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humansofnewyork:

Today I met an NYU student named Stella. I took a photo of her. Afterwards, she told me about a self-portrait she recently posted on Tumblr. So, instead of the photo I took, here is her self-portrait:
thebodyloveblog:

WARNING: Picture might be considered obscene because subject is not thin. And we all know that only skinny people can show their stomachs and celebrate themselves. Well I’m not going to stand for that. This is my body. Not yours. MINE. Meaning the choices I make about it, are none of your fucking business. Meaning my size, IS NONE OF YOUR FUCKING BUSINESS.
If my big belly and fat arms and stretch marks and thick thighs offend you, then that’s okay. I’m not going to hide my body and my being to benefit your delicate sensitivities.
This picture is for the strange man at my nanny’s church who told me my belly was too big when I was five.
This picture is for my horseback riding trainer telling me I was too fat when I was nine.
This picture is for the girl from summer camp who told me I’d be really pretty if I just lost a few pounds
This picture is for all the fucking stupid advertising agents who are selling us cream to get rid of our stretch marks, a perfectly normal thing most people have (I got mine during puberty)
This picture is for the boy at the party who told me I looked like a beached whale.
This picture is for Emily from middle school, who bullied me incessantly, made mocking videos about me, sent me nasty emails, and called me “lard”. She made me feel like I didn’t deserve to exist. Just because I happened to be bigger than her. I was 12. And she continued to bully me via social media into high school.
MOST OF ALL, this picture is for me. For the girl who hated her body so much she took extreme measures to try to change it. Who cried for hours over the fact she would never be thin. Who was teased and tormented and hurt just for being who she was.
I’m so over that.
THIS IS MY BODY, DEAL WITH IT.
and FUCK YOU ALL who tried to degrade my being and sense of self with your hurtful comments and actions. 
GUESS WHAT IT DIDN’T WORK HAHAHAHAH
xoxoxoxoxoox
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humansofnewyork:

Today I met an NYU student named Stella. I took a photo of her. Afterwards, she told me about a self-portrait she recently posted on Tumblr. So, instead of the photo I took, here is her self-portrait:

thebodyloveblog:

WARNING: Picture might be considered obscene because subject is not thin. And we all know that only skinny people can show their stomachs and celebrate themselves. Well I’m not going to stand for that. This is my body. Not yours. MINE. Meaning the choices I make about it, are none of your fucking business. Meaning my size, IS NONE OF YOUR FUCKING BUSINESS.

If my big belly and fat arms and stretch marks and thick thighs offend you, then that’s okay. I’m not going to hide my body and my being to benefit your delicate sensitivities.

This picture is for the strange man at my nanny’s church who told me my belly was too big when I was five.

This picture is for my horseback riding trainer telling me I was too fat when I was nine.

This picture is for the girl from summer camp who told me I’d be really pretty if I just lost a few pounds

This picture is for all the fucking stupid advertising agents who are selling us cream to get rid of our stretch marks, a perfectly normal thing most people have (I got mine during puberty)

This picture is for the boy at the party who told me I looked like a beached whale.

This picture is for Emily from middle school, who bullied me incessantly, made mocking videos about me, sent me nasty emails, and called me “lard”. She made me feel like I didn’t deserve to exist. Just because I happened to be bigger than her. I was 12. And she continued to bully me via social media into high school.

MOST OF ALL, this picture is for me. For the girl who hated her body so much she took extreme measures to try to change it. Who cried for hours over the fact she would never be thin. Who was teased and tormented and hurt just for being who she was.

I’m so over that.

THIS IS MY BODY, DEAL WITH IT.

and FUCK YOU ALL who tried to degrade my being and sense of self with your hurtful comments and actions.

GUESS WHAT IT DIDN’T WORK HAHAHAHAH

xoxoxoxoxoox

Source: thebodyloveblog

    • #feminism
    • #feminist
    • #body love
    • #fat
    • #fat love
    • #girls
    • #body ideal
    • #activism
    • #fat acceptance
    • #women
    • #bodies
    • #body positive
  • 7 months ago > thebodyloveblog
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fem-blog:

The Fight For Feminism As Explained By Dudes Who Totally Get It

“It is time for hulk and she hulk to get equal pay for equal smash”

(via sociallyunacceptablezombie)

Source: fem-blog

    • #feminism
    • #feminist
    • #women
    • #women's issues
    • #humor
    • #education
  • 7 months ago > fem-blog
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badasswomen:

Erin DiMeglio, a 17 year old, may be the first girl to play quarterback in Florida high school football history.

When the announcer told the crowd Erin DiMeglio was at quarterback, there was little reaction, because the name Erin, when pronounced, does not connote a gender. But then everyone saw her ponytail swaying as she jogged onto the field. Then there was some buzz. Is that the girl? Can she play? Can she throw?

South Plantation Coach Doug Gatewood knew that the answer to all three questions was yes. The one question he did not know the answer to, and did not want to know, was whether she could take a hit. So when DiMeglio dropped back for her first pass, saw no open receivers, and began to roll to her left, Gatewood felt queasy.

“Go down, Rock,” he said quietly. “Go down.”

DiMeglio, who is 5 feet 5 inches and 140 pounds, did not go down, but she did fire a pinpoint pass to a receiver, who turned upfield for a 10-yard gain. Fans cheered. Cheerleaders chanted Erin’s name. Kathleen DiMeglio exhaled.

“Oh, my God,” she said.

This event, observed on video and recounted by Gatewood in an interview, was not a publicity stunt or a tale of a small-town football team with a jersey to spare. South Plantation High is near Fort Lauderdale, Fla., nestled in one of the nation’s high school football hotbeds. The Paladins’ roster is filled with college prospects. The star running back has committed to Miami, and its starting quarterback has offers from Navy and Air Force. And, yes, one of the backup quarterbacks is a girl.

Erin DiMeglio, a 17-year-old senior, was 2 for 3 passing in that scrimmage at Loxahatchee. And on Friday night, she took two snaps in the Paladins’ 31-14 season-opening victory against Nova, handing the ball off both times. She is believed to be the first girl to play quarterback in a Florida high school football game.

“My friends all think I’m crazy,” DiMeglio said. “But they also think it’s pretty cool.”

DiMeglio’s father, Tom, a police officer, taught her to throw a football when she was a child. Most often, Erin tried to mimic her favorite player, Dan Marino.

She joined a flag football league when she was in the fourth grade. There were about 90 players, and DiMeglio said all but four of them were boys. Among the girls, Erin was the only quarterback.

“She’s always had a really strong arm,” Tom DiMeglio said. “She could throw better than a lot of the guys.”

When Erin was a freshman at South Plantation, she stood on the sideline at varsity football games and helped however she could — as a ball girl, a manager or a trainer’s assistant. She also became the quarterback of South Plantation’s girls’ flag football team, which plays in the spring.

“She’ll get upset because the girls can’t catch her ball because she throws too hard,” said Gatewood, who also coaches the girls’ team. “For the most part, she’ll drill them in the hands and it’ll fall off. I have to remind her to throw a catchable ball, because she’s not throwing to Michael Irvin. But she can pretty much wing a girls’ football wherever she wants to put it.”

Last spring, Gatewood invited DiMeglio to throw to the boys at an off-season workout. She adjusted to the bigger football and proved herself immediately, then asked to try again the next day with a helmet. She threw while wearing the helmet, then asked if she could try in full pads.

“I said, ‘Sure, but you’re not playing,’ ” Gatewood said. “She wore me down and she wore her parents down.”

Last summer, DiMeglio played for South Plantation’s varsity team in a seven-on-seven tournament at the University of South Florida in Tampa. She threw five touchdown passes and three interceptions in three games.

“We’d be warming up, and people would stop over and wait for her to throw to see if she could play,” the Paladins’ starting quarterback, John Franklin, said. “And then they’d walk away like, ‘Oh, they have a girl, and she’s for real.’ ”

Even though DiMeglio was playing against boys, there was no tackling, no need for her to leave her comfort zone. If the quarterback still had the ball four seconds after it was snapped, the play was ruled a sack. But DiMeglio’s performance gave her confidence to take the next step.

Her parents were leery of seeing her get tackled. Gatewood assured them that DiMeglio would line up in the shotgun formation rather than under center, so she would have more time and space to elude a hit. And DiMeglio reminded them that she was tough. As the star point guard for the South Plantation girls’ basketball team, she has had a broken nose, a torn labrum, dislocated fingers and a concussion.

“We kind of realized she’ll actually be protected with a helmet and shoulder pads,” Kathleen DiMeglio said.

Tom DiMeglio added, “She’s not the kind of girl that’s going to worry about splitting a nail.”

After her parents relented, DiMeglio rushed a consent form to Gatewood. The coach did not believe it.

“So I still asked for a letter from her mom,” he said, “another layer of ‘Are you freakin’ sure?’ ”

DiMeglio had proved herself to the other players during spring and summer workouts, so when she officially joined the team, it was met with a respectful shrug. She has her own changing area in the girls’ locker room, and at the seven-on-seven camp last summer, she shared a room with the cheerleading coach. Otherwise, she is one of the guys, and they are protective of her.

Last month, DiMeglio and several teammates traveled to a rival high school to watch a scrimmage. Some students from the other high school approached the players.

“They were kind of making comments about how they heard we had a girl quarterback,” said wide receiver Hordly Seide, who has a scholarship offer from Memphis. “We were just like, ‘Yeah, she’s standing right here.’ ”

After DiMeglio’s debut in the scrimmage, a game in which she was untouched, she brought cookies and dessert to her offensive line.

Gatewood knew he had to prepare her to be hit eventually. Last Wednesday, he brought junior varsity players up to the varsity and taught DiMeglio the best way to take a tackle. She popped back up each time, ready to do it all again.

“Everybody says, ‘What happens when she gets hit?’ ” Gatewood said. “This isn’t a knock on Erin, but she’s bigger than 10 kids on my team. I have a wide receiver that weighs 25 pounds less than her. And the pads she wears are the same as the pads he wears.”

Gatewood has told DiMeglio that she may not throw a pass this season. If she enters a game, South Plantation will probably have a sizable lead and be trying to run out the clock. And that will pose a quandary for DiMeglio, because during this unforgettable season, she would prefer that time stood still.

(via sociolab)

Source: The New York Times

    • #feminism
    • #women
    • #football
    • #politics
    • #gender
  • 8 months ago > badasswomen
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emer:

good:

People Are Awesome: Teen Ballerina Shames Seventeen Magazine To Stop Photoshopping
Julia Bluhm of tiny Waterville, Maine was fed up with opening the pages of Seventeen Magazine to find pixel perfect images of girls touched up and thinned down with the magic wand of Photoshop. So she did what any social media savvy young person would—she ascended her digital soapbox. Nearly 86,000 Change.org petition signatures later, her digital organizing has rattled the windows of a 17th floor Manhattan office.
Find out more at GOOD.is

Yay Maine!
However, my joy at seeing the advocacy efforts of a young Maine teen work is tinged with a healthy amount of cynicism.  Based on the carefully worded statement by editor-in-chief Ann Shoket, I don’t think much will be really be changing.  Seventeen will still be actively selecting models that are thin and have blemish-free skin, who will be worked on by a team of hair and clothing stylists and makeup artists… most girls will still be looking at an image that isn’t real.  The unrealistic norm will be soldier on.

That’s a great media critical perspective! Hadn’t thought of some of that myself.
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emer:

good:

People Are Awesome: Teen Ballerina Shames Seventeen Magazine To Stop Photoshopping

Julia Bluhm of tiny Waterville, Maine was fed up with opening the pages of Seventeen Magazine to find pixel perfect images of girls touched up and thinned down with the magic wand of Photoshop. So she did what any social media savvy young person would—she ascended her digital soapbox. Nearly 86,000 Change.org petition signatures later, her digital organizing has rattled the windows of a 17th floor Manhattan office.

Find out more at GOOD.is

Yay Maine!

However, my joy at seeing the advocacy efforts of a young Maine teen work is tinged with a healthy amount of cynicism.  Based on the carefully worded statement by editor-in-chief Ann Shoket, I don’t think much will be really be changing.  Seventeen will still be actively selecting models that are thin and have blemish-free skin, who will be worked on by a team of hair and clothing stylists and makeup artists… most girls will still be looking at an image that isn’t real.  The unrealistic norm will be soldier on.

That’s a great media critical perspective! Hadn’t thought of some of that myself.

Source: GOOD

    • #seventeen
    • #women
    • #girls
    • #teenagers
    • #healthy
    • #body image
    • #self esteem
    • #photoshop
    • #objectification
    • #feminism
    • #feminist
  • 10 months ago > good
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This is how thoroughly we women have been sexualized, that we cannot make the kind of noises that come with physical exertion without it being associated with sex. In fact, everything about our bodies has been sexualized in one way or another. If we groan during sport or we breast-feed in public, we are criticized for making people think about sex. If we talk openly about things like menstruation and poop and farts, then we are criticized for making people not want to think about sex.

Think about what it means to be ladylike and all of the adjectives that go along with it: elegant, cultured, classy, sophisticated. To be successful at being feminine means being successful at being private, keeping your body’s natural functions behind closed doors and never letting anyone know they exist. It means to be constrained, that you do not let your legs spread wide in public transportation and you do not make noises that are harsh on the ears. It means presenting a polished, shiny surface to the world at all times, one that allows others to project whatever they wish onto you while never showing too much of your true self.
Women’s tennis and the gender politics of grunting « Fit and Feminist (via sexisnottheenemy)

(via sociolab)

Source: fitandfeminist.wordpress.com

    • #sexism
    • #feminism
    • #women
    • #sexualizing
    • #sex
    • #socialization
    • #sociology
  • 10 months ago > sexisnottheenemy
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Early childhood is also the time when the brain is the most plastic, and most open to change. Kids are laying down tracks that will last the rest of their lives, about gender, about everything.

So every experience a child has - and you know the younger the child, the bigger the effect - the first time they speak, they learn to walk, they learn to talk, they laugh, they cry, they fall down, they run - everything affects their brain on a neurological level, strengthening some neurons at the expense of others.

So when children play in gendered worlds, and are only exposed to the ways, styles and experiences that are attributed to their sex, it has an impact on them. And when they’re exposed to a broader range of styles and experiences, that has an impact, too.

From a talk by Peggy Orenstein about the subject of her new book, “Cinderella Ate My Daughter” on KUOW.
    • #feminism
    • #women's issues
    • #gender
    • #equality
    • #pink
    • #marketing
    • #advertising
    • #sociology
    • #capitalism
    • #education
    • #children
    • #youth
    • #girls
    • #women
  • 1 year ago
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lieblingherz:


 If Barbie was an actual woman, she would be 5’9” tall, have a 39” bust, an 18” waist, 33” hips and a size 3 shoe.
• Barbie calls this a “full figure” and likes her weight at 110 lbs.
• At 5’9” tall and weighing 110 lbs, Barbie would have a BMI of 16.24 and fit the weight criteria for anorexia. She likely would not menstruate.
• If Barbie was a real woman, she’d have to walk on all fours due to her proportions.
 • Slumber Party Barbie was introduced in 1965 and came with a bathroom scale permanently set at 110 lbs with a book entitled “How to Lose Weight” with directions inside stating simply “Don’t eat.”
Wow..

Deleted all of the “we don’t need body positive messages” nonsense. Just because you weren’t personally affected by Barbie or you don’t need positive messages about you body (good for you) doesn’t mean others don’t also. What’s good for you isn’t good for others, and sending messages that all bodies are good is not “nonsense”.   So the rest of us will continue to promote self love and you can go stand over there. That’s fair.
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lieblingherz:


 If Barbie was an actual woman, she would be 5’9” tall, have a 39” bust, an 18” waist, 33” hips and a size 3 shoe.

• Barbie calls this a “full figure” and likes her weight at 110 lbs.

• At 5’9” tall and weighing 110 lbs, Barbie would have a BMI of 16.24 and fit the weight criteria for anorexia. She likely would not menstruate.

• If Barbie was a real woman, she’d have to walk on all fours due to her proportions.

 • Slumber Party Barbie was introduced in 1965 and came with a bathroom scale permanently set at 110 lbs with a book entitled “How to Lose Weight” with directions inside stating simply “Don’t eat.”

Wow..

Deleted all of the “we don’t need body positive messages” nonsense. Just because you weren’t personally affected by Barbie or you don’t need positive messages about you body (good for you) doesn’t mean others don’t also. What’s good for you isn’t good for others, and sending messages that all bodies are good is not “nonsense”. So the rest of us will continue to promote self love and you can go stand over there. That’s fair.

(via rose-of-the-revolution-deactiva)

Source: sometimesitsaboutme

    • #barbie
    • #body
    • #weight
    • #women
    • #feminism
    • #advertising
    • #beauty ideal
  • 1 year ago > zebra-parade
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cat-eyes:

just a friendly reminder that looks can be deceiving! :)
a girl messaged me about a week ago on dailybooth and said, “if I had your face, my life would be complete.”
and I couldn’t help but think, “well, if I actually looked like that, then my life would probably be complete too.”
but I don’t.
I don’t think you guys realize how much of my appearance (and most girls on the internet’s appearances) is just straightened hair, pretty makeup, and push-up bras.
I don’t like showing myself without makeup because I feel ugly. but I also don’t like taking compliments that I don’t really deserve, so I wanted to show you guys the difference between fresh-out-the-shower sarah, and all-dolled-up sarah.

granted, I don’t do myself up like that every day; I haven’t got the time or the energy. most days I just look like this.

I had an anon earlier who said nobody notices her because she isn’t “tumblr pretty.”
well anon, most girls aren’t. you just have to fake it til you make it.
that is, sadly, how the world works.

This is a really brave post, particularly for someone who seems to wear at least some makeup in photos online or daily. I WANT TO MAKE ONE, TOO!
The comments and responses creep me out a little bit. Things like “more women should be this modest” and “we can all be beautiful if we just wear makeup”. Yikes. Yikes yikes.
Makeup is a touchy topic. I cry for girls who truly believe that they are UGLY without makeup, and would never be seen (even by their partner) without. This girl is NOT ugly without makeup. She’s just different. Granted, this seems to be a bit of an intense transformation (but if you look at the photos, there are other differences - posture, lighting, photo quality - that affect the result). Still I’m kinda like “whoah that’s a big difference.”
On the other hand, I don’t believe that normal makeup can change your essential features - it can emphasize and de-emphasize qualities, but it won’t change who you are. This girl is GORGEOUS both with and without makeup. She’s just different. 
I dunno. Perhaps I’m trying to make a case where there isn’t one, because I don’t want women thinking that they aren’t valid or beautiful without makeup. I don’t like that makeup is considered essential by both men and women (and many businesses that require employees to wear it) to validate a women’s beauty.
I don’t think makeup is bad. I think reliance on it to feel whole is problematic.
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cat-eyes:

just a friendly reminder that looks can be deceiving! :)

a girl messaged me about a week ago on dailybooth and said, “if I had your face, my life would be complete.”

and I couldn’t help but think, “well, if I actually looked like that, then my life would probably be complete too.”

but I don’t.

I don’t think you guys realize how much of my appearance (and most girls on the internet’s appearances) is just straightened hair, pretty makeup, and push-up bras.

I don’t like showing myself without makeup because I feel ugly. but I also don’t like taking compliments that I don’t really deserve, so I wanted to show you guys the difference between fresh-out-the-shower sarah, and all-dolled-up sarah.

granted, I don’t do myself up like that every day; I haven’t got the time or the energy. most days I just look like this.



I had an anon earlier who said nobody notices her because she isn’t “tumblr pretty.”

well anon, most girls aren’t. you just have to fake it til you make it.

that is, sadly, how the world works.

This is a really brave post, particularly for someone who seems to wear at least some makeup in photos online or daily. I WANT TO MAKE ONE, TOO!

The comments and responses creep me out a little bit. Things like “more women should be this modest” and “we can all be beautiful if we just wear makeup”. Yikes. Yikes yikes.

Makeup is a touchy topic. I cry for girls who truly believe that they are UGLY without makeup, and would never be seen (even by their partner) without. This girl is NOT ugly without makeup. She’s just different. Granted, this seems to be a bit of an intense transformation (but if you look at the photos, there are other differences - posture, lighting, photo quality - that affect the result). Still I’m kinda like “whoah that’s a big difference.”

On the other hand, I don’t believe that normal makeup can change your essential features - it can emphasize and de-emphasize qualities, but it won’t change who you are. This girl is GORGEOUS both with and without makeup. She’s just different. 

I dunno. Perhaps I’m trying to make a case where there isn’t one, because I don’t want women thinking that they aren’t valid or beautiful without makeup. I don’t like that makeup is considered essential by both men and women (and many businesses that require employees to wear it) to validate a women’s beauty.

I don’t think makeup is bad. I think reliance on it to feel whole is problematic.

(via cat-eyes-deactivated20120216)

    • #makeup
    • #transformation
    • #feminism
    • #self esteem
    • #women
    • #health
  • 1 year ago > cat-eyes-deactivated20120216
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NEW WAVE FEMINISM IN THE MUSLIM WORLD

newwavefeminism:

submission from jfye:

As a Muslim Woman I am often asked how I can claim to be a feminist AND a Muslim. People often associate Islam with being an oppressive religion that marginalizes and degrades women. However, Islam is the first religion to have given women rights. Prophet Muhammad (SWT) is thought to be the worlds first feminist. It clearly states in the Quran that ” Women were not created for the purpose of man, rather Men and Women were created for the mutual benefit of each other”. The Quran prescribes that men and women dress modestly. As a woman the choice to wear the hijab, burqa, or niqab has to be at the will of the woman herself. Different cultures have of course interpreted the Quran in their own way and have stripped many Muslim Women of their God given rights. However it is unfair to assume that all Muslim women are oppressed. There are some Muslim Women who feel liberated by their decision to cover themselves, mainly because it is their decision. There is also a new wave of feminism taking place in the Middle East where women are reclaiming the rights given to them in the Holy Quran. Muslim women are often left out of the discussion of feminism because we are presumed to be submissive women that do not regard their womanhood with pride. However I can attest to the fact that there are several Muslim women like me, who believe in Islam and the teachings of the Quran and do not have to compromise their womanhood to do so.

I am a proud muslim as well as a proud feminist. 

tell it girl!

It’s good that we are constantly reminded that just because WE think something seems oppressive, doesn’t mean it actually is. Then again, just because someone thinks they’re not oppressed, doesn’t mean they aren’t.

I haven’t had a TON of thought about this subject yet, but I’m still on the fence, looking for an answer.

    • #Muslim
    • #Islam
    • #feminist
    • #feminism
    • #women
    • #rights
    • #fashion
    • #religion
    • #sociology
    • #oppression
  • 1 year ago > newwavefeminism
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juicy-r:

MSNBC has discovered the history behind the top photo.

The women pictured are from left to right: Elizabeth Moku, Alice Cho, Katherine Lowe, and Hilda Van Gieson.  The photo was taken during a training exercise for female civilian workers at Pearl Harbor during the war.  

Katherine Lowe (bottom photo) still lives in Hawai’i today.  She volunteered for a civilian job at Pearl Harbor after the attack and was trained to fight fires.  She says, “We were rugged. We carried heavy stuff, oil drums, bags, anything that needed to be stored.”

Elizabeth Moku was one of Katherine’s best friends and Katherine’s children called her Aunt Moku.  Elizabeth died in 1986.  

Little is known about the other two women, Alice Cho and Hilda Van Gieson, but they are believed to have passed away.

The whole MSNBC article is worth reading for more details.  Thanks to Fixed Sash for letting me know the mystery has been solved.

HAWAI’IAN HISTORY AND WOMEN REPRESENT! I’ve never seen this photo before. They’re beautiful, aren’t they?

(via existentialcrisisfactory)

Source: coolchicksfromhistory

    • #hawaii
    • #history
    • #women
  • 1 year ago > coolchicksfromhistory
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