Magic is in our Hearts

@magicisinourhearts

Recognizing Abuse Masterlist

Signs that you’re living in abuse:

Breakdown of abusive parent’s behaviour:

Signs your parents are narcissistic:

Signs you’ve been thru sexual abuse:

Signs of abusive friendship/relationship:

Signs you’re struggling with trauma

Anonymous asked:

Are you a Gold Star lesbian? (Just in case you don't know what it means, a Gold Star lesbian is a lesbian that has never had the sex with a guy and would never have any intentions of ever doing so)

ohh my god. OH MY GOD. oh dear lord what the actual fuck. who keeps sending these. WHO KEEPS SENDING THESE. ARE THEY AUTOMATED TO HAUNT ANY GIVEN LESBIAN ABOUT HER PERSONAL LIFE? NOBODY CARES ANYMORE MEN DO NOT DEFINE WHAT KIND OF LESBIANS WE ARE

man: *makes a joke about women*
other men: lol yeah
woman: *makes a joke about men*
other women: you shouldn't generalize, men are great. i thought feminism was about equality, you wouldn't like it if was the other way around, you're actually being sexist by insulting men. anyways, i love my emotionally abusive boyfriend who calls himself a feminist!!!!

It’s not just owning the gun, it’s the NRA propaganda that ‘they’re coming for your guns’ that influences the paranoia and irrational fears of gun owners.

For eight years, they said Obama was coming for their guns, and the fact that Obama was not coming for their guns was proof Obama was coming for their guns. You can’t get more delusional.

It was witches who developed an extensive understanding of bones and muscles, herbs and drugs, while physicians were still deriving their prognoses from astrology and alchemists were trying to turn lead into gold. So great was the witches’ knowledge that in 1527, Paracelsus, considered the ‘father of modern medicine,’ burned his text on pharmaceuticals, confessing that he ‘had learned from the Sorceress all he knew.’

Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English, Witches, Midwives, and Nurses - A History of Women Healers (1973)

HAVE YALL SEEN THIS…THIS IS WHAT I MEAN BY 20GAYTEEN HAPPY VALENTINES DAY LOVE IS REAL

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lesbianegg

I wish more women knew that it was okay to acknowledge that being a woman can be, in itself, traumatic and life-altering

sometimes women don’t have big events in their lives. sometimes they it’s “just” the ever-present fear of harassment and assault, the fact that most of your friends have been harassed and assaulted, the constant pressure to hate, change, and dress up your body, the fact that both men and women are less likely to take you seriously, the almost daily news about violence against your gender, the casual misogynistic jokes, the expectations that you will have have high-risk sex and carry a child, the knowledge that your gender has been considered less valuable than men for a large part of human history in most parts of the world…

I want all women to know that that going through all of that (and more) is enough to mess you up. trust yourself. 

In the 1960′s Legally a woman couldn’t

  1. Open a bank account or get a credit card without signed permission from her father or hr husband.
  2. Serve on a jury - because it might inconvenience the family not to have the woman at home being her husband’s helpmate.
  3. Obtain any form of birth control without her husband’s permission. You had to be married, and your hub and had to agree to postpone having children.
  4. Get an Ivy League education. Ivy League schools were men’s colleges ntil the 70′s and 80′s. When they opened their doors to women it was agree that women went there for their MRS. Degee.
  5. Experience equality in the workplace: Kennedy’s Commission on the Status of Women produced a report in 1963 that revealed, among other things, that women earned 59 cents for every dollar that men earned and were kept out of the more lucrative professional positions.
  6. Keep her job if she was pregnant.Until the Pregnancy Discrimination Act in 1978, women were regularly fired from their workplace for being pregnant.
  7. Refuse to have sex with her husband.The mid 70s saw most states recognize marital rape and in 1993 it became criminalized in all 50 states. Nevertheless, marital rape is still often treated differently to other forms of rape in some states even today.
  8. Get a divorce with some degree of ease.Before the No Fault Divorce law in 1969, spouses had to show the faults of the other party, such as adultery, and could easily be overturned by recrimination.
  9. Have a legal abortion in most states.The Roe v. Wade case in 1973 protected a woman’s right to abortion until viability.
  10. Take legal action against workplace sexual harassment. According to The Week, the first time a court recognized office sexual harassment as grounds for legal action was in 1977.
  11. Play college sports Title IX of the  Education Amendments of protects people from discrimination  based on sex in education programs or activities that receive Federal financial  assistance It was nt until this statute that colleges had teams for women’s sports
  12. Apply for men’s Jobs   The EEOC rules that sex-segregated help wanted ads in newspapers are illegal.  This ruling is upheld in 1973 by the Supreme Court, opening the way for women to apply for higher-paying jobs hitherto open only to men.

This is why we needed feminism - this is why we know that feminism works

I just want to reiterate this stuff, because I legit get the feeling there are a lot of younger women for whom it hasn’t really sunk in what it is today’s GOP is actively trying to return to.

Did you go to a good college? Shame on you, you took a college placement that could have gone to a man who deserves and needs it to support or prepare for his wife & children. But if you really must attend college, well, some men like that, you can still get married if you focus on finding the right man.

Got a job? Why? A man could be doing that job. You should be at home caring for a family. You shouldn’t be taking that job away from a man who needs it (see college, above). You definitely don’t have a career – you’ll be pregnant and raising children soon, so no need to worry about promoting you.

This shit was within living memory.  I’M A MILLENIAL and my mother was in the second class that allowed women at an Ivy League school. Men who are alive today either personally remember shit like this or have parents/family who have raised them into thinking this was the way America functioned back in the blissful Good Old Days. There are literally dudes in the GOP old enough to remember when it was like this and yearn for those days to return.

When people talk about resisting conservativism and the GOP, we’re not just talking about whether the wage gap is a myth or not. We’re talking about whether women even have the fundamental right to exist as individuals, to run their own households and compete for jobs and be considered on an equal footing with men in any arena at all in the first place.

I was a child in the 1960s, a teenager in the 1970s, a young adult in the 1980s. This is what it was like: When I was growing up, it was considered unfortunate if a girl was good at sports. Girls were not allowed in Little League. Girls’ teams didn’t exist in high school, except at all-girls’ high schools. Boys played sports, and girls were the cheerleaders. People used to ask me as a child what I wanted to be when I grew up. I said I wanted to be a brain surgeon or the first woman justice on the Supreme Court. Everyone told me it was impossible–those just weren’t realistic goals for a girl–the latter, especially, because you couldn’t trust women to judge fairly and rationally, after all. In the 1960s and 1970s, all women were identified by their marital status, even in arrest reports and obituaries. In elementary school, my science teacher referred to Pierre Curie as DOCTOR Curie and Marie Curie as MRS. Curie…because, as he put it, “she was just his wife.” (Both had doctorates and both were Nobel prize winners, so you would think that both would be accorded respect.) Companies could and did require women to wear dresses and skirts. Failure to do could and did get women fired. And it was legal. It was also legal to fire women for getting married or getting pregnant. The rationale was that a woman who was married or who had a child had no business working; that was what her husband was for. Aetna Insurance, the biggest insurance company in America, fired women for all of the above. A man could rape his wife. Legally. I can remember being twelve years old and reading about legal experts actually debating whether or not a man could actually be said to coerce his wife into having sex. This was a serious debate in 1974. The debate about marital rape came up in my law school, too, in 1984. Could a woman be raped by her husband? The guys all said no–a woman got married, so she was consenting to sex at all times. So I turned it around. I asked them if, since a man had gotten married, that meant that his wife could shove a dildo or a stick or something up his ass any time she wanted to for HER sexual pleasure. (Hey, I thought it was reasonable. If one gender was legally entitled to force sex on the other, then obviously the reverse should also be true.) The male law students didn’t like the idea. Interestingly, they commented that being treated like that would make them feel like a woman. My reaction was, “Thank you for proving my point…” The concept of date rape, when first proposed, was considered laughable. If a woman went out on a date, the argument of legal experts ran, sexual consent was implied. Even more sickening was the fact that in some states–even in the early 1980s–a man could rape his daughter…and it was no worse than a misdemeanor. Women taking self-defense classes in the 1970s and 1980s were frequently described in books and on TV as “cute.” The implication was that it was absurd for a woman to attempt to defend herself, but wasn’t it just adorable for her to try? I was expressly forbidden to take computer classes in junior and senior years of high school–1978-79 and 1979-80–because, as the principal told me, “Only boys have to know that kind of thing. You girls are going to get married, and you won’t use it.” When I was in college–from 1980 to 1984–there were no womens’ studies. The idea hadn’t occurred in many places because the presumption was that there was nothing TO study. My history professor–a man who had a doctorate in history–informed me quite seriously that women had never produced a noted painter, sculptor, composer, architect or scientist because…wait for it…womens’ brains were too small. (He was very surprised when I came up with a list of fifty women gifted in the arts and science, most of whom he had never heard of before.) When Walter Mondale picked Geraldine Ferraro as a running mate in 1984, the press hailed it as a disaster. What would happen, they asked fearfully, if Mondale died and Ferraro became president? What if an international crisis arose and she was menstruating? She could push the nuclear button in a fit of PMS! It would be the end of the WORLD!! …No, they WEREN’T kidding. On the surface, things are very different now than they were when I was a child, a teen and a young adult. But I’m afraid that people now do not realize what it was like then. I’ve read a lot of posts from young women who say that they are not feminists. If the only exposure to feminism they have is the work of extremists, I cannot blame them overmuch. I wish that I could tell them what feminism was like when it was new–when the dream of legal equality was just a dream, and hadn’t even begun to come true. When “woman’s work” was a sneer–and an overt putdown. When people tut-tutted over bright and athletic girls with the words, “Really, it’s a shame she’s not a boy.” That lack of feminism wasn’t all men opening doors and picking up checks. A lot of it was an attitude of patronizing contempt that hasn’t entirely died out, but which has become less publicly acceptable. I wish I could make them feel what it was like…when grown men were called “men” and grown women were “girls.”

Know your history.

So this, too, is what they mean saying “make America great again” and/or the good old days.

REBLOG FOREVER.

I am 70. I remember all those things. I was a student nurse from 64 to 67 and we were not permitted to “finish” a bed bath on a male or insert a catheter in a male. Seeing male genitals might cause us “harm” or upset our delicate sensibilities. Imagine when we graduated and were “thrown” to the wolves. Imagine if you were a male patient who had to be the first to be “practiced” on by a graduate nurse. (Ha!) At the school I attended no student nurse could be married. Only one school in my city (Atlanta) would even admit married women and Male Nurses weren’t even thought of. What man would want to be a nurse when he could be a Doctor. In all my training I only remember 3 or 4 Women who were Doctor’s and a very few, (less than 5 or 6) female interns or residents (and this was a teaching hospital) and most of those were OB/Gyns and one was a pediatrician.

When I graduated and was going to get married I wanted to go on birth control pills. You needed to be on them for a least one cycle before they were effective. I won’t go into what hoops I had to jump through to get a prescription from my Dr. (a man, natch) but when i went to the drug store to get the prescription filled I ended up having to get my future husband to “accompany” me so the pharmacist “interview” him and see if it was okay with him for me to be on the pill.

Even when we went to get a marriage license I had to get my Father’s signature and we had to go before a Judge because I was not yet 21 (I was 20 and 9 months).

I could go on and on, getting a credit card in MY name, etc., but I will tell you that WE MUST RESIST.

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casper-the-friendly-being

The number of people I know who romanticize gender inequality is frankly terrifying. A world never existed in which the lives of women were simplified by benevolent men who saw to her every want and need. That was not a thing. A world never existed in which women were all ladies, men were all gentlemen, & everything was some great big cishet fairytale. Feminists aren’t a bunch of upstarts who want to destroy a perfectly wholesome and non-harmful system. Just…look at history. Look at the posts above. We. Must. Resist..

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rivergst

About 8: The State of New York only added No-Fault Divorce as an option in 2010 (!!!)

I want to repeat here. 

This is what they mean, when they say “Old-fashioned values”

When conservatives start waxing lyrical about the ‘good old days’, this is what they mean. They are fully aware how much things blew for women, and they would like to return to that. 

The actual worst discourse I see commonly in radfem circles is “If you are anti-psychiatry/psychiatry-critical you are ableist.”

It makes me feel sick. There is nothing radical or feminist about calling out someone for being critical of psychiatric medication or the psychiatric system. It has been the system historically used to brutalize Lesbians (i.e. psychiatry historically sanctioned corrective rape for Lesbians) and continues to the modern day to do so in a million different ways.

Need I remind you all that transition is sanctioned by psychiatry. Need I remind you all that womyn are being locked up and drugged and raped in wards around the world. Need I remind you that companies are making billions off medicating away the most obvious symptoms of womyn’s distress under patriarchy. Need I remind you that we should be critical of anything that is primarily sold to womyn and that this includes psychiatric medication. Need I remind you that psychiatric diagnoses are socially constructed with an agenda. Need I remind you that the monoamine hypothesis is unproven at best. Need I remind you the government can lock you up, drug you and induce seizures in you basically whenever they feel like it if you are mad.

I am disgusted that there are people who would think I’m ableist for hating a system that transitioned me and later locked me up, tried to get me to transition again, threatened to send me to an institution rampant with rape and deaths for not taking medication, put my freedom in the hands of a man who hated that I wouldn’t do as he said and finally tried to get me to take an anti-psychotic because I was crying about all of this.

If you think being anti-psychiatry is ableist I don’t know what sort of liberal analysis you are using but it is one that accepts the brutalization of the mad, especially mad womyn. That doesn’t sound very radfem to me.

Just wondering what makes most liberal feminists want to be feminists? Because for me, and pretty much every radical or radical-leaning feminist with whom the subject has come up, it’s about wanting an end to sexual assault. That was it for me, the biggest reason. There are other reasons too, but that was the main one. It’s still the main one.

And it’s exactly why I initially jumped aboard the trans train. What? A group of people has even higher rates of sexual assault than women do? And they’re being ignored? And some feminists want to exclude them? I’m not having this! Fuck TERFs!

But it’s also why I jumped right off again when I learned of the “cotton ceiling” bs. Because coercive sexual assault is sexual assault and guilting people (mostly lesbians) into sex they don’t want is fucking coercion, no matter how the words are twisted or how many inaccurate comparisons.

I get the trans pushing this narrative. It benefits many of them directly (mostly het trans males, but some het trans females too) and others it’s just male solidarity. What I don’t get is the (non-trans identified) women on board with it. I mean, I get women siding with men in order to get them to like them better. But how you claim to be a part of a movement created by women and support males harassing women into sex they don’t want? What are your reasons for calling yourself a feminist if not to want to see an end to sexual assault? Genuinely curious.

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shadowalker9

Fear and peer pressure. “If I do the Right Thing™ maybe he will assault someone else”. “If I was a man, I would be safe from men” “It will happen anyway. It’s inevitable. I can’t do anything about it.” Among other possible reasons.

My hole, my fish! This is my fish in the hole! What are you doing? The audacity!.. [fox runs off, then returns] The audacity!! Why are you like this! You can’t be this fuckin shameless! Dude!! [fox jumps slightly, but doesn’t run off] Have some decency! Where are you– Who asked– Damn.  [fox tries to steal the fish again] The audacity!!! How dare you? Don’t eat. Don’t eat! Don’t eat!! Off! This is my capelin! My fish, I’m telling you! My fish, my hole! [fox starts digging, the man watches quietly, then laughs] You’re quite a character. Aight, take, take it. [fox finally takes the fish] Good boy. This is for your digging trick. Good job.

Source: youtu.be

the argument that some women should be brutalized so that men don’t go brutalizing just any other women is so batshit, like how are you going to admit men are evil and need/want to brutalize women and girls, ignore the fact that the sex industry hasn’t stopped domestic violence since it still ya know happens????, and basically say “¯\_(ツ)_/¯ welp in the fight to stop violence against women I guess some need to be beat and raped and killed and sold and kidnapped” especially since we all know which girls and women are most likely to be taken off the street to make money for pimps, let’s be reallll for a second