My submission for Threadless’s Simpsons contest is up for scoring!

If you vote and comment I will love you forever!

You could also vote on my Antisocial Hedgehog design while you’re at it 🙂

How to talk to your daughter about her body, step one: don’t talk to your daughter about her body, except to teach her how it works.

Don’t say anything if she’s lost weight. Don’t say anything if she’s gained weight.

If you think your daughter’s body looks amazing, don’t say that. Here are some things you can say instead:

“You look so healthy!” is a great one.

Or how about, “you’re looking so strong.”

“I can see how happy you are – you’re glowing.”

Better yet, compliment her on something that has nothing to do with her body.

Don’t comment on other women’s bodies either. Nope. Not a single comment, not a nice one or a mean one.

Teach her about kindness towards others, but also kindness towards yourself.

Don’t you dare talk about how much you hate your body in front of your daughter, or talk about your new diet. In fact, don’t go on a diet in front of your daughter. Buy healthy food. Cook healthy meals. But don’t say “I’m not eating carbs right now.” Your daughter should never think that carbs are evil, because shame over what you eat only leads to shame about yourself.

Encourage your daughter to run because it makes her feel less stressed. Encourage your daughter to climb mountains because there is nowhere better to explore your spirituality than the peak of the universe. Encourage your daughter to surf, or rock climb, or mountain bike because it scares her and that’s a good thing sometimes.

Help your daughter love soccer or rowing or hockey because sports make her a better leader and a more confident woman. Explain that no matter how old you get, you’ll never stop needing good teamwork. Never make her play a sport she isn’t absolutely in love with.

Prove to your daughter that women don’t need men to move their furniture.

Teach your daughter how to cook kale.

Teach your daughter how to bake chocolate cake made with six sticks of butter.

Pass on your own mom’s recipe for Christmas morning coffee cake. Pass on your love of being outside.

Maybe you and your daughter both have thick thighs or wide ribcages. It’s easy to hate these non-size zero body parts. Don’t. Tell your daughter that with her legs she can run a marathon if she wants to, and her ribcage is nothing but a carrying case for strong lungs. She can scream and she can sing and she can lift up the world, if she wants.

Remind your daughter that the best thing she can do with her body is to use it to mobilize her beautiful soul.

skoppelkam on WordPress  (via rabbrakha)

Lovely

lacigreen:

always need reminding.

PSA

domesticnoise:

The St Mary’s bluffs were lit up today pre-storm (at St. Eugene Golf Resort & Casino)

Gorgeous

Please vote for my design Antisocial Hedgehog on Threadless!

Then we can all wear cute things and just communicate through the internet. It’ll be super fun I promise.

If you want to comment to that would also be great <3

glamaphonic:

moniquill:

No guys, I need to stop and talk about something in this movie and how fucking revolutionary it was; something that I haven’t seen in a movie before or since.

This is a movie about a kid who leaves her birth family.

Not a kid who find that they have a secret lineage or something that allows them to find their ‘true family’ – this is a movie about a kid whose true birth family is made up of bad people. So she gets out. And that is played as the right thing to do. She isn’t punished for it or made to feel bad about ‘abandoning her family’. There isn’t an underlying ‘but they’re your family and you have to love them’ or ‘they’re your family and they love you even if they don’t show it well or do hurtful things’ message of the kind that I see OVER AND OVER AND OVER AND OVER in media. Matilda gets out and lives happily ever after because of it.

We need a million more movies like this to counter the metric shit ton of movies that directly counter this message.

 #sometimes the family you start with isn’t a good one #but you can find your own #family is not absolute #blood is not absolute

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It’s Free Tee Friday, you cool cats!

Atomic Kitties by Pim Tanachwanan is the winning design from our Super Cats design challenge, and it’s Pim’s first printed design! 

To celebrate Pim’s design, reblog this post for a chance to win this tee in your size!

Ends 8/5, 10AM

Yay kitties!

perpetualthoughts:

imperfectreflection:

perpetualthoughts:

Another design I made for threadless! Waiting for it to be approved at the moment.

I love hedgehogs!

OMG I LOVE IT

That’s what I wanted to show you yesterday. If it gets approved ill let you know so you can vote on it 🙂

PS My tablet works so good!

Now up for scoring! If you like my design please go give it a 5 and/or comment! 🙂