That’s a real good question…
I truly don’t know the answer to that but if anyone else does they are more than welcome to reblog and share their opinions. Any takers?while I don’t think being with a white person inherently makes you less pro-black – I think your partnerships and relationships with white people make you more visible and therefore more privileged/having more mobility in our society.
also – being with white folks romantically can be quite challenging because of set standards of beauty and desire being extremely white washed. In ways – you may come to realize your white partner as super average at best – not to mention their level of comprehension in regards to your journey through white supremacy and their ability to care for you while you’re being ‘anti-white’ or saying things that do not align with whiteness.
of course your white partner could truly be an ally – but that requires on going work and unless you’re willing to repeatedly check your partner and make space to process – which is not easy – you’ll be dealing with whiteness in your face 24/7 on an intimate level which makes it harder to call out/hold folks accountable.
something to think about
Try to imagine a life without timekeeping. You probably can’t. You know the month, the year, the day of the week. There is a clock on your wall or the dashboard of your car. You have a schedule, a calendar, a time for dinner or a movie. Yet all around you, timekeeping is ignored. Birds are not late. A dog does not check its watch. Deer do not fret over passing birthdays. Man alone measures time. Man alone chimes the hour. And, because of this, man alone suffers a paralyzing fear that no other creature endures. A fear of time running out.
so we have a conversational safeword in my group of friends and it’s great, idk why more people don’t do this. whenever someone wants a subject to be dropped immediately no questions asked we just say “spleen” and we stop immediately and it’s a really good way to avoid crossing the line between teasing friends and genuinely upsetting them by accident, or stopping debates from turning into actual arguments
The Dark Side of Body Positivity: Body Snark in the Lingerie Blogging Community
LinkThe Dark Side of Body Positivity: Body Snark in the Lingerie Blogging Community
We live in a world where being body positive means starting your statement with “I love plus size women, but…” and then making whatever fat phobic statement you were going to make anyway. These bloggers are generally in their early 20’s, white and wear small sizes – but they’ve figured out that jumping on the the body positive train is the one that will help them get more readers. This frequently leaves me frustrated on both a personal and professional level. When I have a client who wants to work with bloggers to advertise a body positive product, do I send them to bloggers I know are making nasty comments about plus size women behind the scenes? Or do I tactfully steer them elsewhere, to bloggers with sincere attitudes but generally smaller numbers? I struggle with the nasty hidden side of lingerie blogging on a weekly basis due to my job and I don’t have an answer yet.
I feel like a lot of Body Positivity–and I’m definitely including myself in this–is actually championing fat women, or dark-skinned women, or disabled women for obtaining beauty in spite of their “flaw.” So the message isn’t “Fat women are beautiful!” but “Look how these women overcame fatness to be beautiful!”
It’s difficult for support of other women to feel sincere–no matter how much you truly admire them–when you hate your own body. Actions speak louder than words. Any talk of how gorgeous Amber Riley is (and she is) rings hollow when loudly lamenting how disgusting one’s own smaller body is. I’m guilty of this. And I suspect I’m not the only one.
We’re getting hit by (and harming others with) shrapnel from bullets not aimed at us. I haven’t endured direct insults about my skin tone since fourth grade (save for Twitter), but the women in my old neighborhood–only slightly lighter than I am–refusing to go anywhere in the summer without giant black umbrellas and linen wraps in tow made me feel bad. Would any of those women have ever called me ugly? I highly doubt it. But they certainly made it clear that they would hate for their skin to look like mine. So what messages do my insults about my body shape send?
I feel like we can only solve this problem by loving what we see in the mirror. But that seems like an impossible task for myself and so many other women. But at the very least we can fake it until we make it and stop insulting ourselves publicly. If we can’t do it for ourselves then at least we can do it to stop insulting others by proxy.
Get your fresh, unedited hot takes right here, folks!
Since a book isn’t happening any time soon, I’ve turned to something less ambitious and actually far more in the spirit of classic anarchism: zine making.
This is the read-friendly version, print-friendly version coming soon.
This is beautiful. Here is a transcription of the text in the images:
[Cover]
A first exploration into why I like kink but NOT bdsm
TRIGGER WARNINGS:
- rape culture
- predators
- abuse
[Page 1]
I think kink is really amazing.
All these possibilities to find eroticism or romance or care in unlikely places.
[Page 2]
There is:
- shoes,
- fantasy,
- fabrics
- (playing) creatures,
- gender roles,
- places,
- touch,
- dirt,
- cleaning,
- publicity,
- history,
- roles,
- orgasms (or not),
- drag,
- clothing,
- styles,
- privacy,
- your kink here: __________.
[Page 3]
But if you look for kink you find “BDSM” and that’s usually like…
- …one person is powerless,
- and getting tied up,
- and likes pain,
- inferior,
- Pornografic,
and the other is like the exact opposite.
…
That’s not very creative. (Boring! Restrictive! Binary!)
[Page 4]
And,
For a community that claims to value consent and communication, BDSM sure has a lot of…
- “let me push your boundaries”
- “but you know you LIKED it”
- violence,
- “it’s not rape if…”
- “but did you use your safeword?”
- “expressing your desire is topping from the bottom”
- “you don’t like that…yet”
…along with trying to protect an image of NOT being abusers, ends up protecting abusers, rapists and predators.
…does not allow conversations about consent violations.
So they
talk the talk
but they end up
not walking
the walk.[Page 5]
Imagine if we could restart kink, explore it without BDSM.
without racism
without rape culture
without sexism
without domism
without patriarchy
without transphobia
without shaming
vulnerability.This is not easy. We’re not all happy and healthy, and neither are our kinks.
[Page 6]
But it seems worth the
trip
exploration
workImagine…
- kink without power binaries
- without identity borders or flags
- kink without dominants
- kink without clearly defined roles
- kink as a world to explore, not a club to join
Imagine exploring.
[Back Cover]
Fuck copyright.
Steal my stuff.
If you would like to print and distribute this zine, there are print-ready versions of the above imagines available here.
Thank you so much for making a transcript. After about 3 hours of scissors and glue I was too tired to do that today. thanks <3