2farts2furious:

daaaamn

funny and critical. all the applause.

(via flame2009)

221,055 notes

Say you’re walking down the sidewalk on a beautiful day. Someone who has internalized an outsider’s perspective of herself will often spend more time adjusting her clothing or hair, wondering what other people are thinking of her, judging the shape of her shadow or reflection in a window, etc. She will picture herself walking – she literally turns herself into an object of vision – instead of enjoying the sunny weather….

… Women are constantly being looked at. Even when we’re not, we’re so hyperaware of the possibility of being looked at that it can rule even our most private lives. Including in front of our mirrors, alone.

Excerpt via Beauty Redefined ”To BE or to be LOOKED at?”  (via fitvillains)

Good Gawd, THIS. 

I’m working to re-define my thinking about myself and walk in the glorious space of not being an object for other people’s visual consumption and the freedom it brings. 

And reminding people of that fact when they feel compelled to comment. 

(via str8nochaser)

Fuck.

(via versatilequeen)

“Judging the shape of her shadow” Yep. Yep yep yep yep. 

(via neutralgenius)

(via laceupmyart)

13,936 notes

#feminism

#beauty

landorus:

image

i cant believe this

(via afternoonsnoozebutton)

43,901 notes

paintaloosa:
“ now-dammit-sid:
“ did you catch that?!
”
I am not even that into baseball and I can’t stop watching this. XD
”

paintaloosa:

now-dammit-sid:

did you catch that?!

I am not even that into baseball and I can’t stop watching this. XD

(via afternoonsnoozebutton)

1,840,046 notes

earthmoonlotus:

pinkiepony:

Don’t ever tell a guy to “man up”. Emotions do not make someone any less of a man. Additionally, lack of strength is not synonymous with the female gender.

Even just the fact that this expression is so widely used shows that we live in a patriarchal society.

(via redhairvacantexpressions)

1,337 notes

Say you’re walking down the sidewalk on a beautiful day. Someone who has internalized an outsider’s perspective of herself will often spend more time adjusting her clothing or hair, wondering what other people are thinking of her, judging the shape of her shadow or reflection in a window, etc. She will picture herself walking – she literally turns herself into an object of vision – instead of enjoying the sunny weather….

… Women are constantly being looked at. Even when we’re not, we’re so hyperaware of the possibility of being looked at that it can rule even our most private lives. Including in front of our mirrors, alone.

Excerpt via Beauty Redefined ”To BE or to be LOOKED at?”  (via fitvillains)

Good Gawd, THIS. 

I’m working to re-define my thinking about myself and walk in the glorious space of not being an object for other people’s visual consumption and the freedom it brings. 

And reminding people of that fact when they feel compelled to comment. 

(via str8nochaser)

Fuck.

(via versatilequeen)

“Judging the shape of her shadow” Yep. Yep yep yep yep. 

(via neutralgenius)

(via damnitdisney)

13,936 notes

everyoneisdeadnow:

if we go to a restaurant and have to choose between a table or a booth and you say table i will never trust you again

(via tastefullyoffensive)

639,267 notes

salesonfilm:

The Invisible War (Kirby Dick, 2012)

(via afternoonsnoozebutton)

10,156 notes

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