Rise Up, Oh Heart, For There is Another Battle to Win

Mar 01

“Of course my daughter watches princess movies! I don’t want her to become a lesbian or something like that!”

bleedingwillow96:

wheeloffortune-design:

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…Mom, we need to talk.

ACTUALLY THOUGH.

(via bleedingwillow96)

I have stretch marks.

Reblog if you do too. Just to prove that it is more normal than what people actually think.

(via bleedingwillow96)

Reblog if you’re not homophobic

elma1972:

larryloveflakes:

fabu-darlin:

Every url that reblog’s will be written in a book and shown to my homophobic dad. 

Reblog this you little shits.

Always reblog.

(Source: of-aurora, via bleedingwillow96)

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…A young child born deaf in an indigenous North American nation grew up nearly always being able to communicate with her community. She would not be physically segregated. The expectation would be that if she survived the vagaries of life to which all were exposed, she could find and enjoy a partner, and she would eventually grow old as a treasured elder who tickled and guided the children around her. If all were in balance, she would find her gift—perhaps weaving, perhaps gathering particularly delicious herbs—and share that with her community, who would then share their gifts with her. A successful healing ceremony, if one was needed, would balance and resolve whatever unease might have existed—but certainly no one would expect the young girl to hear, for such a result was unnecessary.

Nearly every indigenous-language group used signed communication to some degree, and many nations shared singed languages despite their verbal difference. Europeans documented use of signed language among North American indigenous peoples as early as the sixteenth century, and anthropologists and linguists agree that it was employed long before contact with Europeans. Signed language has been identified within at least forty different language groups. Today, we know about indigenous signed languages because of its continued use by some elders, the anthropological work of scholars such as the Smithsonian’s Garrick Mallery in the late nineteenth century, films made by Hugh L. Scott in 1930 at the Indian Sign Language Council, and the tenacious scholarship and activism of contemporary linguists such as Jeffery E. Davis.

The most widely used signed language spread across an extensive region of the Great Plains, from Canada’s North Saskatchewan River to the Rio Grande, from the Rocky Mountain foothills to the Mississippi-Missouri valley. What is now referred to as Plains Indian Sign Language (PISL) enabled communication across communities regarding trade, in critical political negotiations, and even in courtship. Great Plains used this “signed lingua franca” as Davis has characterized it, within their communities as an alternative to spoken language for ritual or storytelling purposes—and of course as a primary language for deaf people and those around them.

” — A Disability History of America by Kim E. Nielsen, page 4 and 5 (via mustangscullaaay)

(via dubiousculturalartifact)

iamafanofsomanythings:
“adoxographist:
“acclassiguy:
“acclassiguy:
“aRE U KIDDING ME
”
btw i just looked at the playlist they linked and i am so fucking mad
”
The resurgence of rick rolling has brought about a new form of rick rolling. A rick rolling...

iamafanofsomanythings:

adoxographist:

acclassiguy:

acclassiguy:

aRE U KIDDING ME

btw i just looked at the playlist they linked and i am so fucking mad

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The resurgence of rick rolling has brought about a new form of rick rolling. A rick rolling where you trick someone into thinking you’re going to classic rick roll them, only to link them to a photograph of the video, or an ashley tisdale cover, or this playlist. 

Like living creatures, memes must evolve to survive….

this is the most beautiful thing i have ever seen

(via bleedingwillow96)

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