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Yeah okay idk don’t hurt me alfjsfgkdgj
Based off of the comments in this post.
(via feltelures)
Posted on June 3, 2012 via Sephirona (Version 2.0) with 16,439 notes ()
Source: sephirona
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Conclusion: dinosaurs: gleeok: water is not lube, water washes out lube and the natural...
water is not lube, water washes out lube and the natural lubrication of the vagina water is not lube WATER IS NOT LUBE. water is a solvent. it dissolve things. like lubricant.
putting water between a dick, real or not, and a fleshy wall causes micro-tears because there’s friction…
(via feltelures)
Posted on June 3, 2012 via mr no-good with 68 notes ()
Source: gleeok
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artistfingers asked: Top three novels?
Sorry, meant to get to this sooner! I’m taking “top” for most personally relevant/enjoyed/inspired/etc.
Top is Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. It’s quality, it’s witty, and my copy is slowly yet steadily falling apart from overuse.
Next up is Lord of Emperors by Guy Kay. It’s very thinly veiled historical fantasy, something I didn’t actually catch on when I read it in high school. It makes it into my top three due to sheer inspirational power. The climax of the book is everywhere, pulling in plotlines every which way, and the first time I read it, I was in awe. I wanted to write like this. I’m a bit afraid to go back and reread it now, because it might not be as good as I remember it.
And then there’s The Hobbit. My dad decided one day to plunk me into literature and read the entire thing aloud to me when I was little. I’m pretty sure it was the first thing I ever mentally composed fanfic of, and I suppose it’s my first cosplay too. I was even hobbit-sized at the time.
Posted on June 3, 2012 with 5 notes ()
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Then there’s gender attribution, whereby we look at somebody and say, “that’s a man,” or “that’s a woman.” And this is important because the way we percieve another’s gender affects the way we relate to that person. Gender attribution is the sneaky one. It’s the one we do all the time without thinking about it; kinda like driving a sixteen-wheeler down a crowded highway… without thinking about it.
In this culture, gender attribution, like gender assignment, is phallo-centric. That is, one is male until perceived otherwise. According to a study by Kessler and McKenna, one can extrapolate that it would take the presence of roughly four female cues to outweigh the presence of one male cue: one is assumed male until proven otherwise. That’s one reason why many women today get “sirred” whereas very few men get called “ma’am.Kate Bornstein, Gender Outlaw: On Men, Women, and the Rest of US (via queerandpresentdanger)(via frompastmetofutureme)
Posted on June 3, 2012 via QUEERING THE GAME OF LIFE with 86 notes ()
Source: queerandpresentdanger
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(via wllw979)
Posted on June 3, 2012 via Absolutely Madness - Tumblr with 2,002 notes ()
Source: absolutelymadness
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(via notsofireproof)
Posted on June 3, 2012 via i wan t to go bak to farmin pods :( with 17,292 notes ()
Source: pesterchump
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We grew up with the Internet and on the Internet. This is what makes us different; this is what makes the crucial, although surprising from your point of view, difference: we do not ‘surf’ and the internet to us is not a ‘place’ or ‘virtual space’. The Internet to us is not something external to reality but a part of it: an invisible yet constantly present layer intertwined with the physical environment. We do not use the Internet, we live on the Internet and along it. If we were to tell our bildnungsroman to you, the analog, we could say there was a natural Internet aspect to every single experience that has shaped us. We made friends and enemies online, we prepared cribs for tests online, we planned parties and studying sessions online, we fell in love and broke up online. The Web to us is not a technology which we had to learn and which we managed to get a grip of. The Web is a process, happening continuously and continuously transforming before our eyes; with us and through us. Technologies appear and then dissolve in the peripheries, websites are built, they bloom and then pass away, but the Web continues, because we are the Web; we, communicating with one another in a way that comes naturally to us, more intense and more efficient than ever before in the history of mankind.
Posted on June 3, 2012 via AZspot with 4,569 notes ()
Source: booktwo.org
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(via frompastmetofutureme)
Posted on June 3, 2012 via MªïĿBoMB with 21,663 notes ()
Source: mailbomb
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FOR BEN ♥
I can’t help but notice that your mug is still labeled “coffee”, as if you were avoiding the true reality that is tea.
Posted on June 2, 2012 via seiji has many socks. with 4 notes ()
Source: 4seiji
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(via imperilled)
Posted on June 2, 2012 via this is not here. with 26,209 notes ()
Source: guremike.jp
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And so for me, the whole point of the gender movement is that it’s not only about those familiar specimens inevitabley correlated in the bianary zoo: the stone butches, drag kings and queens, lipsticks and deisel dykes, radical faeries and nelly fags, the transexuals, transgendered, crossdressers, and intersexed. It’s also about the 17 year old who ruins her health with anorexia because real women are suposed to be unnaturally thin, It’s about the aging lesbian who suffers a full hysterectomy because certain kinds of gendered bodies don’t matter. And it’s about the shy artistic little straight boy who is taunted and assualted each day because he is percieved as genderqueer, gender different, or simply gender vulnerable.
Riki Wilchins Gender Rights Are Human Rights (via skrinkles3)
gender vulnerable
(via frompastmetofutureme)
(via frompastmetofutureme)
Posted on June 2, 2012 via with 139 notes ()
Source: skrinkles3
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LBGTQ* Children’s (Picture) Books To Keep On Your Radar
- Oh The Things Mommies Do! What Can Be Better Than Having Two? written by Crystal Tompkins; illustrations by Lindsey Evans (follow their tumblr HERE)
- The Boy Who Cried Fabulous written by Leslea Newman; illustrated by Peter Ferguson
- My Mommy Is A Boy written by Jason Martinez; illustrated by Karen Winchester
- My Two Super Dads written by Bronny Falls and Munsta Vincent
- Pugdog written by Andrea U’Ren (*book discussing gender)
- The Baby Kangaroo Treasure Hunt, A gay parenting story written by Carmen Martinez Jover; illustrated by Rosemary Martinez
- My Princess Boy written by Cheryl Kilodavis ; illustrations by Suzanne DeSimone (*book discussing gender)
- Arwen and Her Two Daddies written by Jarko De Witte van Leeuwen (Translated from Dutch)
- Fairy Tales of the 21st Century written by Bill Carey (retelling of Sleeping Beauty and Cinderella)
- My Uncle’s Wedding written by Eric Ross; illustrations by Tracy K. Green
(via frompastmetofutureme)
Posted on June 2, 2012 via -KNOW Homo- with 1,729 notes ()
Source: knowhomo
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(via notsofireproof)
Posted on June 2, 2012 via Vestige with 59,422 notes ()
Source: shercockled
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I hate it when fans ship avengers characters just from what they saw in the movies
Stop shipping them. Tony and Steve especially. Want to base ships? Read the comics.
Okay.







Have I read enough comcis for you??

:-|
you’re right. i just reread all those comics
and you’re totally right
context?
what context?
there’s no context here
no
context
whatsoever
wow this ship has no base to it
at all
i can’t find one thing that’s shippable about them
not one
it’s not like, idk, tony has a captain america memorabilia room or anything. or that he has posters and pictures of cap, just cap, around his mansions. that he has captain america collectibles. that he pays, what? 2 million? for steve’s original avengers card.
it’s not like steve has a signed iron man helmet in his apartment. nope
it’s not like tony was so torn about the civil war that for the first time in his life his grief was too big to drown in alcohol
it’s not like they constantly go around spouting praise about one another’s genius/azure eyes/moral compass/compassion. lol no
it’s not like marvel writers heavily imply that the biggest reason tony stark wanted to wake up at the end of dissassembled was for steve.
it’s not like the others avengers refer to them as mom and dad.
it’s not like despite being polar opposites on so many different issues, they’re still bffs. no.
it’s not like after steve died tony had hallucinations/dreams about him. nope
it’s not like they kissed in the 616 universe or got married in another universe.
it’s not like they come to each other’s aid, wherever, whenever. nuh-huh.
it’s not like other characters tell them to get a room or talk about how much they love each other
it’s not like marvel ships them or anything. like, they would never purposefully sandwich panels of steve kissing someone and tony being in unbearable pain or anything. pshh no.
is that enough for you guys? can you get off your high horse of “they’re superheroes, they’re manly, they can’t be gay”? can you shut up now? i would just like to point out: they. get. married. in another universe. but married. i’m sorry, but in my opinion, that’s pretty canon. jussayin’.
(via ironfries)
Posted on June 2, 2012 via Rift Master with 4,435 notes ()
Source: rift-master
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Only cause we know better.

(via notsofireproof)
Posted on June 2, 2012 via A Guide To Deduction with 26,285 notes ()
Source: aguidetodeduction



