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Nov 9
awedjob:

stfuconservatives:

quay-cur submitted: do not hit send. do not hit send. not worth it. not worth it. p.s. this kid is gay…i don’t get it either

Yes, feeding the hungry and housing the homeless and caring for the sick and dying are such bad things to do. Who originally thought of such a dumb idea?

sounds like a plan.
why not a government built, community run housing facility?

awedjob:

stfuconservatives:

quay-cur submitted: do not hit send. do not hit send. not worth it. not worth it. p.s. this kid is gay…i don’t get it either

Yes, feeding the hungry and housing the homeless and caring for the sick and dying are such bad things to do. Who originally thought of such a dumb idea?

sounds like a plan.

why not a government built, community run housing facility?

Nov 4

your full name without an E,F,R,S,K,I,M,L,C,A,Y,N

knitmeapony:

yaeltiferet:

toastradamus:

tinyspacebabe:

classychassiss:

O

bobu

(via billie-joe)

v x

D O G

that’s actually hilarious.

U J O H

K T O P H

“Invisible Obama” Chair Lynchings

awedjob:

Sadly, it has happened in Texas and in Virginia.

hate crimes are illegal right?

someone quick, call the chair police.

fishingboatproceeds:

meghantonjes:

THIS IS EVERYTHING.

How does this have 15,000 notes?

Anyway, context: I received this good advice from my chaplaincy supervisor when I worked as a student chaplain at a children’s hospital in 2000. We were talking not about any of the terrible things I’d witnessed at the hospital but about my breakup with my college girlfriend.

One time when I was a chaplain, this especially awful thing happened, and a bunch of us had to attend this post trauma debriefing/group therapy session. (The theory goes that this was a way to prevent or minimize PTSD, I think.) So here is this big group of people—doctors, nurses, social workers, paramedics, etc.—all being forced to attend this group therapy session they don’t particularly want to be at, and the counselor person is asking all of us to recount what happened that night, which no one is particularly inclined to do.

Eventually, I tell a story about my girlfriend: When I came home the morning after this thing had happened, I was really freaking out, and she was not particularly empathetic.   This story animates everyone: They all start talking about my girlfriend, and how she’s just like their boyfriend/girlfriend/spouse, and how I should really break up with her, because that’ll show her.

So I did break up with her.

Of course, I immediately regretted it, but once she was free of obligation to me she probably felt tremendous relief and had no intention of re-entangling. (This was very sane and mature of her, in retrospect.) So I spent my days moping around the hospital, not because of the horrible things I’d seen but because I missed this woman so much. And I felt like an idiot being so upset over this girl when there were far worse things happening around me at the hospital every day.

Which just made everything worse: I was sad because I was no longer close to this woman I loved. And then I was ashamed because I felt more upset about my own stupid romantic problems than about the illness and death that was all around me in the hospital. I felt like my problems were silly and small, but they still made me very sad, and I could never seem to get out of that spiral.

All of this combined to make me super annoying to be around. Fortunately, I was surrounded by chaplains, who are basically professionally empathetic, and are required by job description to listen to you.

It was my supervisor who finally helped me understand why I was so sad, and that I should feel sad. So often we try to make other people feel better by minimizing their pain, by telling them that it will get better (which it will) or that there are worse things in the world (which there are). But that’s not what I actually needed. What I actually needed was for someone to tell me that it hurt because it mattered. 

I have found this very useful to think about over the years, and I find that it is a lot easier and more bearable to be sad when you aren’t constantly berating yourself for being sad.

Hank's Tumblr: Another Post about the Pronunciation of GIF

edwardspoonhands:

OK, so whenever I say “JIF” when talking about GIFs, I get a bunch of people telling me I’m wrong. First thing’s first, if you think you’re right, you’re wrong, because both are accepted pronunciations.

Secondly, the most common argument I see “proving” that it’s a hard G is “The G stands for…

peanut butter.

just saying, they can be smooth or crunchy and there spread out all over.

cinemagram.

Number one: quality of information.
Number two: leisure to digest it.
Numbers three: the right to carry out actions based on what we learn from the interactions of the first two.

- Fahrenheit 451

edwardspoonhands:

YouTube up to it’s old tricks, adding a second to the end of my video. Proof.

Hank Switched to Premiere Pro. :D

edwardspoonhands:

YouTube up to it’s old tricks, adding a second to the end of my video. Proof.

Hank Switched to Premiere Pro. :D

oatmeal:

Tumblr:  help me buy back Nikola Tesla’s old laboratory.

oatmeal:

Tumblr:  help me buy back Nikola Tesla’s old laboratory.

Aug 9

Woman walking into an abortion clinic gives Flying Spaghetti Monster pamphlet to anti-choice protester. Anti-choicer assaults her. Woman calls police, gets abortion, then blogs about the experience.

sunshineuncertaintyprinciple:

I am in awe of this flawless human being.

Yes!

Aug 4

Retological Fallacies