Come run the hidden pine trails of the forest
Come taste the sunsweet berries of the earth
Come roll in all the riches all around you
And for once, never wonder what they’re worth
(via bal-lerina)
Come run the hidden pine trails of the forest
Come taste the sunsweet berries of the earth
Come roll in all the riches all around you
And for once, never wonder what they’re worth
(via bal-lerina)
1 -2: Paris
12 places, 12 months and i dont even have 12 places.
3: Thailand
4-5: Bora Bora
7-8: Egypt
9: Amazon
10: Rio de Janria
(via girlinthegreenscarf)
A lot of women in the room owe their positions to Steinem, the questioner said. Steinem broke down barriers for women. But looking at today’s generation, did she break down those barriers “so young women today can dress like hookers and be OK with being treated like a piece of meat, whether it’s in a music video or in social situations?” Isn’t it ironic, Steinem was asked, that what she fought so hard for has been rejected by the generation that came later?
Steinem was candid in her reply, and perhaps surprising.
“No,” she said simply. “This generation of young women is actually much more feminist than we ever were. If you look at the public opinion polls, they’re actually much more supportive of all the issues of equality. And my question to the young woman who is dressing as you describe is: Is she doing it because she wants to? Is she body-proud? Is she sexuality-proud? Because then, I say, great. Is she doing it because she feels she has to? That she won’t be popular otherwise? Then, that’s wrong.
"— Mark Twain (via light-essence)
(Source: quote-book)
Untitled on We Heart It. http://weheartit.com/entry/12557172
(via thebitchinleopard)
“What the heck do I tell my daughter? […] For Women’s Equality Day, I’m telling my daughter to fight.”
(Source: katespencer, via birdwings)
— Sarah Kay, “Hiroshima”
— Sarah Kay, “If I should have a daughter”
— Sarah Kay, “If I should have a daughter”