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#black womxn
imaniascending · 2 years
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Your favorite Fae Goddess
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chumanimtshixa-blog · 8 months
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Ubuntu as The Art of Cultivation: Nurturing Relationships and Personal Joy
In the hustle and struggle of modern life, slow down and savor the essence of our existence: cultivate! This thought encourages me to invest my time and energy into the things that truly matter, experiencing my life in ways that bring joy and meaningful connections. That must be why my mom named me Chumani. Let's delve into the essence of cultivation and how it can transform our relationships, our personal space, and our overall sense of happiness. Cultivating is not easy, as a matter of fact it is hard, it hurts and times. In the process you have to learn self actualization, to sit with oneself, the good and the bad, then to accept the facts, and work to do better. But the first step is to try not to get worse. In some aspects we are incapable of doing better, so there is value in starting with wanting to "not do worse or more". Sometimes the intention matters most, but I digress!
Blood is thicker than water: Families are Made, Not Born
Listen! The full saying is: "The blood of the covenant is thicker than the water of the womb." So this phrase actually conveys the opposite of the commonly shortened version "blood is thicker than water." The full saying suggests that the bonds formed through shared experiences and choices (the blood of the covenant/those who go bleed together) can be stronger than mere family (the WATER of the WOMB). In other words, it emphasizes the importance of chosen and cultivated relationships and connections over purely biological ones.
The tapestry of life is woven with threads of relationships. Like a skilled gardener tending to a cherished garden, we must nurture our relationships with care and intention. Families, in particular, are not merely a product of biology; they are crafted through shared experiences, laughter, and support. Every smile shared, every tear wiped away, contributes to the growth of these invaluable bonds. Cultivating relationships means being present, empathetic, and communicative. It's about creating a safe and nurturing environment where love and understanding can thrive.
Respect your own boundaries and those of others in order to Protect Your Space and Others'
I always took this for granted, the older I get the more I learn about boundaries. I would have obviously love to be efficient at it by now but I know the importance of unlearning. Just as a garden flourishes when the land is prepared and boundaries are respected—allowing each plant to grow without being overshadowed by another—so too do our lives prosper when we respect the personal space of others. Invading someone else's space can lead to discomfort and strained relationships. Instead, we should strive to build a culture of empathy, where we understand and honor the boundaries of those around us. By doing so, we create an atmosphere of trust and mutual respect. But most of all mutual benefits like the 3 companion sisters planting method.
Nurture Your Inner Garden
Imagine your happiness as a delicate flower, ready to bloom if given the right care. Cultivating joy involves embracing the things that bring us happiness and fulfillment, while also being mindful of not trampling upon the joy of others. Just as a mindful gardener wouldn't tread upon their freshly sprouted plants, we should approach others' feelings with sensitivity and consideration. When we allow our own joy to flourish alongside that of others, we create a harmonious environment where everyone's happiness can thrive.
The art of cultivation invites us to invest in the aspects of life that truly matter. By nurturing relationships, understanding boundaries, and cultivating joy, we create a life that is not only fulfilling but also filled with meaningful connections. Just as a garden requires time, care, and attention to blossom, so too do our lives benefit from intentional cultivation. So, let us embrace this philosophy and watch as the tapestry of our existence blooms with vibrant colors of love, respect, and happiness.
Never forget that I'm just thinking out loud. Izwe lethu!
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subsurfaced · 8 months
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I need people to use either non-race coded language or at least switch it up a little. Like, are you sure you ran your hands through my long hair? Or did you desperately dig your fingers into my scalp and pull up on my fro until I made that noise you wanted to hear.
this post is black and queer because the user is black and queer please have decorum.
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tryingating · 1 year
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I'm finally done with this placement. FUCK I am tiredddddD!!! I need rest. I need love making dick me down sex!!! My got damn muscle are sore these old folks need to take they ass to long term care bout they in "retirement"
Bro my school done fucked on this paid placement shit. This shit is ridiculous why you gotta wait to send a cheque? Why you sending a cheque instead of e-transfer. Y'all know the cheque go be on hold for 7 days!!!! Why you be like that!!!!!!🙄😤😤😤😤
I swear my tax return gonna hit before this cheque 😭😭😭
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thoughtsfromthe305 · 2 years
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Camera Shy
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daywalkers-fic · 3 months
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12. why the 1880s?
something about this decade really sings to me. I find in particular, nearing the end of the nineteenth century, so much was happening on around the world in terms of arts, politics, technology, colonization. world events and global news don’t personally reach the day-to-day lives of the everyday folk, but they are an important part in gauging what life, thought, and society was about—what things were important then and now?
basically for myself, reminding me of notable things that occured during the 1880s—some thematic, some of relevance to context and characters, and the rest just ?? interesting and/or wild?
cocaine is a hot new cure for everything and anything. perscribed, sold in foods and more. heroine introduced as a lesser-addictive substitute for morphine…
lots of developments in fields of psychology; many experiments and happenings; Freud starts his work 1886.
1880-1914 had +twenty million immigrants to the United States: Germany, Ireland, England, China had the most arrivals.
William Dorsey Swann, the first self-proclaimed drag queen, organizes a series of drag balls in Washington, D.C. 1880-1890s.
Jack the Ripper claims his “first” victim in 1888 White Chapel, London. big scare.
Sherlock Holmes first appears in Arthur Conan Doyle’s A Study In Scarlet as part of the British magazine’s Beeton’s Christmas Annual in 1887.
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson is published in 1886. Gothic fiction, drawing from emerging fields of science and psychology. & Treasure Island was published earlier in 1883 by him too!
Mark Twain drops The Prince and the Pauper (1881), Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court (1889).
Bel-Ami, Guy de Maupassant’s second novel is published in 1885. about a man who seduces and manipulates high society French women in the French colonies for power and wealth. MOVIE WAS ADAPTED IN 2012 STARTING ROBERT PATTINSON LOL
western European art movements very romantic and swirly and pretty: Monet, Debussy xoxo.
meanwhile, African American ragtime music becomes the “pop” music across the pond here.
North Dakota (1889), South Dakota (1889), Montana (1889), Washington (1889) become states.
train segregation laws flag beginning of Jim Crow; Civil Rights Movement of 1875 voided, making discrimination in private is not illegal, and prohibiting state intervention to personal or commercial segregation. l*nching continues throughout the south. slavery may be over on paper, but indentured labour is legal.
1882 infamous O.K Corral gunfight.
Gold Rush continues, all over the world—South Africa, to British Columbia, to California, to Argentina, to Russia-China borders.
centuries of American “Indian” wars continue.
American Dawes Act of 1887 granted American government authorization to regulate indigenous lands, including creating and assigning and enforcing reservations.
Sitting Bull’s 1883 speech of the atrocities experienced at the hands of white American settler colonists.
Canadian Pacific Railway 1881-1885. foreign labourers were hired to do a lot of heavy, dangerous, unwanted work. in America, more than 100,000km of tracks were laid by majority Chinese, Irish, Scandinavian workers.
America’s Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and Canada’s Chinese Immigration Act of 1885 was officiated, enforcing law of a Head Tax to be paid for every Chinese person entering North America. over the course of the next couple of decades, the fee of $1,500 was doubled to $5,000 was increased 500% to $25,000 in today’s currency—per person. this had devastating and lasting impacts on generations and societies of Chinese living both overseas and already in North America. propaganda at this time created many racist myths that persist today: there are too many Asians, they are taking our jobs, (the men) are gross and effeminate and a threat to (white) women, they shady and scheming people. these were the first and only major federal legislation to explicitly suspend immigration for a specific nationality in American and Canadian history. (I study Asian Canadian history, I can go on about this all day)
Tong Wars (1883-1913) had Chinatown gangs and factions in violent street wars across America, San Fransisco to New York.
large, targeted, and repeated anti-Jewish rioting (pogorm) and antisemitism rampant throughout Imperial Russia, 1881-1882 had more than two hundred anti-Jewish events alone. Jews continue to be racialized and othered.
fuck ton of colonization happening in Africa and the Middle East, Southeast Asia. Berlin conference 1884-1885 literally chopped up Africa to distribute to European powers.
Irish nationalist efforts to push forth Home Rule bill of sovereignty is defeated in British Parliament. Irish are not “white”, they are “othered” in Europe and in Americas.
use of photographic film pioneered by George Eastman, who started manufacturing film. his first camera (Kodak) was ready for sale in 1888.
Thomas Edison gets lit in New York 1883 with first electrical power station. next several year sees major cities being lit up with street lamps and public lighting with the science and works of a Nikolas Tesla (1886-1893).
hell of a lot more inventions in the works and patents being claimed. Hertz and radiowaves, Bell for telephone services.
“Between the years of 1850–1900, women were placed in mental institutions for behaving in ways the male society did not agree with”
way too much history to cram, obviously. here are some keywords for further research oki
prison industry / spiritualism / opium epidemic / irregular and uneven “modernizations” in rural vs. urban areas / class and poverty gaps / morality scares, checks, comparisons, gaps / new businesses and gadgets, products, tech to help with anything / fascination of the (colonial) Other; side shows, “freak shows” and other human zoos
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haleygravesofficial · 2 years
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Hey wassup,
I'm Haley Graves! I'm a 21 year old Queer, Black Afro LatinX Pop Punk Musician. I sing about women 🤪
Feel free to give me a follow on all socials:
TikTok: @haleygravesofficial
Instagram: @haleygravesofficial
Twitter: @HaleyGravesOFC
YouTube: HaleyGravesOfficial
Facebook: Haley Graves
Check my music out on Spotify:
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hoekami · 2 years
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When I say Protect Black Womxn, I don’t mean wait until we’re a hashtag or viral post.
Yesterday I had to fend for myself in a fucking grocery store parking lot and there were at least six people in my immediate vicinity.
Now, I don’t mind shedding blood if I have to… But that still doesn’t guarantee my safety. And it damn sure don’t help my PTSD symptoms.
Everyone in that lot made it be known that they didn’t care or they thought I was in the wrong. It’s very clear that society has deemed Black Womxn as disposable, but we somehow still get pushback when trying to defend ourselves. Make it make sense 😒
PROTECT BLACK WOMXN
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katwriterly92 · 1 month
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I find it wild when men (especially online) project this energy toward women and feminine-presenting people that “bitch, no one would want you anyway 😤” Bahahahaha YOU THINK I DON’T KNOW THAT???? No one wanted to date me until I was 27 😂 You think I didn’t notice that shit? Don’t taunt me with words I’ve already used on myself 🤷🏾‍♀️
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myevon · 1 year
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#ad
“Our Bodies, Ourselves” is part of my ongoing explorations documenting the expressions and perception of beauty, sexual identity, and self-worth within Black and underrepresented communities. For this series I photographed five womxn who have experienced cosmetic procedures for various reasons. In conversation with my sitters I learned their personal reasons for surgical alteration and discovered a depth and complexity that extends well beyond the surface and visual aesthetic of the body. I was struck by the autonomy in these womxn's decisions to choose how they prefer to exist within larger American society, as well as their individual motivations.
Photographed by @myeshaevongardner on @googlepixel_us for Creator Labs 7
So much love and gratitude to the womxn that trusted me to share and embrace their stories. 
@_gialove_ @jontee.samuels @ari_akav @reallypretti @demiigoddesss
Many thanks to my incredibly talented team! 💜
Styling - @aldotg
Hair - @lurissaingridhair
Makeup - @_ern.3st
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mybeingthere · 7 months
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Batik is a difficult area of art and Sola Olulode is very good with it. I am posting the gallery description of Sola's life and work:
"Sola Olulode (b. 1996) is based in London and received her BA in Fine Art Painting from the University of Brighton in 2018.
​Her dreamy queer visions explore embodiments of British Black Womxn and Non-Binary Folx. Working with various mediums of natural dyeing, batik, wax, ink, pastel, oil bar, and impasto she develops textural canvases that explore the fluidities of identities. Drawing inspiration from lived experience, friends, and cultural reference points to centre Black Queer Womxn, Sola emphasises the integral need of representation and celebration of queer intimacies."
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tryingating · 1 year
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Taxes filed!!!
CMHA Referral Accepted!!!
New Meds POPPIN!!! THIS IS WHAT I MEAN WHEN I SAY I WANT DRUGS TO MAKE ME HAPPY!!!! Thank GOD it was a Black Female doctor who assessed me in the ER because sis asked the questions like a sista would and with all the racist shit I gotta deal with in this city I NEEDED THAT!!! I'm gonna request to change my nurse practitioner because we just ain't vidin and she gives the strong feel that she doesn't trust me with my meds and I noticed it after I told her I smoke weed, she never gives me refills I always have to ask for more even though she told me see you in 3 months WHY NOT SUPPLY ME WITH 3 MONTHS OF REFILLS!!!
I should do a review of all the meds I've gone through and their side effects because I think this is the forth try and my anxiety I can recognize easier on Venlafaxine and Bupropion is the new one I almost want to call it the smiley pill 😂 it did cause me to vomit the first 2-3 days just once though not all day so I started taking it with food!
I'm like cautiously navigating the day and my emotions I try not to fall down any rabbit holes of thoughts or what ifs. I just try to remember that the mind will lead me to think the worst so I need to think and be positive! Practice makes perfect the doctor and a therapist told me :/
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olowan-waphiya · 7 months
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About the Campaign
The Aim:
We are seeking 30 acres of land with healthy soil, ideally with a previous history of agricultural use. The land should be within 20 miles of Denver, CO and grant us both water and mineral rights. The land should be valued equally to all members of the ecosystem that occupy it. We intend to use this land to grow food for our communities throughout Denver and as a place of education and healing. The land would be owned by the organization, FrontLine Farming, but would also be open to collective use in our BIPOC community.
Now is the Time:
Black, Brown and Indigenous Farmers across the United States have been systemically excluded from access to land whether through outright intimidation and theft, loan discrimination or laws such as Heirs Property Rights. Land in the United States was stolen from Indigenous Communities and while BIPOC communities represent a quarter of the US population, they own less than 5% of farmland and cultivate on less than 1% of the land. Yet those who have historically cultivated the land and comprise the over 2.4 million farmworkers in the United States are people of color from diverse communities and foodways. They are descendants of Africans brought here, immigrants, refugees and people who have continuously brought their agricultural knowledge and skills to feed nations.
We have used our radical imaginations for our vision of coming back to the land and are ready to bring this vision to life. To acquire our own soil and land will fortify our efforts to honor our ancestors, to educate our community, to generate independent economic systems, to manifest equitable policies and systems change, to lead by example, to understand history and to create our future. It is a way to co-create generational wealth for our communities, and more importantly, shared power.
Acquiring the land that we envision requires moving money and resources. We are seeking support from philanthropy, local and national networks, and donors. The funds raised from this project will aid our vision and goal.
Frontline Farming
We are a BIPOC-led farmer advocacy and food justice organization that strives to create greater equity across our food system on the Front Range of Colorado. We support and create greater leadership and access for Black, Indigenous, People of Color and Womxn in our food systems. We achieve these goals through growing food, listening, educating, honoring land and ancestors, generating policy initiatives and engaging in direct action.
In 2021, we distributed 26,000 lbs of farmed produce through various programs such as our CSA, Healing Foods and SNAP/WIC recipients. We also advocate for farmers and farm workers alike to ensure that the people who grow our country’s food have access to basic rights and protections that are already afforded to other workers in the state.
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drdemonprince · 8 months
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Have you read any of Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinhas works on disability? I find her stories especially about activism initiatives and groups like sins invalid but I've been completely thrown off by their use of "femmes" as an umbrella term. I'm worried I might be missing some context on the usefulness of the term because of my white context but ur recent post in response to a question abt womxn seemed like an insightful and confident assertion of the terms limitations so I wondered if you had any advice for navigating the kind of jarring experience of seeing someone use identity language in the pursuit of justice that feels super uncomfortable in its vagueness but being worried that your own internal prejudices might be the source of that discomfort.
It all comes down to discernment I think.
Fundamentally there's a degree of self-trust you have to build in your own ability to pool information and thought from a wide variety of sources, taking what is useful, releasing what is not, reflecting upon what challenges you in a meaningful way, and then synthesizing all of that into a greater understanding of the world that is distinctly your own, without finding it threatening that others are also doing the same thing with what information that they have and will always arrive somewhere slightly different.
I don't agree with their use of femmes. I have seen other activists of similar orientations use "femmes" to highlight the fact that a lot of organizing labor falls onto women, and I get what they're trying to do with the term -- and I think it's completely misplaced and that they'd have a better way of talking about it if their work was more informed by the contributions of transexual people, especially trans women. I think the perspectives of butch people and trans mascs are also largely absent from that analysis, particularly Black trans men.
But I don't expect anyone that I'm reading to be a perfect reflection of my own beliefs and my politics. I am the reflection of what I know and believe, I don't need anybody else to be that, and thus somebody having a slightly differing view or base of knowledge from me is not an existential threat.
Whenever I notice that someone does use different language from my own, I pay close attention to what they are meaningfully saying, and I ask myself whether their use of language reflects a set of biases that skews their overall worldview.
In many authors who use language like "women and femmes," I do very much see an exclusion of butch women, nonbinary people, trans men, and trans women, and a lack of awareness of how being perceived as masculine effects Black trans people. But this is revealed to me by their broader attitudes, the way they summarize and explain social problems, the examples they choose to give, and the overall deeper content of what they are saying -- not their choice of a single term or another. I take a person with a grain of salt if they use that term -- but I still take them.
On the whole there's a lot to be valued within that authors' work. And they also have areas where I think they are less prepared to be a reliable source of expertise. And the same can certainly be said for me. In general I think we need to stop searching for catchall gender terms -- especially those of us who are transmisogyny exempt and/or non Black and distinctly positioned to not really "get" the ways that we're failing at it, and that includes both Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinhas and me.
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rxgeryoxng · 1 year
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WHAT IS GRUESOME GRRL?
Gruesome grrl is a queering and evolution of Riotgrrrl. Gruesome grrl is for the femmes that aren't usually accepted in femme spaces. This is for the femmes that due to their transness, their brashness, and their inability to compromise, exist on the edges of what 'woman' means. Some reject womanhood outright for an alternative nonbinary trans masculinity. Some see femininity as the absolute trap that it is. These are women who reject conventional femininity for something more butch, more futch and above all else transfeminine. I don't want this to be a binary punk movement. I want this to be something for the nasty nonbinary punks that have had femininity define their identity in some powerful and violent ways. This is for nasty gruesome grrls who have had their femininity denied. For the mascs and femmes who deny feminitiy outright for their own sanity. This isn't a movement just for cis women and they/thems, and womxn. this is a movement for transfems, transmasc, nonbinary freaks, trans androgynous art hoes, messy drag queens, sexy hermaphrodites, hard kink trans sex workers, the absolute nastiest femmes and mascs and enbies with shitty attitudes. This is something for the types of weirdos that are never platformed in cis lesbian spaces let alone trans lesbian spaces. Granted I'm just some angry trans sissy dyke with a chip on her shoulder known for starting shit, and pissing and whining with the best of them. But I want to make something, a movement with actual teeth. 
Alright everyone let's be honest:
RIOTGRRRL ISN’T FUCKING WORKING
Katheleen hanna is a fucking liberal now. She’s not jumping up and down and calling out her rapist live in the middle of the college quad and calling it a song anymore. She's shown her capacity and it isn't really to progress feminism in any way that's radical anymore. Le tigre made a fucking hilary clinton song dude!? LIKE FUCK HILARY CLINTON!
 Silvia Rivera's dead. pose is a great show but I wouldn't say finding a bunch of fishy black dolls to cosplay as the house labeija is a big countercultural shift. Play dress up with the clothes more radical women left in their closets before they were laid to rest. Make all the liberal art you want but that wont stop our genocide.
It's just more of the same when your a black transfem or a gruesome grrl in any regard you see two stories played out constantly:
You either live the beautiful conventional femme. She gets her liberal ideas displayed thanks to a system that wants to affirm all her middle of the road ideas. a patriarchy of creepazoid chasers loves controlling and acquiring there own fishy doll they can use to lash out at other femmes and all the girlies to fall in line.
Or you die the radical transfem. Your name in lights after fighting and screaming and fucking and sucking your way to get the movement to finally accept you, your enemies in the millions. other women who masculinize you and make you the aggressor. patriarchal men who want to acquire you and like it better when they can pay you to be at the height of their menagerie. And of course theres the cops who want you homeless and crazy or begging for freedom till they snuff you out like a light.
SO EITHER YOU LIVE TO BE HUNTER GODDAMN SCHAFER OR YOU DIE MARSHA P FUCKING JOHNSON.
I made my choice. Im dying marsha p but my run is gonna be historic and im gonna make sure every tranny remembers the Gruesome grrls. We’ll have the genderfucks dancing and fighting and moving and writing and drawing and singing and marching till there aint a single cop, or fucked up john or crazed lesbian terfy theyfab on the street. Either learn that the craziest trannies, the ones your afraid of, the one you make rumors about, the ones that are broke and barely surviving; are the ones you need to look out for or get the fuck off my block. The freakiest trannies have always led movements in the right direction and that's always been the case historically. so why in the throws of mass genocide, truscum infighting, theyfab memery, and terf videogame franchises is it impossible for me to find a single tranny that looks looks like me? Another femme or even a transmasc or enby that looks this black this fat this loud this punk this existentially mistreated and maligned? In the streets on twitter on tiktok on facebook on tumblr not a single tranny with the same look or attitude. I refuse to believe that im this isolated. With that being said whether you identify as a girl, a boy, a cat, an eldridge lovecraftian hellbeast, or all those things at the same time (i know i do) you are now officially a Gruesome grrl! A transfem led movement for transwomen, transmascs, cis women, she/theys of any kind really anyone who's been femme  in the past, present or future. I just want to hear your stories of femininity and how it affected you, defined you or even hurt you and how you're using those lessons to fight against a shitty conformist  patriarchal heteronormative society. 
ITS GRRL NOT GRRRL THIS IS FOR THE BITCHES AND TRANNIES THAT DON'T GET THAT THIRD R! WHETHER YOUR BEING TOLD YOU DONT DESERVE THAT THIRD R OR YOU PLAINLY DON'T WANT IT THE GRUESOME GRRL TRANNIES WILL ALWAYS BE HERE FOR YOU! 
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how do i join gruesome grrl?
hit me the fuck up its @gruesome_grrl on all platforms
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dear-indies · 7 months
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heya do you know of any fcs who have played a role or just generally look more punk/alt and who have resources? (big bonus if they are tattooed) thank you
Benjamin Bratt (1963) Peruvian of Quechua descent, German (including Sudeten German), and English - DMZ.
Clemens Schick (1972) - Barcelona-Krimi: Blutiger Beton.
Chris Messina (1974) - Harley Quinn: Birds of Prey.
Lesley-Ann Brandt (1981) English, East Indian, German, Spanish, Dutch, Khoisan, Ashkenazi Jewish - Lucifer.
Miyavi (1981) Japanese / Korean-Japanese.
Nyla Rose (1982) Oneida / African-American - is a trans woman.
Riz Ahmed (1982) Pakistani - Sound of Metal.
Levy Tran (1983) Vietnamese.
Richard Cabral (1984) Mexican.
Asia Kate Dillon (1984) Ashkenazi Jewish / Unspecified - non-binary and pansexual (they/them).
Jaimie Alexander (1984) - Blindspot.
Clayton Cardenas (1985) Mexican and Filipino.
Deepika Padukone (1986) Konkani Indian - XXX: Return of Xander Cage.
Maika Harper (1986) Inuit - Mohawk Girls.
Kali Reis (1986) Wampanoag, Nipmuc, Cherokee, and Cape Verdean - is Two-Spirit (she/her) and queer.
Diane Guerrero (1986) Colombian - Doom Patrol.
Jurnee Smollett (1986) African-American, possibly other / Ashkenazi Jewish - in Harley Quinn: Birds of Prey, The Twilight Zone.
Uraz Kaygılaroğlu (1987) Turkish - Üç Kurus.
Ritu Arya (1988) Indian - The Umbrella Academy, Humans.
Macarena García (1988) - Pesar De Todo.
Nico Tortorella (1988) - is non-binary (any pronouns), poly and demisexual.
Mae Whitman (1988) - pansexual - Jack.
FKA twigs (1988) African-Jamaican / English, Spanish.
Tóc Tiên (1989) Vietnamese - Furies.
Rob Raco (1989) - Riverdale.
Hannah John-Kamen (1989) Nigerian / Norwegian - Killjoys.
Úrsula Corberó (1989) - Money Heist, Snake Eyes.
Tom Maden (1989) French, Belgian [Walloon], Portuguese, Afro Caribbean, African-American, English, German - Lifeline.
Chang Ryul / Yull Jang (1989) Korean - My Name.
Yamada Yuki (1990) Japanese - Tokyo Revengers.
Eric Graise (1990) African-American - is a bilateral amputee - Queer as Folk.
Oliver Stark (1991) - MindGamers.
Ryan Sitkowski (1991)
Vico Ortiz (1991) Puerto Rican - non-binary (they/them) and poly.
Tyler Posey (1991) Mexican / English, Scottish, Irish, German, distant French - is queer and sexually fluid.
Avan Jogia (1992) Gujarati Indian / English, Welsh, some German, Irish, French - Johnny, Now Apocalypse.
Jessica Henwick (1992) Chinese Singaporean / English - The Matrix Resurrections.
Kiana Madeira (1992) Irish, Unspecified First Nations, Black Canadian / Portuguese - Fear Street.
Simone Susinna (1993) - 365 Days: This Day.
Bia Arantes (1993) Brazilian - Órfãos da Terra.
Park Gyu Young (1993) Korean - Sweet Home.
Joseph Quinn (1993) - Stranger Things.
Yves Mathieu East (1994) Afro Asian - is queer.
Emma Dumont (1994) - The Gifted.
Remington Leith (1994) Unspecified Indigenous Brazilian and White.
Keshi / Casey Luong (1994) Vietnamese.
Lyrica Okano (1994) Japanese - The Runaways.
Lily Sullivan (1994) - Romper Stomper, Evil Dead Rise.
Natasha Liu Bordizzo (1994) Chinese / Italian - Ahsoka.
Lina Ahn (1994) Korean.
Sasha Lane (1995) African-American, Māori, English, Scottish, Sorbian, French, Cornish, distant German, Italian, Belgian Flemish, Russian, and Northern Irish - is gay and has schizoaffective disorder.
Sophia Taylor Ali (1995) Pakistani / Sicilian Italian, Danish, Norwegian, German - Uncharted.
Ryan Potter (1995) Japanese / Ashkenazi Jewish, Swedish, English, German - is bisexual - Titans.
Adeline Rudolph (1995) Korean / German - Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Resident Evil.
Rish Shah (1995) Indian - Do Revenge.
Brandon Perea (1995) Filipino and Puerto Rican - Nope.
Ashton Sanders (1995) African-American - Native Son.
Kehlani (1995) African-American, French, Blackfoot, Cherokee, Spanish, Mexican, Filipino, Scottish, English, German, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish, and Welsh, as well as distant Cornish, Irish, and possibly Choctaw - non-binary womxn (she/they) and is a lesbian.
Emma Mackey (1996) - Sex Education.
Leah Lewis (1996) Chinese - Nancy Drew.
Rhea Ripley (1996)
Tati Gabrielle (1996) Korean, African-American / African-American - Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Uncharted.
Hero Fiennes Tiffin (1997) - After.
Do Han-se (1997) Korean.
Evan Mock (1997) Bisaya Filipino / White.
Lizeth Selene (1997) Mexican [Black, White, and Unspecified Indigenous]- is genderfluid and queer (she/they).
Archie Renaux (1997) English, Punjabi Indian - Gold Digger.
Murakami Nijiro (1997) Japanese - Alice in Borderland.
Bahar Sahin (1997) Turkish - Duran.
Chella Man (1998) Hongkonger and Jewish - is deaf, genderqueer and pansexual (he/they) - Titans.
Brianne Tju (1998) Chinese, Indonesian - High School.
Fin Argus (1998) - genderqueer (they/them).
Beabadoobee (2000) Ilonggo Filipino - is bisexual.
Quannah Chasinghorse (2002) Hän, Gwich’in, Sicangu Oyate Lakota Sioux, and Oglala Lakota Sioux.
CG (?) Black - non-binary (they/them) - Queer as Folk.
MEMO FOR ME TO WORK ON MOVING MY ALTERNATIVE FACECLAIM MASTERLIST TO GOOGLE DOCS SO I CAN ADD MORE PEOPLE BC THE TUMBLR MASTERLIST HAS A LIMIT!
All of these have resources, anon!
16 notes · View notes