Care to debate abortion?

kiwianaroha:

prochoice-or-gtfo:

motherbychoice:

Nah

Mood.
-V

This reminds me of a party I went to last year. I was standing with some friends, chatting, and someone said something that indirectly implied that sexism exists. Some trivial recounting of the basic facts of daily life for most women. Something so mild, so uncontroversial, so mundane that I don’t even remember what it was. 

Suddenly, this man standing on the outskirts of our conversational circle piped up with “actually, I think men are more discriminated against than women these days.”

 All conversation died.

I turned to look at him and he had this smug, insufferable grin on his face, relishing this moment, expecting us to waste our time and energy refuting this ridiculous thing he had just said.

The Devil’s Advocate was among us.

And, in my mind, I saw the next 15+ minutes playing out. The parade of facts and statistics in a vain attempt to defend ourselves, our gender, and to prove that misogyny is real. The glib, snide denials from some shithead who is getting off on our pain and frustration. The Gish Gallop of bullshit that would take a whole evening to properly dismantle. It was depressing and overwhelming. I hated it. I had to kill it before it began.

So I looked him dead in the eye and I said “OK,“ shrugged, and just walked away. 

Nothing I have ever said to another human being has ever been so crushing. As I walked away, I watched the smug grin vanish and confusion and anxiety set in. The rest of the group turned their backs to him and carried on as if he had never spoken – as if he was invisible. He was still staring at me when I walked over to another friend and told her what he had said. I pointed him out for her and made direct eye contact with him while we both laughed.

tl;dr: Don’t feed the troll. Let it perish, cold and hungry, in the wasteland of your indifference. It is weak and you are strong. Live your best life.

thea, i think you’re gonna love this, here in brazil they adapted several jane austen novels into one story (a soap opera). and they wrote a gay couple slightly based on anne elliot and captain wentworth. i’ll never get over this, their dialogues are something else and their scenes really are small masterpieces!

thealogie:

excellent I’ve lived my whole life for brazilian jane austen soaps…@netflix please bring this to an american audience

alexaprilgarden:

Noctiluca scintillans

It’s been a while, but chapter 14 is up!

“John looks at him for a moment, raising his eyebrows in surprise. Then he
   lifts his hand to brush a curl away from Sherlock’s face. How did he end up
   here with Sherlock? What’s he done right to make his life take this turn?
   Waking up in his tent with Sherlock feels like a sunny morning, like the world new and open, like all worries wiped away. Like the promise that things will turn out good, very good, better than he’d ever dared hope. It’s the best fucking feeling.

  

The curl falls back into its old place on Sherlock’s forehead, its s-shaped tail hanging in front of his right eye. John brushes it away again, trying to tug it back into the mass of Sherlock’s other curls. He gently combs his hand through Sherlock’s hair, for longer than necessary, just because he can’t believe how soft it feels. Sherlock’s fucking silky curls are something entirely different than his own short hair. John’s hair never feels like this, but maybe he’s never touched it with this amount of affection.”

I know I’m repeating myself, but I have the most amazing betas, @green-violin-bow and @ennisgarlaend, and the most amazing readers. ❤

Keep reading

sweetenergrandes:

“When the [Wonder Woman] TV show came out, I was twelve years old, and I just never seen anything like it in my life. I mean, soon as the going got tough, you saw this woman who was seemingly demure and sweet and beautiful and all of that. [Diana] could transform into this superhero and just get the job done. It wasn’t about her trading in her femininity or her intelligence. She wasn’t vindictive towards other women. She was just her. And the lasso, and the bulletproof bracelets

― I mean, that sort of superhuman power associated with being a girl… I’ve never seen anything like it. I’m still a twelve-year-old girl. I try to talk her off the ledge every once in a while, but I’m still a twelve-year-old girl.” ― Viola Davis on her obsession with Wonder Woman