Kirkwallhellmouth does life

I think I like it better when, when I do observations, teachers don’t point me out and introduce me.

It cuts down on–as in, removes almost completely–students being incredulous about my gender. I wear slacks, a button-down, a sweater vest, and a blazer (today’s outfit was even actually all from the “women’s department”) when I observe. I have short hair. Other than earings, there’s nothing traditionally feminine about what I wear to observe. This is the sort of thing I will wear when I eventually get my degree and find a teaching position. Once I have the job, I may even occasionally wear a tie. Because i have some freaking glorious ties.

But anyway. I’d heard at least one incredulous in the first class the teacher I observed today introduced me in.

The last class she introduced me in, she did the very quick, very straight forward, “This is Ms. __, she’s from [uni] and she’s observing today.

From right across the room I hear an incredibly incredulous and loud enough for the rest of the class to hear (even it it may have been in a stage-whisper), ”She?!?

Yes, she. My disinterest in and lack of adherence to traditionally feminine modes of dress does not preclude me from being female.

It hurt. And it’s part of why I wish there were more positive examples of masculine and non-traditionally feminine women in the media. Because these kids never see a woman who dresses like me with short hair and no make-up on TV. Not in a positive light, anyway.

And it makes me determined to work in a discussion of gender identity and gender presentation to my classes once I start teaching, because the fact that I don’t dress like a lot of my student’s other women teachers is probably going to be a thing, and I will do my best to address that, because my students deserve to be treated with honesty and they need to know clothes don’t determine gender.

alioninherowncause:

cybrslut:

[TRIGGER WARNING: child sexual abuse, incest]

Lena Dunham’s actual response and justification of her sexually abusing her younger sister. i want to start off by saying that the site that originally posted the accusations is a right wing site, and not very reliable. however, all evidence has come from lena’s own book that she wrote. no one has twisted her words.

Lena wrote that at age 7 she looked up her 1 year old sister’s vagina and found pebbles. for some reason news sites are only reporting on that event and not how lena described how she did “anything a sexual predator might do” to coerce her younger sister in to kissing her for prolonged periods of time and that she even masturbated in bed next to her. “This was within the spectrum of things I did” she wrote, ie she did other things to her sister. This happened over a period of years. For some reason news sites are hardly mentioning and some even leaving out that she tricked her sister in to kissing her and that she would masturbate in bed with her, among other things. they only reported the story from when she was 7. imo that’s twisting the story to portray lena as a curious, ignorant child. however, this wasn’t just one event, this lasted for years. Lena grew up. Lena did this as a preteen. she should’ve known better and shouldn’t be bragging about it now.

Children have innate curiosity about bodies and genitalia, showing privates to each other, touching your body, and kissing isnt abnormal, especially with kids their own age. what is abnormal is for a child, who was somewhere between 7-12* years old to coerce and trick a toddler in to sexual activities and to do so continuously. children can be sexual abusers to other children, and it happens more often than we like to think

that’s not being a weird child, that’s absolutely revolting and wrong. and for her to be proudly telling these stories 20 years later is horrific. to be an adult and proud of the sexual abuse you did to a child is boderline pedophilia imo.

lena has a history of racism, fetishization of lgbt people, and she even outed her sister to her parents, so this is just another thing to add to the list of how she’s a shitty person. now can everyone please stop calling lena dunham a feminist?

*i’m estimating those ages. we know it lasted for years, but not how long, and it started at 7. it could have been a few years or many years, i dont want to overly estimate. however i do want to put emphasis on that she was of an old enough age to know better and the age gap is large at these young ages and puts her in a position of power.

Actual quote from Grace Dunham: , “Without getting into specifics, most of our fights have revolved around my feeling like Lena took her approach to her own personal life and made my personal life her property.”

Grace has implied that this happened throughout her life (and we know that Lena was masturbating in bed with Grace for years, by her comment about ‘puberty’.) Grace has said in interviews and in her poetry that Lena has used her as her own personal journey, as her property- and now she’s essentially been outed (not only as a lesbian, which Lena outed her as to her parents without her permission as well!) but as an abuse survivor to her parents and the whole world. Without her consent.

Fuck Lena Dunham and fuck you if you defend any aspect of this.

aro-ace-skeleton-warrior:

eomega:

aro-ace-skeleton-warrior:

cloudplusone:

therainbowgorilla:

nyehs:

i literally just thought to myself “wow halloween is almost over” but then i remembered that the entire month of october isnt halloween and halloween is actually only one day and hasnt even started yet

The entire month might as well be

I like Halloween being thought of as the entire month, it makes the holiday feelings more tangible. When it’s just one day, nothing happens and it feels like nothing special. But the whole month gives time for it and it actually makes it feel important.

It’s kinda like how you start playing Christmas music all the time after thanksgiving.

but halloween is after thanksgiving

Thanksgiving is in November. Halloween is tomorrow…

Canadian Thanksgiving is before Halloween, American Thanksgiving is after,

Halloween sandwich!

Asexuality as a white supremacist dream

thingsthatmakeyouacey:

Here’s the thing: perhaps be glad you don’t understand how “asexuality” as a concept has been a part of white supremacy. To a lot of us, it’s not just some abstract concept. It’s a brutal reality.

In my family history, for example, marriage was a form of survival and sex was an act of violence. British colonialism in the Caribbean ensured that female indentured servants – and before them, slaves – were useless property:

labelled as “the harlots of empire” by the british, this is an epithet that came to haunt their existence throughout indenture & long after to the extent that in the west indies, amongst indians, the word randi/रण्डी became a commonly used synonym in bhojpuri for ‘woman.’ there is a hell of a lot to say about what kind of jobs women were expected to perform and the specific dangers that came with them…

indentured labourers were housed throughout the indenture period in the same shacks that black slaves had had to live in, not long before these being long sheds made of corrugated metal, partitioned into small cubicles, in which a person or family was expected to live. when the sun shone on them, you can imagine how gruellingly hot they would’ve become, and most importantly for women, the partitions between the cubicles did not reach the roof. it was possible to stand on a stool etc. and look over the top of the partition at your neighbours. this was deadly for women, particularly single women, whose only option was to marry themselves at the earliest opportunity in order to protect themselves from harassment and r*pe. this was the theory, at least, and the one indian women were coerced into following.

in practice, with the partitions not meeting the ceiling, once a woman’s husband had gone to work, she was left to defend herself to the point where it was difficult to bathe or change clothes or any action without being watched by a stranger whose intentions were clear. what it meant for indian women was that marriage didn’t offer the security it was supposed to provide, and many women were forced to take up multiple partners just to protect themselves from harassment and threats, leading to generalised accusations of infidelity and sex work which turned out to be deadly. so many women were murdered by their boyfriends/husbands that it has its own name, “coolie wife murders”…

…a woman who fled to the colonial authorities was unflinchingly dragged back to her partner, with the implicit knowledge she would be killed. a woman who begged for help from one of her partners against the other could just as easily be murdered by him tomorrow. “i kill my wife, why not? i kill no other man’s wife” being said by a young indian man, and have seen quotes by white visitors to the colony who, on the subject of the murders said “we can hardly help admiring this trait in his character.”

“such murders occurred at a rate ninety times greater in Guiana than in India in the previous decade [this report from 1871]…"In the heartland district where most migrants were from, the picture was even darker: Indian men killed their romantic partners at a rate 142 times greater in Guiana than in India’s Northwestern Provinces and Oudh.”

laws over time became more and more lenient towards wife murdering. where initially it was met with the death penalty, the plantocracy & indian men appealed to the judiciary, in light of the expenses paid to bring them to the caribbean & the value of their labour to remit the sentences given, to the point where murdering a woman eventually, at best, caused you to be relocated to another plantation as sufficient punishment. and it is worth noting also that the numbers of women recorded dead reflect only those cases where prosecution was successfully brought against a man. undoubtedly there were many murders where there was no prosecution. the rate was higher than recorded.

marriage was not a safe-haven for women either. the scanty rights protecting women were swept away once she got married. becoming her husband’s property, she had no right to leave him, and if he died before her and they had children, unless she could find another husband quickly, she was liable to be sent back to india as a nuisance an her children taken from her and put into orphanages where they were [forcibly] converted to christianity & put into work houses until they were ready to be married. 

(source)

So how does this reflect personally? In the generations since “liberation” from the system of indenture servitude, marriage still has the connotation of survival, or at least has for my parents’ generation. It is a mode of protection from government, poverty, and colonialism, turned into a mark of piety and respect for the family.

This is a coerced and compulsory sexuality, and one sourced from white supremacy. The social status of indentured servants and furthermore indentured women allowed for the Empire to denigrate our people to animals, where rape was seen as deserved (a pattern we see in the US with how the justice system deems Black women as deserving of sexual assault or else unfeeling). South Asian women were useless in labor and thus had to deserve murder and sexual crimes.

Sexual abuse is extremely pervasive in my and other family narratives and often silenced because of the nature of marriage as a form of survival. Later colonization – the political strife in the 50s-70s with the institution of multiple tyrants by the British and Americans – just exacerbated this system.

What’s this have to do with asexuality, then? Sexuality is a way to colonize a people. It is a way to divide the people you are enslaving (say, by gender) and thus weaken them (via justification of murder). And these traumas persist in cultures.

When I say it’s difficult for me to say I’m asexual, I really do mean, it is viscerally horrible to consider myself asexual. It is violent. It makes me think of my mother and all the women in my family put into arranged marriages and the regret the men face as they emplace their daughters in these marriages purely out of fear for them. It makes me think of the conviction my grandfather has when he tells us young girls that we need to be financially independent and educate ourselves, because we finally can be safe outside of marriage. It makes me think of the stories of soldiers roaming neighborhoods and grabbing women from inside their homes.

Asexuality is what they want. It is what the soldiers, and the masters, and the foreign governments want. They want us to lack something they deem human so they don’t have to empathize. They want us to not desire because it gives them sick satisfaction. They want us not to feel because then they can justify crimes against us in our own courts. How could it not pain me to call myself asexual?

I literally feel all of this weight every time I have to confront my sexuality, when I have to confront my family and my family history, which I’m trying to uncover because the British literally wiped our records. 

So maybe be glad that you cannot personalize the ways in which white supremacy operates via sexuality. But don’t think it’s some theoretical abstraction that has no place in discussions of asexuality.

This Asexual Awareness Week,

thingsthatmakeyouacey:

follow up on your promises of solidarity.

There are so many amazing grassroots organizations working to help Q/T people of color, especially youth:

  • The Sylvia Rivera Law Project (site)
  • FIERCE NYC (site)
  • Queer Detainee Empowerment Project (site)
  • Audre Lorde Prject (site)
  • HGBC Boston (site)
  • Streetwise and Safe Youth NYC (site)
  • Community United Against Violence (site)
  • Colorado Anti-Violence Program (site)
  • Youth Break Out (site)
  • Southerners On New Ground (site)
  • National Black Justice Coalition (site)
  • Brown Boi Project (site)
  • National Queer Asian Pacific Islander Alliance (site)
  • Native Youth Sexual Health Network (site)
  • Trans People of Color Coalition (site)
  • Muslim Alliance for Sexual and Gender Diversity (site)
  • LGBT Muslim Retreat (site)
  • Queer Women of Color Media Arts Project (site)

Asexual Awareness Week as an organization is clearly still running.

spookyplantain:

image

image

But you know what? That wasn’t the issue. I KNEW it was running. Because someone READ my email and REMOVED THE IMAGE.

So not only have y’all been creating distractions from the real issue at hand, that is, that this organization was told to remove the Aryan Brotherhood symbol from its website and did so without a single apology or mark of accountability, but y’all have also been wrong about AAW being “defunct.”

Collect, white aces. Collect. Because I’ve been saying this from the beginning. The email is up and the website was updated in order to remove both my intern bio and the symbol in question (although N.B.the bio was removed probably two weeks before I sent any email, no correlation, just that AAW as a site has been running this summer).

All of this chatter about AAW not responding to emails is well and good on your own time and posts but here I am trying to make this organization and the community as a WHOLE collect on its blatant racism, and somehow, it needs to be diverted. Clearly y’all don’t see that you are the problem I’m trying to address.

aro-ace-skeleton-warrior:

Ok this post is probably going to be a mess of thoughts, but whatever. I have seen some things in the aaw tags saying that we don’t need asexuality or aromantic awareness weeks. People are saying that it shouldn’t be so important to us that everyone knows about asexuality and aromanticism (why is that word so awkward?). I don’t think you’re understanding the point of asexual and aromantic awareness. The point is not to educate allosexual alloromantic people about these things. That’s something we do, yes, but that’s not the reason. The point of asexual and aromantic awareness is to educate people who might be on the asexual are aromantic spectrum, but don’t know it. Because most of us on the spectrum have been there. Most of us remember feeling broken, trying out different sexual orientation labels to try and find one that fits. Wondering if everyone just pretends to be romantically or sexually attracted to people all the time. Or, for allosexual aromantic people, feeling like a heartless slut, because that’s what the world tells you that you are. The primary goal of asexual and aromantic awareness is to spread these words and definitions and stories around so that these people who are in the shoes we were once in can maybe see it and realize that they aren’t broken or heartless.

Asexual Awareness Week Linkspam: Day 1

ace-muslim:

Each day of Asexual Awareness Week, I am tweeting links about asexuality. These posts provide an archive of the links. Feel free to share any that you find useful.

Asexuality: A Mixed-Methods Approach [scientific study] (pdf)

Asexuality in the 1970s (pptx)

Timeline of events in the asexual movement

Ace Pride photos [asexuals marching in LGBTQ Pride parades]

The Invisible Orientation: An Introduction to Asexuality [book]

Understanding Asexuality [book]

Asexualities: Feminist and Queer Perspectives [book]

Asexuality and Sexual Normativity: An Anthology [book]

What Asexuality Contributes to the Same-Sex Marriage Discussion

What Does Asexuality Have to Do with Polyamory? (pdf)

Asexuality in Japan: a conversation with harris-hijiri

A Conversation About the Israeli Ace Community with Limor

A conversation with Robin on Asexuality in Taiwan

Thoughts on the plight of aces in India

Being ace across language barriers

queerodactyl:

hey guys. i like that i’m seeing more people talking about asexuality with it being asexual awareness week and all, but i would like it even more if everyone would give a little extra attention to

  • sex repulsed asexuals
  • asexuals with low or no sex drive
  • people who are asexual due to trauma or abuse

because i feel like there’s a disproportionately small amount of posts about these forms of asexuality to posts saying things like “not all asexuals hate sex!!!!” or “asexuals can still have a sex drive!!!” or “asexuality doesnt have to be a result of abuse!!!!”

like, i’m not saying that those aren’t valid points, but sometimes it feels like we’re getting thrown under the bus because we “fit the stereotype”