Instead of telling women their breasts are sexy no matter their size, how about we stop sexualizing breasts?
There's room for reminding people they're capable & deserving of confidence & sex lives no matter what they look like.
But "all boobs are sexy" messaging is old & overdone & risks furthering objectification.
We get to define our body parts & decide how sexual we consider them.
Rather than focus on which features are sexy, let's remind people that sexiness comes from the inside — and, more importantly, that they don’t have to be sexy.
When people responded to this tweet by criticizing my appearance, I initially comforted myself by remembering those who have found me attractive.
Then I considered the spirit of the tweet and realized: I’d rather stop giving thought to what others say about my looks, positive or negative, and focus on shining the beautiful light of my soul.
It’s good for people to know their boobs are perfectly fine no matter their size.
But we have more to gain by focusing on the size of the heart underneath them.
Body image insecurities are almost always about something other than your body. If you focus on making peace with certain features, your mind will probably find some other feature to hate until you deal with your feelings of inner ugliness.
Loving your body starts with loving yourself on the inside.
Until you learn to love yourself from the inside out, that overriding sense that you’re not OK, that you don’t belong here, will keep coming back to haunt you.
It may haunt you in the form of different physical insecurities. But addressing the physical alone won’t solve it. It will always feel like there’s someone prettier than you, like there’s something wrong with how you look, until you see beyond appearances altogether.
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Has anyone had things not work out with their quarantine boo? Please DM me if you're willing to be interviewed for an article!
Still looking to talk to people who have had things not work out with their quarantine boo. DM me if that's you and you can help with an article. Thanks!
Update: I'm looking in particular for people in their 20s who had things fall apart with a quarantine boo. Let me know if you'd be willing to be interviewed for an article. Thanks!
How many people would attend an online cacao ceremony/discussion group if I held one? I've got this meetup group, which has details on how they work, and I could expand them beyond LA... meetup.com/LA-spiritual-i…
If I were to host a virtual cacao ceremony, would you prefer it be done over Facebook Live or Zoom?
All right, I'm officially hosting a virtual cacao ceremony next month! All are welcome. RSVP here: meetup.com/LA-spiritual-i…
In case you’re wondering what I’ve been doing with my quarantined time, I’ve got 152 pages of a memoir written.
It contains such lines as, “Once I ingested the San Pedro, this threesome seemed like the most important thing in the world.”
Another preview of my memoir:
“I think iboga wants me to go on Tinder,” I announced to a few other participants the next morning, a tad embarrassed that this plant spirit would have given me such seemingly unsanctimonious instructions.
Another snippet from my memoir:
"And that was the moment I knew my three-year relationship was about to end because of a 90-minute orgasm."
I don't believe in chasing people. I also don't believe in rules like "don't text someone twice in a row." Rules are for people disconnected from their hearts. Follow your heart and nothing else matters. If it says to double-text someone, do it.
Fuck "don't chase men." Sometimes men are clueless and/or scared and if you know the relationship's right, you gotta fight for it, even if that means chasing them to the end of the goddamn Earth.
Women get told don't make the first move, don't be too aggressive, you were meant to be chased.
If you take this advice, I can guarantee you'll be pursued by a lot of mediocre suitors & the ones you like will have no clue you like them bc they'll be busy w/ women who chase them.
I'm looking to talk to trans and non-binary people about obstacles they experienced in obtaining healthcare — particularly obstacles caused by society's binary and essentialist view of gender. Please DM me if you can help. Thanks!
Also looking to interview:
-A woman who had trouble getting a chronic illness diagnosed & treated because of her gender
-A woman who experienced mental or physical health issues due to sexual trauma or objectification
-Someone who experienced an orgasmic birth
DM me, thanks!!
Looking in particular for a woman of color who had trouble getting an illness diagnosed and/or treated due to gender and race bias. DM me. Thanks!