May 2012
May 1st
18,449 notes
April 2012
Apr 30th
8,540 notes
Apr 30th
9,352 notes
Apr 30th
732 notes
2 tags
Dream Journal #422 April 28th - April 29th
[Nothin’.]
Apr 30th
3 tags
Dream Journal #421 April 27th - April 28th
[Sequence 1] Something involving a radio.  I was convinced that the radio was some kind of new video game.  I plugged headphones in and began listening.  At first it was just static, and darkness [I closed my eyes] but then I began to feel the sensation of flight.  My body was zooming around the sky at a really high speed, and I was firing off rockets at a helicopter tailing me.  I had a rocket...
Apr 30th
Apr 28th
28,019 notes
9 tags
Apr 28th
70,423 notes
Apr 28th
2,694 notes
Apr 28th
15 notes
Apr 28th
83,750 notes
Apr 28th
969 notes
Apr 28th
63,410 notes
Apr 28th
1,108 notes
2 tags
Dream Journal #419 - #420 April 25th - April 27th
[No dreams.  No sleep last night, and nothing I can recall the night before.]
Apr 28th
6 tags
Dream Journal #418 April 24th - April 25th
[Sequence 1] I’m on a lake canoeing with Gilbert, it starts to rain and gets totally dark.  Completely, utterly dark, no vision possible at all.  I have no oar, and begin panicking. [Sequence 2] Cass and me are in my basement bathroom, she’s in her purple bra.  We’re making out, and my grandma and aunt come downstairs and I’m trying to explain what’s going on.  ...
Apr 28th
Apr 27th
3,071 notes
Apr 27th
8,184 notes
Apr 27th
1,387 notes
2 tags
Apr 27th
10 notes
Apr 26th
31,249 notes
1 tag
Apr 26th
26 notes
Apr 26th
1,159 notes
Apr 26th
88,358 notes
I want to be handled rough
cassia-charis-martinez: Pull my hair, bite me, scratch me. Seems about right
Apr 26th
2 notes
Apr 26th
8 notes
3 tags
Apr 26th
1,283 notes
Apr 26th
93,962 notes
2 tags
I Feel Like A Time Bomb
Waiting to explode.
Apr 25th
1 note
Apr 25th
6,941 notes
A Dialogue With My 86-year-old Grandmother About...
I saw this article:
http: //www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/29/gay-activists-grandparents-marriage-equality_n_1310537.html
earlier this afternoon and I got suddenly curious how my 86yo grandmother felt about marriage equality and LGBT rights. Since she's often hilarious, I decided to interview her on the phone and post it here. I put it on speakerphone, recorded it, then transcribed it. She's in Miami, and Cuban-born, so this is translated from Spanish. She's a pretty feisty lady. I want to be her when I grow up. Here's what she said:
Me: Grandma, what do you think about this couple in their 90s supporting their gay grandkids in the fight for marriage equality?
Grandma: I think it's very nice. You have to support your family, no matter who they are. You can't reject people for things like that.
Me: If you had gay or lesbian family, would you do the same?
Grandma: I don't know if I could make a video like those people. They speak English.
Me: What about in Spanish? Would you make videos supporting marriage equality in Spanish.
Grandma: Ay... don't get any ideas. I don't want to make a video.
Me: But is it okay if I post this on the Internet? On one of my websites
Grandma: Ignorant people might yell at you.
Me: Oh, that's okay, I don't mind.
Grandma: Yes, you can put what I said on the Internet.
Me: Okay. So do you support gay and lesbian people getting married?
Grandma: I think gay people should be able to get married. Times have changed. Even my ideas have changed. There used to be a lot of ignorance and rumors about gay people, mostly because they had to live in hiding, you know, you couldn't be yourself out in public like they can be sometimes now. So I think people just made things up. But think gay people should be allowed to live their lives like everyone else.
Me: Would you go to a gay wedding?
Grandma: Yes, I would. It would probably be more lively than a regular one. I hate weddings. They're so boring.
Me: They really are. What do you think about people who protest gay marriage?
Grandma: Oh. Idiots.
Me: They're wrong?
Grandma: Idiots. Dumb people with nothing better to do. Out of all the things to protest. They should be out trying to do some good in the world instead.
Me: Do you think you would have felt the same way when you were my age?
Grandma: (Pauses) I don't think I gave it any thought. People didn't talk about these things back then. There was a lot of ignorance. Everybody knew gay people, of course, but people didn't talk about it in normal conversation, much less in public like on the news now. I think that's good. Talking is always good. When people know things, they can make up their own minds.I would like to think that maybe with a little information and thinking about it, I would feel the same way.
Me: Do you think gay people should be able to adopt kids?
Grandma: Of course.
Me: As a Christian, what do you think the Bible says about gay people?
Grandma: The Bible is very clear that Jesus doesn't care about race or gender or where you came from or anything. He loves everyone.
Me: What about the parts of the Bible that says gay people should be stoned to death?
Grandma: We don't stone people to death anymore...
Me: So you don't think that applies?
Grandma: I think God gave us some common sense to be able to figure out what parts were meant for forever, like "don't kill" and "don't steal" and "be good to people," and what parts were just a record of the society people lived in back then. We don't hide women in the dark during their periods anymore, either. Things like that.
Me: What about gays in the military? Do you think that should be allowed?
Grandma: You know, when I heard President Obama had helped made that legal, I was surprised it already wasn't. If you're willing to pick up a gun and go fight in some war somewhere for my freedom, I'm not willing to do that, so if you are, I don't care if you have a boyfriend or a girlfriend or fifteen cats.
Me: Yeah, I think most people supported that one.
Grandma: It's like I told you. God gave us common sense for a reason.
Me: I know you've had a few close gay male friends. Have you ever had a lesbian friend?
Grandma: I did in Cuba. She was my neighbor and she did everyone's hair on the block. You couldn't really tell she was a lesbian, but she told me, after many years of knowing her.
Me: What do you mean by "you couldn't tell she was a lesbian?"
Grandma: Well, she was very glamorous. She looked like a movie star all the time - that's why she did everyone's hair. Some lesbians, you can tell.
Me: In English, they call the ability to tell if someone's gay "gaydar." Like "radar" but for "gay."
Grandma: Oh! I think I have that.
Me: You think you have good gaydar?
Grandma: Well, I was an artist, so I was around a lot of gay men. And I can usually tell, but Paula fooled me.
Me: The slang term for lesbians who are very conventionally feminine in English is "lipstick lesbian."
Grandma: She did wear lipstick!
Me: Do you think a lot of older people think like you do?
Grandma: I think so. A lot of older people keep up with the news better than you think. And you get to be my age and you realize a lot of past mistakes in your thinking. You realize that a lot of things you think mattered, really don't. And the people who don't think like that, it's mostly because they don't know any better. But even at my age, people can be taught.
Me: Thank you, Pupa.
Grandma: You should show me your website when you put this up. I hope a lot of people read it.
Apr 25th
20,610 notes
I need a hug
Apr 25th
3 notes
2 tags
Dream Journal #417 April 23rd - April 24th
[Nothing that I can remember.]
Apr 25th
2 tags
Dream Journal #416 April 22nd - April 23rd
[It’s snowing pretty heavily.  I’m downtown, presumably in Chicago.  I’m with Mary.  She’s scared to drive home on the highway because of all the snow.]
Apr 25th
Apr 25th
31,997 notes
Apr 25th
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Apr 25th
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Apr 25th
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Apr 25th
135,499 notes
Apr 24th
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Apr 24th
9,406 notes
Apr 24th
437 notes
5 tags
Apr 23rd
87 notes
3 tags
Vaginas: Your Vagina Isn't Just Too Big, Too... →
But I like it brown…
Apr 23rd
1 note
Apr 23rd
16 notes
Apr 23rd
3,604 notes
Apr 23rd
1,715 notes
7 tags
Apr 23rd
7 notes
4 tags
Apr 23rd
10,007 notes
5 tags
Apr 23rd
3,008 notes