Austin Paine--”Never Come Back Again”
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Austin Paine--”Never Come Back Again”

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This gives me hope for humanity
The Dolomites, Italy by Martin Rak
Thinking was torment; why not give up thinking, and drift and dream?
Virginia Woolf, from The Years (via violentwavesofemotion)
The Job Dilemma
I started working as an editor at Christopher Street Extension recently, and I offered to write an article about my experience looking for jobs as someone who is outted through their resume. Please read the article, and leave comments with your own stories if you can or feel comfortable. Help start a conversation about hiring discrimination.
“I live in the South, in the boonies. I have to drive 31 miles to work everyday. I drive past houses and stores with confederate flags, cars with NRA and Bush/Chaney stickers. A shooting in a local gay bar made headlines when I was in high school. Southern Virginia is not necessarily a place people associate with liberal thinking.”
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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.
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It is awful to want to go away and to want to go nowhere.
Sylvia Plath, from The Unabridged Journals Of Sylvia Plath (via violentwavesofemotion)
Character is a set of walls, like the four walls of a squash court. They are the boundaries of what a fictional person can do. Things happen and a person reacts. He cannot have a reaction outside the walls of “character.” For the most part the hero cannot, due to his moral nature, gun down a defenseless man. This wall of his character makes him appealing but, in certain emergencies, limits his range of action.
Larry Beinhart (via writingquotes)
Bellerby & Co. Globemakers: One of the World’s Only Globe-Making Studios Celebrates the Ancient Art of Handcrafted Globes
“I’m a word freak. I like words. I’ve always compared writing to music. That’s the way I feel about good paragraphs. When it really works, it’s like music.”
Hunter S. Thompson (via haikusandhyperboles)
Pilanesberg, South Africa
The Lensblr Gallery presents:
Gustav Butlex | Portfolio
4 of 11

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I like the sea: we understand one another. It is always yearning, sighing for something it cannot have, and so am I.
Greta Garbo (via aestheticintrovert)
Flåm, Norway
Been wanting to go here ever since I saw some dreamy pictures of the Flåm railway
The problem with defending the purity of the English language is that the English language is as pure as a crib-house whore. It not only borrows words from other languages; it has on occasion chased other languages down dark alley-ways, clubbed them unconscious and rifled their pockets for new vocabulary.
James Nicoll (via writingquotes)

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Foz Meadows on Portrayal of Sex in Media
I agree, all men should learn about women’s sexuality by reading My Immortal.
Hi friend! Foz here. Just a couple of points:
- I’ve specified good fanfiction in literally the first tweet. While this is, obviously, a value judgement wherein YMMV, My Immortal is famous for being arguably the most terrible fanfic ever written, and is therefore demonstrably not what I’m talking about. Similarly, I’ve seen other responses to this post bring up 50 Shades, which, despite its popularity in mainstream circles, is pretty much universally regarded as being not just terrible fanfic, but an excruciatingly bad and dangerously inaccurate portrayal of BDSM that romanticises abuse. So no: these are not the droids you’re looking for.
- Here’s the thing, though: you already knew that. The decision to respond to this post with a flippant reference to a fic that’s notorious precisely because of its poor quality is exactly why I used up precious Twitter characters to specify good fanfic, even though I shouldn’t have had to. Every mode of artistic expression is composed of good, bad and mediocre works, but when it comes to genres that are traditionally viewed as less worthy or literary - like fanfiction, or romance - we have a reflexive tendency to conflate the bad with the whole, such that the good is implied to be either exceptional or nonexistant. I specified that I’m talking about good fanfiction, not because I think such fics are an exalted minority, but to pre-emptively combat the assertion that they are, and then you’ve gone and made it anyway. So, thanks for that.
- But while we’re on the subject of quality, let’s make a very important distinction. Though fanfic is a largely unmediated medium, it’s not bad; it’s amateur, in the very literal, dictionary-definition sense of engaging or engaged in without payment; non-professional. While there’s a stereotype that lots of ficwriters are teenage girls - which, why is that always wielded as an insult? oh right, misogyny, carry on - a lot of us are, in fact, grown-ass adults of varying genders, some of whom also happen to write professionally in other contexts; like me, for instance. I’ve read fanfics that are unquestionably as good as, if not better than, many professionally published works I’ve read, some I’ve simply enjoyed or felt meh about, and others where I’ve mounted up on my Nopetopus and ridden off into the sunset after the first paragraph. It’s a grab bag, is what I’m saying, but if you think that’s an inherently different spectrum of enjoyment over quality than applies to any other medium, then I’d politely invite you to reconsider the matter.
- In conclusion: fanfic might not be your bag, but it has its own culture of editing, collaboration, publication, criticism and dissemination, its own conventions and subversions of same, its own extensive history and trope awareness, and, yes, its near-unique status as a medium invested in female sexual desire. That doesn’t mean there aren’t other things straight dudes can do to learn the mystical ways of What Women Want like, oh, say, talking to them, always bearing in mind that women are not a goddamn hivemind, but given that there are a frightening number of guys out there whose first or primary exposure to any type of porn is whatever degrading mainstream het they can scrouge up for free without virusing the hell out of their PCs, then yeah: I’m gonna go out on a fucking limb and suggest they maybe balance it out with some fanfic.
This might be the best summary of the power of fan fiction and its inherent lessons about women’s sexuality that I’ve ever seen.
Perfectionism is not the same thing as striving for excellence. Perfectionism is not about healthy achievement and growth. Perfectionism is a defensive move. It’s the belief that if we do things perfectly and look perfect, we can minimize or avoid the pain of blame, judgment, and shame. Perfectionism is a twenty-ton shield that we lug around, thinking it will protect us, when in fact it’s the thing that’s really preventing us from being seen.
Brené Brown, Daring Greatly (via emyphoric)