landyscape:

Every road leads you somewhere..:) (by Katarina 2353)

landyscape:

Every road leads you somewhere..:) (by Katarina 2353)

red-lipstick:

Ninioninio - Cabeza, 2012                                     Photography

red-lipstick:

Ninioninio - Cabeza, 2012                                     Photography

(Source: jessicachu, via lukeybabee)

prayingforafrica:

browngloriasteinem:

fsufeminist:

lyssamae:

redefiningbodyimage:

shewhorollswithrolls:

stophatingyourbody:

wheeliewifee:

Glamour Magazine Body Size Stereotypes Survey:
What the Glamour Magazine poll shows about the assumptions women hold
Heavy women are pegged as…
“lazy” 11 times as often as thin women; “sloppy” nine times; “undisciplined” seven times; “slow” six times as often.
While thin women are seen as…
“conceited” or “superficial” about eight times as often as heavy women; “vain” or “self-centered” four times as often; and “bitchy,” “mean,” or “controlling” more than twice as often.
Even the “good” labels are unfair.
An overweight woman may be five times as likely to be perceived as “giving” as a skinny one. “But it just fits into the stereotype that thin women are not that way,” explains Ann Kearney-Cooke, Ph.D. “It’s still putting women in a box based on their body size.”
————————————————————————————-
This is so interesting… and really sad. The fact that heavy women ALSO judge heavy women and thin women judge other thin women is so disheartening.
Hopefully places like Stop Hating Your Body can help change this even a little bit at a time… 
(click on the image for the entire article, it is worth the read!)

It’s very interesting that the article is about stereotypes, and yet both the women shown here, while their body sizes are different, are both white, blonde, and what the media would like to push as being ideally ‘beautiful’. 
That being said, however, the article does make a good point. People are far too eager to place people in a box strictly on what the shape of their body, and it’s not okay. The only way to change is to question what you’re made to think, and why.

ugh. also: sticky note to myself to work on planned photo project. ok.

bolded above comment for absolute truthness
but this is super valid otherwise

This is similar to a project that I’ve got in the works. Interesting!

I’d also like to point out that even though the thinner woman has stigmas against her, she still has more privilege than the woman on the right by the mere fact that attractive people (cis women even moreso) are treated better by society as a whole.

^^^ what she said

This is so inaccurate I’m skinny and I am NONE  of those things. smh

prayingforafrica:

browngloriasteinem:

fsufeminist:

lyssamae:

redefiningbodyimage:

shewhorollswithrolls:

stophatingyourbody:

wheeliewifee:

Glamour Magazine Body Size Stereotypes Survey:

What the Glamour Magazine poll shows about the assumptions women hold

Heavy women are pegged as…

“lazy” 11 times as often as thin women; “sloppy” nine times; “undisciplined” seven times; “slow” six times as often.

While thin women are seen as…

“conceited” or “superficial” about eight times as often as heavy women; “vain” or “self-centered” four times as often; and “bitchy,” “mean,” or “controlling” more than twice as often.

Even the “good” labels are unfair.

An overweight woman may be five times as likely to be perceived as “giving” as a skinny one. “But it just fits into the stereotype that thin women are not that way,” explains Ann Kearney-Cooke, Ph.D. “It’s still putting women in a box based on their body size.”

————————————————————————————-

This is so interesting… and really sad. The fact that heavy women ALSO judge heavy women and thin women judge other thin women is so disheartening.

Hopefully places like Stop Hating Your Body can help change this even a little bit at a time… 

(click on the image for the entire article, it is worth the read!)

It’s very interesting that the article is about stereotypes, and yet both the women shown here, while their body sizes are different, are both white, blonde, and what the media would like to push as being ideally ‘beautiful’. 

That being said, however, the article does make a good point. People are far too eager to place people in a box strictly on what the shape of their body, and it’s not okay. The only way to change is to question what you’re made to think, and why.

ugh. also: sticky note to myself to work on planned photo project. ok.

bolded above comment for absolute truthness

but this is super valid otherwise

This is similar to a project that I’ve got in the works. Interesting!

I’d also like to point out that even though the thinner woman has stigmas against her, she still has more privilege than the woman on the right by the mere fact that attractive people (cis women even moreso) are treated better by society as a whole.

^^^ what she said

This is so inaccurate I’m skinny and I am NONE  of those things. smh

thefluffingtonpost:

Beagle Gains Fresh Perspective on Life
An area beagle found himself flipped upside down early Friday while engaged in his morning ball playing. It was at that moment when eye-witnesses noticed a change.
“It’s like his whole attitude shifted,” says Marie Gould, a source close to the situation. “He saw the world from a different perspective, and suddenly his problems didn’t seem so bad.”
Via Kieran.

thefluffingtonpost:

Beagle Gains Fresh Perspective on Life

An area beagle found himself flipped upside down early Friday while engaged in his morning ball playing. It was at that moment when eye-witnesses noticed a change.

“It’s like his whole attitude shifted,” says Marie Gould, a source close to the situation. “He saw the world from a different perspective, and suddenly his problems didn’t seem so bad.”

Via Kieran.