Obviously, Serena in a custom denim outfit by Nike at the US Open in 2004
Phoebe Dynevor as Daphne Bridgerton, Claudia Jessie as Eloise Bridgerton, Ruby Stokes as Francesca Bridgerton, Florence Hunt as Hyacinth Bridgerton, Ruth Gemmell as Violet Bridgerton
Bridgerton 1.01
swan lake ballet pump | paolo sebastian
being so fr when I say that transmisogyny has put feminism back like 50 years
what i thought we had distanced ourselves from was the reduction of women to vaginas and wombs and the ability to bear children. i thought we had progressed past ‘dresses are for women and pants are for men.’ i thought we progressed past the idea that someone is less of a woman if she does not adhere strictly to beauty standards. i thought we progressed past the idea that naturally being comfortable adhering to highly feminine standards is vulgar. but i (sarcastically) guess no one could have predicted that trans-exclusive feminism would be the downfall of all the progress we’ve made
“We’re in danger of losing what the entire second wave of feminism, what the entire second wave of women’s liberation was built on, and that was ‘Biology is not destiny’. ‘One is not born a woman,’ Simone de Beauvoir said, ‘one becomes one’. Now there’s some place where transsexual women and other women intersect. Biological determinism has been used for centuries as a weapon against women, in order to justify a second-class and oppressed status. How on Earth, then, are you going to pick up the weapon of biological determinism and use it to liberate yourself? It’s a reactionary tool.”
— Quote by Leslie Feinberg, from TransSisters: The Journal of Transsexual Feminism, issue 7, volume 1. 1995.
Marcel Proust, from "Remembrance of Things Past" in The Complete Works
if i think about this too much i will sob my heart out
not to be insensitive but some of the salem witch trials were so funny bitches like “i saw her at the devils sacrament!!!” girl... what were YOU doing at the devils sacrament 👀
SNOOPY JAPAN ARABESQUE CUP AND SAUCER SET
Sketches by A.K. MacDonald, 1932
— Sylvia Plath, The Journals of Sylvia Plath
[text ID: Outside it is warm and blue and April.]