Doctor Awesome by Lee Bretschneider
11”x17” glossy print on 100# stock. $10.
Add to Cart
(via withrevolutionarycries)
Doctor Awesome by Lee Bretschneider
11”x17” glossy print on 100# stock. $10.
Add to Cart
(via withrevolutionarycries)
(via zooborns)
Since I forgot cats n’ tats Thursday for the umpteenth time, here’s a lion cub.
(via deliciouskaek)
Street level Monopoly installations in Logan Square, Chicago at 1. Small Bar 2. Lulu’s 3. Longman and Eagle. One of the many reasons I love Logan.
(via blackbutshining)
—
those 2/3 of Afghans – something like 20 million people – face PTSD or other mental disorders with only FORTY-TWO psychiatrists and psychologists in the entire country.
(via theamericanbear)
(via withrevolutionarycries)
Christians have all sorts of privilege in this society. (I’ve honestly never heard of anyone wearing a rosary for fashion, tbqh, but I’m not in that demographic, so that doesn’t really mean much.)
I personally think it’s pretty shitty, but to say that it’s the same as wearing a bindi or a headdress is ignoring centuries of colonization and racism. You can’t equate the two, because in doing so you’re erasing history.
If I can throw in my two cents as a Catholic:
I’ve seen people of both genders, from a few different social groups, wearing rosaries.
Does it bother me?
Absolutely.
The rosary is an important symbol of my faith. It marks me not only as Christian but as distinctively Catholic, and it’s a sign of our unique and passionate devotion to Mama Mary.
It’s not jewelry (it’s not meant to be worn around the neck at all - it’s designed to be tied at the waist of a monk or nun’s robes) and it bugs me that people wear it for reasons of style.
It is oppressive? FUCK NO.
There are a couple of reasons why.
First and foremost, I can’t be oppressed as a Catholic Christian. People representing my views have had political, religious, social, and institutional power for almost 1700 years. We are the oppressors, not the oppressed. While Catholicism and Christianity are no longer as popular as they once were, they still dominate, and any trends toward unpopularity are incredibly recent. I might be discriminated against - there might be someone who unreasonably hates Christians or Catholics - but that is an isolated incident of disapproval and in no way can it be compared to the kind of systematic oppression Christianity has inflicted upon people of other faiths.
Of all the people I’ve seen wearing them, a polite conversation about how important that symbol is and an offer to teach them how to pray it the Catholic way has ALWAYS worked. They, at the very least, stop wearing it, and many have accepted the offer of instruction.
This is a powerful sign of my privilege. Claiming something as a religious symbol of mine has power, because my religion and religious views are considered legitimate. Other people feel that they have an obligation to respect them. This is not the case for almost every other faith. When I talk about religion, people listen to me and take what I have to say into consideration in how they live their lives. That is HUGELY, MASSIVELY, INCREDIBLY powerful. Pagans do not have that kind of power - hence their constant battles to end appropriation of their religious symbols. No one has EVER told me “I’m just trying to show respect for other faiths!” or “it just looks pretty, why do you take this so seriously?” When I make efforts to educate people about my faith, they listen. That’s privilege.
So, yes, people wear rosaries, and yes, I don’t like it. NO, it is not oppressive, and it is not appropriative. It can’t be, because of the context in which my faith is rooted.
So yes, I will politely ask people to stop wearing rosaries. No, I will never compare it to the struggles that other religions have against oppression or appropriation. It can never and will never be the same.
Important commentary!
extremely-clever is in fact, extremely clever
hands up for Catholics who understand shit!
(via trans-terrific)
opals are so magical and special
true fact: Opals are actually eggs with baby queers inside. every time you see a rainbow it means someone broke an opal and a fabulous queer was born.
(Source: root-words, via franciscan-pantheist)
thecuriouscaseofyourmumsvagina:
So true.
so fucking true.
This is one of my all time favorite pictures.
Lovely.
This is beautiful:)
Kids used to be fascinated by my ‘hawk when I wore it up. Parents always seem so sketchy about you when you’re in worn black boots, a band or political tshirt and patches and spikes everywhichwhere with your hair up in some wild styling. Kids are utterly fascinated. “Do those spikes hurt?” “Did your nose ring hurt?” “Can I touch your hair?”
Kids are born scientists. Each and every one. All children are awesome and all children need to be encouraged and given the tools they need to succeed. Not just lip service at election time.