Be Yourself

appleznbananaz:

theneverendingdrums:

fejes:

peaceloveandbrittana:

this wins over other pro-gay commercials because you had no idea he was gay and then you can’t tell which one is his husband

they are showing them as people

not as gays and straights

fuckin love this commercial

can we just talk abotu the fact that the husbands arent even bringing the drinks over theyre just standing there next to the drinks and chatting

fuckin useless husbands

I KNOW RIGHT?

lesb0:

alloutorg:

HUGE day for love. After months of hard work and protest, marriage equality has passed in France — 331 to 225.

Omfg VICTORIAAAA

lesb0:

alloutorg:

HUGE day for love. After months of hard work and protest, marriage equality has passed in France — 331 to 225.

Omfg VICTORIAAAA

hollowpikeman:

deliciouskaek:

shewaschurningbutter:

mikalamode:

lilgrrrlcreep:

sailorpizza:

open-ended-insanity:

This is what people see as they commute to work in Philly. 

Hollaback Philly is absolutely doing it right

this is fucking beautiful

yes perfect

ihollaback.org is and always has been one of my favorite organizations 

fucking perfect in every way. now if only this was mandatory shit taught in schools.

This is awesome. They should do this in NYC.

they should do this everywhere

Definitely agreeing that this should be taught in schools—don’t fucking yell at women.

nlmsbb:

prettieandsick:

I think the concept of virginity was created by men who thought their penises were so important it changes who a woman is.

realist shit I have ever read.

There’s nothing wrong with sex, people.

claireruns:

thechroniclesofrin:

- Having sex every day. 
- Saving sex for your wedding night. 
- Never having sex.
- Having sex with different people.
- Having sex with one person.
- Having sex with a person of your same gender.
- Loving sex. 
- Hating sex. 
- Being loud. 
- Being quiet.

The only thing wrong with sex?

When it’s not consensual.

Because that’s not sex. That’s rape.

Reblogging again because this post is so important.

The pressure to always be thin, beautiful, and healthy makes us miserable. It doesn’t make us happy, or comfortable, or confident, or safe. It keeps us hungry (literally and figuratively) and sad, certain only that we are never virtuous enough to measure up to those cultural expectations, and that we never will be.

The only people I know—myself included—who are happy with their bodies are the ones who have dropped out of the assimilation races. It all starts when we say no. And we can say no.

When someone instructs us to lose weight, to shave, to straighten our hair, to get “in shape”, to wear makeup, to wear less makeup, to dress appropriately, to dress more stylishly, no not that stylishly, to stop standing out, to stop making noise, to stop being so damn large, to stop making excuses, to stop fighting, to just get along, to just do what we tell you, to just buy into this commercial weight-loss plan, to just take these pills, to just have this cosmetic surgery, to just follow instructions, to just know that we’re doing this for your own good, to never walk alone, to never walk alone in that outfit, to never draw attention, because no one wants to see that, because no one wants to see your body, because no one wants to see you.

You can tell them no, and refuse to say more on the subject.

Lesley Kinzel (via internal-acceptance-movement)