23 2 / 2012
from Den Der Hvaderdetnudenhedder!, a 1969 Danish photo book documenting a group sex experiment
> group sex experiment
waitwat. what is the experiment?? Time to work on my Danish.
(via nymphetgarden)
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20 2 / 2012
"Don’t judge a book by its refusal to wear a cover"
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19 2 / 2012
factcheckfactcheckfactcheck
that’s not how oxytocin works. also, it’s sold as a “trust enhancing” spray, which i suspect like “bathsalts” really has a different method of ingestion and is used as a daterape drug, but that’s just the impression i get from the places selling it.. which says enough.

(Source: this-is-the-moment-of-truth, via camerawhore-smile)
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02 2 / 2012
If you met another you from a different dimension, and then you had sex with yourself, is that considered insest??
(Source: lonely-spider)
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26 1 / 2012
Fixed it.
Give this ALL THE NOTES please.
Thiiis
To the guy:
To the girl:
ALL THE AWARDS.
A post-modern point of view for all of you modern-thinking people out there.
Let’s start with Boy:
Boy is simply stating his opinion.Boy is allowed to have his opinion.Boy has his own definition of what is slutty.Boy finds slutty-looking girls unattractive.Boy messes up by using “boys…” as a plural/general term rather than “I…”
Now, moving on to Girl.
Girl is stating her own opinion.Girl is allowed to have her own opinion.Girl has her own definition of what is slutty.Girl apparently thinks she herself dresses in a slutty way (otherwise, Boy would find her “desirable”).Girl is, what, angry that one boy on the internet probably won’t find her attractive?
This post, as a whole, is aggravating and rant-inducing. I (a girl) actually might find Girl’s picture more offensive than Boy’s. Why? Because Boy states his opinion (granted, he generalizes boys, which is annoying and inaccurate due to being a generalization), whereas Girl attacks Boy. Whatever happened to #RespectMen? Why can’t we #RespectEveryone? Even those with differing opinions. Why can’t we look at things in more of a positive light? (i.e. Not immediately thinking negatively of a person who feels like people demean themselves by dressing slutty-like. Because, really, if you think about it, Boy is looking out for girls. Yes, he does it clumsily, but his basic argument is sound and meant well.)
If you read all of that, thank you. I appreciate your patience and interest in my thoughts.“Scratch that, I’ve internalized my own oppression.”
i dig it, but i also think that they both have good points in their own way, but are both being douchebags about it, in their own way. Opinions may vary.Scratch that, I’m showing you by using “douchebag” that I don’t know the first thing about gender oppression and the current state of society. Sorry for wasting your time.
I’m probably opening up a can of worms here, but I’m just going to state that while “opinions” are all well and good, they can be wrong. “Opinions” based on bigotry can be wrong. “Opinions” based on misinformation can be wrong.
We can break this down, like above:
Boy’s picture:
- Boys don’t want to date slutty girls: Let’s take a look at the word “slutty” first. I’m going to presume here that the connotation is “boys don’t want to date girls who are sexually promiscuous.”Problem #1: There is a problem with demonising sexual promiscuity. It leads to misinformation and ignorance and above all, shame. When people are ashamed of sex, they don’t ask about safe sex practices. When people are ashamed of sex, they don’t buy condoms or other forms of birth control. They don’t educate themselves about sexually transmitted infections. It creates problems, and makes things unsafe for everyone who engages in sexual activity. Ignorance, misinformation, and shame prevent responsible action.
Problem #2: Tying in with demonising sexual promiscuity is demonising sex workers. Not all sex workers are such because they are desperate; not all sex workers are such because they’re drug addicts or disease-ridden. A sex worker is a person, and no less than than such. “Boys don’t want to date sluts” - you know what that implies? That sex workers are undesireable. That they are not relationship material. That, for the sole reason their profession involves sexual activity, they are not wanted.
- “#RespectYourself”:
THE PROBLEM: Sexual promiscuity (or being a sex worker) does not mean that the person has no self respect. Like, really. What makes you think that “slut” = no self respect? Some people enjoy sex. There is absolutely nothing wrong with that.
——————————————-
So yeah. Sure, the second picture might be, on the surface, more “offensive” because she’s flippin’ the bird. Yeah, they’re both “opinions”. But the boy’s opinion is much more harmful than the second opinion. Plus, it’s based on a lot of ideas that are rooted in rape culture (blaming women’s manner of dress and/or behaviour for their problems [including but not limited to rape]), which is very, very harmful and is something that we as a society should strive to eradicate.
His basic argument is not sound. He may “mean well”, often the people who “mean well” are those who do the most harm.Reblogging for Kami’s awesome response.
Personally? I’d be interested in someone who is comfortable with their body and their sexuality, and who understands that current social mores are designed to hurt and shame anyone who doesn’t fit within a very narrow worldview. I would not be interested in someone who buys into that bullshit and decides that hurting and shaming people is a good way to find a partner.
Strikeout commentary added by me, because I’m tired of all this ignorant-ass fucking “reverse discrimination” shenanigoats. read a book read a book read a goddamn book.
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02 12 / 2011
Sex
am trying to show people the importance of using protection. I never thought I’d get an STD and was naive. Honestly, I’m lucky I got a curable one. It isn’t lame to tell the guy to use protection, acting in the moment for a short pleasure isn’t worth possibly getting a life long STD. It can happen to you and it only takes having unprotected sex with one person.
Truth. I’ve also been very lucky that the only STD I’ve gotten was curable, and I only one. I’m not sure now how many people I may have passed it to before I even knew or showed symptoms.
But, lest I give the impression STDs are easy to deal with, or that only unsafe people get them, I’ll share another story. I had a friend who contracted oral herpes early in life, from being sexually assaulted. After diagnosis my friend tried to do the right thing, tell potential partners before any physical encounter. But this led to constant rejection and after a while the isolation and loneliness overrode the conscience and they had sex with people without ever telling them, before or after. That break of conscience added tons of guilt to the sadness. But not enough to override the normal human drive for contact.
Now think how many of those people could spread something they didn’t even know they had, including to their families through just kissing. Try to remember that not only do you not ever truly know your partner’s status, they might not either.
Safer sex isn’t about not trusting your partners, it’s about knowing you are both worth protecting from potential hazards. And if they would argue against your health, you have to ask, who benefits from that? Certainly not you, physically or emotionally.
It’s also worth noting that I am still here to share this with you. Mostly from pure chance, but I like to think that removing this learned habit of unnecessarily hazardous actions helped me get here. My friend, on the other hand, committed suicide last year.
I miss my friend. I started crying as I’m writing this.
Please be safe, I don’t want to miss you too.
These two videos are worth the two minutes. Even I learned something new. How to use a condom How to use a dental dam
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