☆Sparkly Space Garbage☆

I'm Davy, 19. I really like Steven Universe, The Office, Bob's Burgers, and a bunch of other shows. Ask me anything?
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  • crownsoflaurels1020:

    cowlicklesschick:

    One time one of my coworkers was talking about his daughter (who was only 5-6 at the time) and how he was already worried about boys, etc. once she got older. He wasn’t one of those dads, who would quite literally hunt down a teenage boy with a shotgun over some backseat shenanigans. He was just a concerned dad.

    He asked me what my dad used to do to scare all of the boys away from me, or to at least make sure they were good to me.

    My answer?

    Example.

    My dad never once said, “Katie, if a boy hits you, make sure to bring him back here so I can make him pay.”

    Instead, my kind, gentle-soul dad expressed anger and utter contempt for men who beat their wives (and vice versa), and has never in his life raised his hand against me or my mother.

    My dad never once said, “Katie, don’t go out with a boy who’s rude to the waitress.”

    Instead, my father has treated every single server we’ve had throughout my entire life (except the rare ones who were rude first) with respect and courtesy.

    My dad never once told my brothers to get up and offer the pregnant lady their seat on the subway.

    Instead he was the first one to stand up, and smiled proudly when his young sons copied him when 2 other women boarded.

    My dad didn’t raise me to only make good decisions when he’s there looking over my shoulder. He showed me what to look for in a man, not by preaching at me or declaring that he was the perfect mold. But his treatment of others (esp women) is the foundation for my standards when it comes to men.

    So, parents, you want to make sure all of those Bad Apples stay away? Step one is to demonstrate what a Good Apple looks like, up close and personal.

    Because if you’ve taught your daughters to respect themselves enough to have high standards, there won’t be any need for you chase any Bad Apples away. Your daughter will take care of that for you.

    This is important. It’s also important to teach little girls that self help is always an option.

    When I was eight I went to my parents crying because a little boy was routinely jumping me from behind when he passed me in the hallways and pulling my hair and it hurt.

    My parents didn’t tell me that the boy must have a crush on me, or that I should cut my hair, or even to go tell a teacher (though that last one wouldn’t have been bad advice).

    Instead, my dad knelt down and soberly said the following:

    “That’s not ok. It’s never ok for someone to touch you in a manner you don’t like. If someone does that too you once, you ask them politely to stop and tell them you don’t like it when they do that. If they do it a second time, you look them in the eye and tell them loudly, “I’m feeling threatened and if you do that again I will defend myself.’ If they do it a third time, you break their nose.”

    He proceeded to teach me how to break someone’s nose.

    I’m sure people will debate the appropriateness of this advice, but I’ve only ever had to move past yelling “I’m feeling threatened” once. My dad wanted me to know, from an early age, that I wasn’t weak or entirely dependent on others to defend myself, he wanted to teach me that I had power too, and I should use it when necessary.

    (via heathengreen)

    • 5 years ago
    • 108260 notes
  • humansofnewyork:
“ “It was a tsunami. In April of ’82 there was an article in the New York Times about a new gay cancer, and everyone thought ‘oh well.’ I was in my twenties. I wasn’t worried about a thing. But then every week you started to hear...

    humansofnewyork:

    “It was a tsunami. In April of ’82 there was an article in the New York Times about a new gay cancer, and everyone thought ‘oh well.’ I was in my twenties. I wasn’t worried about a thing. But then every week you started to hear about somebody becoming ill. My boss was one of the first. He was a famous florist. He went into the hospital on Thanksgiving and was dead by Easter. I lost most of my friends. A lot of the first men to die were privileged. They were closeted, corporate white men. During the day they were bankers but at night they’d hit the leather clubs and bars. But they learned their privilege didn’t matter after they got sick. They were just ‘gay.’ We had to fight for AIDS to be recognized by the government. We joined together with people of color, and junkies, and prostitutes. It was a beautiful thing, really. Our feminist lesbian sisters taught us how to protest because they’d been doing it for decades. They showed us how to organize meetings, and bring people together, and force the government to the table—things we’d never had to think about as white men.”

    (via roachpatrol)

    • 5 years ago
    • 36822 notes
  • ruby-white-rabbit:

    theambassadorposts:

    Read this and try not to cry

    Kids shouldn’t have to sacrifice themselves to save other kids.

    Kids shouldn’t have to know how to handle active shooters at school.

    There shouldn’t be shooters at school.

    My brothers are younger than this boy and I am terrified.

    (via leaveittotegan-deactivated20181)

    Source: twitter.com
    • 5 years ago
    • 66761 notes
  • miseducatedmelanicmuse:
“And this my friend is what you call accuracy!
”

    miseducatedmelanicmuse:

    And this my friend is what you call accuracy!

    (via wonderfulworldofdoom)

    • 5 years ago
    • 39540 notes
  • lizardlicks:

    curlicuecal:

    homestuckbot413:

    my life is ruled by a vicious cycle of standing there like a fucking idiot and knowing an obscene amount of forgotten homestuck lore

    relatable

    #gratuitous picture of us all

    (via lizardlicks)

    • 5 years ago
    • 3790 notes
  • davis-viola:

    Motorcycles are death machines. I have three kids. I’m not risking it.

    (via nbmesa)

    • 5 years ago
    • 22012 notes
  • mindareadsoots:
“That horrible pickup line gets even funnier when you realize that it probably worked for at least one hamsteak in the years since this was published.
”

    mindareadsoots:

    That horrible pickup line gets even funnier when you realize that it probably worked for at least one hamsteak in the years since this was published.

    (via cyanwhisper)

    • 5 years ago
    • 532 notes
  • thesinnabun:

    So, if you’re like me and work in a place with public bathrooms, you most likely have seen this shit before. Some racist fuck graffiti’d up your bathroom with nazi bullshit with a permanent marker.

    Tired of this bullshit? Me too, so I’m gonna show you how to get rid of it nice and quick! 

    The tools you need: A cleaner appropriate for the surface, the appropriate tool to to wipe said surfaces, and the crucial piece: A dry erase marker.

    image

    It’s embarrassingly easy to get rid of and is gonna make those nazi fucks upset that we don’t tolerate their bullshit. 

    Just grab your marker…

    image

    …and draw over it

    image

    then you spray it with your cleaner and then… wipe

    image
    image

    ta-fucking-da

    now you too can use your new-found hack to get rid of sharpie graffiti

    remember kids: fuck fascists, fuck nazis and racists, and fuck white supremacy 

    (via bluedarknessiceheart)

    • 5 years ago
    • 125169 notes
  • notyourbitchlightwood:

    I can’t stop laughing at his face at the end

    (via parasol-girl)

    • 5 years ago
    • 73299 notes
  • otherwindow:
“ did u know: south korea isn’t part of asia. koreans aren’t asian. being asian isn’t asian. asian folk informing u asian things isn’t asian.
”

    otherwindow:

    did u know: south korea isn’t part of asia. koreans aren’t asian. being asian isn’t asian. asian folk informing u asian things isn’t asian.

    (via parasol-girl)

    • 5 years ago
    • 383 notes
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