nobody ever, ever says anything outright and yet EVERYBODY understands each other perfectly
the problem is you can say it online and everyone relates, but then you get into the habit of saying it out loud and no one knows what the hell you are talking about, like online you could say âsameâ about the lizard online but in real life if a pencil fell and you said âmeâ people just stare at you
Truman Capote, In Cold Blood