Lightning'sGirl

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This poem is by Marsha Truman Cooper

FEARING PARIS

Suppose that what you fear
could be trapped
and held in Paris.
Then you would have
the courage to go
everywhere in the world.
All the directions of the compass
open to you,
except the degrees east or west
of true north
that lead to Paris.
Still, you wouldn’t dare
put your toes
smack dab on the city limit line.
You’re not really willing
to stand on a mountainside,
miles away,
and watch the Paris lights
come up at night.
Just to be on the safe side,
you decide to stay completely
out of France.
But then the danger
seems too close
even to those boundaries,
and you feel
the timid part of you
covering the whole globe again.
You need the kind of friend
who learns your secret and says,
“See Paris first.”

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clingtomymouth:

The women divers of Jeju Island (known as haenyeo) are unique   and rare workers. For centuries, they have harvested seaweed and   shellfish at depths of 20 meters, holding their breath for as long as   two minutes without any equipment other than their rubber suits, masks   and nets. The Korean women divers of Jeju Island have faced the   tempestuous tides of history and struggle for economic survival. Their   intimate relationship to the land and sea, their shaman beliefs, and   their communal village life have kept them protected from modern   pressures. In return, many of the haenyeo live a life of   purpose and resilience well into their 90s. They illuminate a steady,   fearless course and most of all, an enduring legacy.
Eyeteeth: A journal of incisive ideas: Photo series: Brenda Paik Sunoo’s “Jeju Grannies of the Sea”

clingtomymouth:

The women divers of Jeju Island (known as haenyeo) are unique and rare workers. For centuries, they have harvested seaweed and shellfish at depths of 20 meters, holding their breath for as long as two minutes without any equipment other than their rubber suits, masks and nets. The Korean women divers of Jeju Island have faced the tempestuous tides of history and struggle for economic survival. Their intimate relationship to the land and sea, their shaman beliefs, and their communal village life have kept them protected from modern pressures. In return, many of the haenyeo live a life of purpose and resilience well into their 90s. They illuminate a steady, fearless course and most of all, an enduring legacy.

Eyeteeth: A journal of incisive ideas: Photo series: Brenda Paik Sunoo’s “Jeju Grannies of the Sea”

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lazz:

sexartandpolitics:


The woman in Room 609, Storme DeLarverie, has dementia. She is but one anonymous elderly New Yorker in a city with thousands upon thousands of them. And many of those who marched down Fifth Avenue on Sunday would be hard pressed to realize that this little old lady — once the cross-dressing M.C. of a group of drag-queen performers, once a fiercely protective (and pistol-packing) bouncer in the city’s lesbian bars — was one of the reasons they were marching.

A Stonewall Veteran, 89, Misses the Parade - NYTimes.com
via lomoexplosion:exmilitary

lazz:

sexartandpolitics:

The woman in Room 609, Storme DeLarverie, has dementia. She is but one anonymous elderly New Yorker in a city with thousands upon thousands of them. And many of those who marched down Fifth Avenue on Sunday would be hard pressed to realize that this little old lady — once the cross-dressing M.C. of a group of drag-queen performers, once a fiercely protective (and pistol-packing) bouncer in the city’s lesbian bars — was one of the reasons they were marching.

A Stonewall Veteran, 89, Misses the Parade - NYTimes.com

via lomoexplosion:exmilitary

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(via boredoom)

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(via shitgaze)

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gurntly:

Nico - I’m Not Saying

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