joenessalovesu:

lj-writes:

joenessalovesu:

my honest to god aesthetic till the end of time itself

tweet: https://twitter.com/d_mich2013/status/1004027227380449280?s=21

The entire (small) thread following the tweet is made of win, too:

Never apologize for being right, Danna.

Update: It got better. They snapped.

Some may not agree with the last tweet in this thread (I personally do), but the rest is spot on honestly.

Omg we got an anti in the house 😂 Always refreshing to see pushback for these horrible apologetics. And ftr I agree with the final one too and wrote an analysis where I read the Rey and Kylo scenes much as Danna did, that Kyle was trying to do to Rey what Snoke did to him. Pablo Hidalgo of the Story Group has also said that being manipulated doesn’t absolve Kyle of responsibility. Many reylows, and many antis tbh, refuse to see that nuance.

Why abusive ships are popular

castbael:

lj-writes:

It’s because girls are taught we deserve to be mistreated and abuse is love.

It’s because I had rocks thrown at me when I was a little girl with skinny legs, with blood streaming down my face, leaving a scar that stays with me to this day, and I was told “he does that because he likes you!”

It’s because so-called “love” stories, all over, everywhere, tell women that the man who obsesses over them, controls them, and abuses them is the one who loves them.

It’s because genuinely good men (not Nice Guys™ who think women owe them sex for basic human decency) are desexualized and sidelined because they don’t conform to the ideals of domineering, entitled, violent masculinity.

It’s because women are told they are responsible for fixing men with the power of their love, that women are selfish if they don’t offer their emotional labor and bodies to men who demand it.

It’s because women are told we should revolve around men, their success, their self-realization, their redemption, because we are not our own persons but accessories in others’ lives.

It’s because women and girls don’t get the space to see themselves cherished and treated as equals in relationships, and instead are bombarded with messages that we are milestones in men’s stories, their rewards, their conquests.

It’s because we’re not taught to say “no,” we’re taught to smile and accommodate and let them down gently and give and give and give and ask for nothing back.

It’s because we are blamed for the wrongs committed by men, because men can do no wrong and we must be tempting them to evil.

It’s because if we speak out we are called names and barraged with threats, because we must be silent, silent and smiling and sweet and we are not allowed to scream when we are hurt.

Because he likes you.

It’s because women are not treated as human beings. It’s because we’re taught to swallow the message that we are less, and we are taught to like it.

Get this out of the Reylo tag considering it’s not remotely abusive, it’s deeply offensive to actual abuse victims like myself (not that you types care about us!), and shows you don’t appear to have watched the movies at all.

a) it’s not in the reylo tag, it’s not my fault you don’t know how to use tumblr (here’s a tip: search #reylo instead of reylo)

b) wow way to talk over victims of abuse who have discussed being assaulted and gaslighted in exactly the same ways

c) if that’s not your experience, fine, but you don’t speak for all victims

thisiseverydayracism:

Mental health treatment and everyday racism

I had been seeing a therapist a few months ago, due to my C-PTSD, depression and childhood trauma.  During that time, I had been struggling with finding a job because of my condition, and whenever I was able to apply to a very hopeful job with a good salary, my therapist appeared very skeptical and against it. I couldn’t understand why. She would suggest that I apply to Walmart instead of the types of jobs I had been applying to. I didn’t catch on, right away, of what she was really implying, and she just kept suggesting walmart. Every week when I updated her on my job search, she’d ask:

“Well, have you tried Walmart? What about Walmart? You’ll be able to get a nice apartment and live on your own if you do Walmart.“  I would just look at her, baffled as to why in the bloody hell would she think that a part-time position at Walmart would get me a nice apartment AND pay the bills in southern California… The thing about that, though, is that I wasn’t seeing through what the ole’ bitch really meant. 

During one session I complained to her about how my panic attacks and nightmares were getting worse ( I didn’t realize that she was the cause). Her response to that was to give me a worksheet called “Monkey Trap,” about a metaphorical monkey getting its hand stuck in a jar. It had absolutely nothing to do with what I had originally complained about. I still didn’t catch on right away, but the nature of my depression and c-ptsd makes it very hard for me to spot abuse right away,( and you can easily look this up in case anyone wants to shame me for not seeing her for who she really was right off the bat), plus it was my first time in therapy, so I didn’t know what to expect. 

Then, she started to completely ignore and scoff at the idea of me having PTSD/C-PTSD. She didn’t want to acknowledge it. I would try to explain my childhood trauma, and she’d tell me to get over it. Her reason for this? 

“You are a strong black woman! Don’t try to make me believe that you can’t handle abuse! It’s nothing to you!" 

That’s right. She said it. This disgusting woman was denying me the proper mental health treatment because of her racist idea that "strong black women” don’t feel pain, can’t experience trauma and no way could develop PTSD. “Black women don’t usually have PTSD,” according to her… 

I have notified my health care provider, insurance, and complained to the BoP about this woman. I just want everyone who might be seeking mental health care to be careful and research a counselor/therapist before you see them. If anything feels off, get out! If they seem indifferent, get out! If they try to shush you and do not want to listen, get out! Since it was my first time, I didn’t do any of that, but I’m here to tell you that if it is your first time in therapy, please be aware of this. Research before you go in. Have an initial consultation. If they violate your mental health in any way, report them to your Provider or the Board. 

Have a good day everyone. 

ryoukotanbo:

lesbian-ochako:

“you shouldn’t apply morality to shipping and fandom” you should apply morality to everything you idiot. you can’t remove yourself from the concepts of right and wrong at your own convenience

people in the notes are completely missing the damn point. theres a difference between writing characters who do bad things and romanticizing characters doing bad things

having a rapist character in your story doesnt mean you condone rape but making your entire story about how ‘sexy’ and ‘forbidden’ the rapist and their victim is fucking disgusting and should not be justified through ‘its just fiction.’ same goes for the glorification of child porn+gore, pedophilia, incest, ect. shut up lol

asdpositivity:

Today my mom told me that the way I stimmed embarrassed her because she said it “made me look autistic” but uh, I am autistic.

She prohibits me from discussing my diagnosis with anyone (I ignore this – I’m really open about my diagnosis at school and online) and not even my extended family knows. The one time that I brought it up, she told my family that I was lying.

Don’t teach your kids to be ashamed of their autism, or any other disability/disorder/illness that they may have. Trying to suppress it doesn’t make it go away. Trying to suppress it only hurts even more.

Once you help your kids know themselves and embrace themselves and all of their differences, you will help their world become a better place.

Please don’t teach your kids to be ashamed of their diagnosis. You can’t hide a part of them from the world for forever

fandomsandfeminism:

misanthropicfeels:

trilies:

oncerbat:

trilies:

fandomsandfeminism:

oncerbat:

fandomsandfeminism:

So many Pro-Spanking advocates talk about how they “Deserved” to be hit by their parents because they were “a bad kid.” And it makes me so sad.

You weren’t.

You weren’t a bad kid, and you didn’t deserve to be hit. Maybe you were a difficult kid, maybe you struggled with boundaries or rules or expectations. Maybe you had bad behavior much of the time. But you, yourself, were not and are not a BAD person for that, and you didn’t EARN violence. You didn’t have it coming. It shouldn’t have happened to you. 

This is exactly the type of thinking that leads people to believe they don’t deserve Hell because they think they’re basically good-hearted.  There is a stark difference between discipline and abuse! 

Dont hit children.

http://ns.umich.edu/new/releases/23732-spanking-does-more-harm-than-good

@oncerbat I’ll bite. In your words, what is the difference between discipline and abuse? At what point does spanking go over the line?

It’s not necessarily the acting of spanking itself, but the reason for spanking.  I was spanked as a kid, and I have not suffered any form of psychological trauma into adulthood. Consequently, those who aren’t spanked are usually the ones who feel entitled to everything and get offended by practically everything as well. 

Now, if someone spanked kids for just about every minor infraction, then it might carry over into abuse, or if you spank your kid out of anger, but a slap on the bum is supposed to teach kids obedience where they are reminded of temporary physical pain for not obeying their parents, Parents should be feared by their kids. Feared does not mean I’m afraid Mommy or Daddy is going to punch me for no reason. I mean feared as respected. There’s a huge difference between someone who spanks their kid for lying to them vs someone who hits their kid in a drunken rage because they spilled something or spelled a word incorrectly. 

What does the non-spanking parent do when their child throws a temper-tantrum in the grocery store? I’m not a parent, but based on my past experience with my parents, I would say it’s perfectly justifiable and not abusive to spank the kid. Why? Because it teaches them respect in a way that’s quick and well-remembered. If you just tell the kid to stop, they’re probably not going to listen. 

Spanking is supposed to teach kids respect,self-control, and accountability among others. And it should be mainly used for young kids. 

I know this response will face backlash, but if you need further info, read this http://madamenoire.com/40373/8-reasons-to-spank-your-kids/6/ 

fandomsandfeminism has talked about alternatives to spanking here. 

With that said, I will say that my mother spanked me exactly the way you described as ideal: not out of anger, not for every little infraction, always after other punishments had been tried, and she made it clear what I was being spanked for. Heck, she was even sad a lot of times when she “had” to do it! 

So here’s a story: 

I’m in elementary school, and just learning more complicated math along the lines of division. I’m bad at math now, and I was bad at math then, so I wasn’t getting my homework. It made no sense to me. More than half my worksheet is blank. The logical thing to do would have been to go to my mother, right? Ask for help. 

Instead, I hid my homework, hoping desperately  that I could convince the teacher I lost it, because I was convinced that if I told my mother that I couldn’t do my math homework, she would spank me. And spanking, being hurt like that, was something I hated and feared more than anything else. The only reason I ended up showing it to her and my aunt who was visiting (at TEN AT NIGHT, when i should have been asleep) was because I realized in my anxiety that my teacher would tell my mother anyway, and I’d still get punished. My mother didn’t spank me for it, but that didn’t get rid of the thought in my child mind. 

So that’s what spanking taught me. 

It taught me to associate making mistakes or disappointing my parents with pain. It taught me to avoid going to my parents when I was confused, or had done something I thought was wrong. It taught me not to manage my anger in any true way but instead bottle it up, whereupon it would eventually explode, thus getting me in trouble anyway. 

And, again, because I cannot repeat myself enough: my mother spanked me in all the ways pro-spanking people say is the right way. She did it right, according to your logic, and I still am messed up by it, a fact I’ve only in recent years come to terms with. And I’m a full grown adult! 

A good friend of mine was also spanked, and said none of her issues, as far as she can tell, stem from that. However, she has talked about how damaging spanking can be at length, and I want to share a quote about it with you:

“It is, in fact, possible to spank sparingly, or within some realm of reason, or for kids to not come away from it severely damaged. But it’s possible in the way that winning the lottery is possible. The fact that people have beaten the odds doesn’t mean that the odds are in your favor. Or, in this case, your kids’ favor. You are literally gambling with your child’s emotional and neurological well-being, and their relationship with you, every time you hit them instead of finding a less violent alternative. Even if you are so in control of yourself that you never strike them purely in anger/frustration, and so enlightened that you’re always very careful and thoughtful about just when and how you hit your kids (that is the most ridiculous sentence I have ever had to type, dear god in heaven), you don’t know how your kid will react. You don’t know if they’ll be okay. You don’t know if they’ll come away with respect or fear or resentment or trauma, because that’s outside your control. And what you’re saying is that, frankly, the odds say it’s more likely you’ll damage your kid than not, but it’s worth the risk to you.”

I can talk more about the ways I’ve learned that spanking did me no favors, but hopefully you get the point here. “Discipline” does not mean “violence”. 

Aaaaand of course there’s the millions of normal people who are just fine from spanking AND aren’t little psychologically damaged from being properly disciplined lmao like what kid thinks “Oh, I’m bad at math! Best make things worse by not turning in my homework and failing!” Like? Did your mom not teach you to ask for help or ask for someone to help you learn something? Lmao XD

Emphasis on “properly” because you should know what actions lead to a spanking, and what to do to avoid those things.

Our generation is pathetically soft and sheltered and fragile, and that’s the fault of bad parenting. This generation is going to raise even softer, weaker kids (Well, those of us that choose to have kids) and they’re going to crumble and cry and falter at every little thing just like this generation does.

“ I need to hit children so they aren’t so soft and weak” is a pretty bad parenting outlook, to be honest.

Also if a kid is scared to admit to failure and to ask for help, hitting them for failing is going to help them feel less scared, right? …right?

thehungryvortigaunt:

lj-writes:

jewishcomeradebot:

I’m so tired of seeing reylos and Kylo stans claim they care about Finn’s abuse when it is abundantly clear that their concern is entirely conditional on whether or not it can be made to serve Kylo.

Because they demand that Finn as an abuse victim himself be understanding, empathetic and forgiving of Kylo because of Kylo’s alleged abuse, so course Finn must in their eyes. Finn’s past abuse are to them only a tool to make him obviously “Pro Ben” and redemption, because they never, ever make the same demand in reverse.

But you do not see comment after comment on posts about Finn, nor meta after meta, espousing how Kylo absolutely have to be sympathetic to Finn’s pain and trauma. That he’s an asshole and utterly heartless and selfish if he doesn’t support Finn, if he hates him or wants him hurt.

How a Kylo who wishes Finn dead is a bastard who deserves nothing but misery, because he’s a bad person for not supporting and being empathetic with a fellow abuse victim.

Holy shit, I didn’t even think of it that way. Here they go on about how Finn must be pro-abuse unless he understands and sympathizes with Kyle, meanwhile they choose to ignore the fact that their fave is an actual abuser. (At least one of them didn’t even remember the part where Kilo stared at Finn before startling him by hitting a structure near him with a blaster beam–which forgetfulness is in itself telling.) The double standard is absolutely staggering.

I’ve seen some galaxy-brained Kylo fans who claim that him being aware of Finn’s trauma but not reporting him was a hint of Kylo’s “goodness” – guess they must have missed out on him literally ordering the deaths of helpless civilians. That’s an easy mistake to make, since “kill them all” is such an ambiguous phrase. 🙂

Also, those same people will say that him calling Finn a “traitor” and injuring him is actually Kylo talking about his own angst against the Order – because displacing your own flaws onto a black man is sympathetic and understandable and something we can all relate to, right?

Talk about low bars, yaigh. I do think Kyle projects his doubts onto Finn and was trying to destroy his own vestiges of conscience by hurting and killing him, but that makes Kyle… like, even more evil? In what universe is it sympathetic to treat others like extensions of your own psyche that you are entitled to hurt? Holy shit.

finndeservesbetter:

awesome-bamon:

If Kylo truly had a abusive childhood then wouldn’t he feel more empathy and sympathy for Finn who was kidnapped from his family and was forced to be raised with the first order to do their evil bidding.  Wouldn’t Kylo understand Finn wanting to escape the side which stole his childhood away from him and mentally/emotionally abusing him by forcing him from a loving family.  And raising him under the brutality of the first order.

Instead what does Kylo do to Finn knowing that the first order kidnaps babies and forces them to be stormtroopers.  He calls Finn a traitor and slices him down the back with his light sabor to punish Finn for t trying to protect Rey(Something that Kylo should appreciate Finn doing if he truly cared for Rey like Reylos says that he does.) 

So for someone who went through a so called abusive childhood.  Kylo Ren nor Reylos  take into account the childhood that Finn suffered through.  They don’t care about the neglect that Finn went through.  Both Kylo Ren and some Stans completely disregard Finn’s suffering and pain.  When Kylo calls him a traitor and wants him dead.  And when Reylos demonize Finn, attempt to make Finn the bad guy, attack Finn and when they celebrate Kylo slicing Finn down the back.

Then they want everyone to take Kylo’s feelings and pain into account and spare him judgment for the evil acts and murders that he choose to commit as an adult man.  But, if they only care about the white man’s pain and suffering and ignores everyone else’s, then why should we have to consider Kylo’s childhood when we are calling him out for his wrong doings?

It’s also really telling how this type of Stan are usually the same ones asking why Finn doesn’t have sympathy for Kylo since they are supposedly in the same boat (they aren’t).

They expect the Black man to have expend the emotional labor it would take to have empathy for someone like Kylo but they sure as hell don’t expect Kyle to do the same. Awfully convenient isn’t it?