The Secret Life of Dancers

I find this turning into a blog about the secret life of me: a dancer. Obviously, its no secret that I am a dancer, a vegan, a traveler....but sometimes my brain and my heart just overflow and spill into here. Things that not everyone would necessarily understand.
~ Tuesday, May 21 ~
Permalink
whatstheenpointe:

why i have fun with my blog

epaulement on the far left…nice

whatstheenpointe:

why i have fun with my blog

epaulement on the far left…nice

(Source: balletandbeautifulthings)


1,835 notes
reblogged via whatstheenpointe
~ Thursday, April 25 ~
Permalink

Good Lordissa! 


143 notes
reblogged via thedesigirl
~ Friday, April 5 ~
Permalink
~ Monday, February 11 ~
Permalink

(Source: coolcatmatt)


4,924 notes
reblogged via lesbianslovefish
Permalink
yesterday

yesterday

(Source: naidahalilovic)


106 notes
reblogged via astriver
Permalink

ferrra:

Miami City Ballet and Miami HEAT

(Source: ferrrra)


2,327 notes
reblogged via whatstheenpointe
Permalink
A woman in harmony with her spirit is like a river flowing. She goes where she will without pretense and arrives at her destination prepared to be herself, and only herself.
— Maya Angelou (via stellablu)

(Source: freshgypsy)

Tags: <3
7,008 notes
reblogged via labelletogolaise
~ Sunday, February 3 ~
Permalink

softhings:

jhermann:

Teju Cole continues to devastate in 140 characters or less.

ProPublica: Everything we know so far about drone strikes

 

From the article:

“There has been considerable back-and-forth about the tally of civilian casualties. For instance, the New America Foundation estimates between 261 and 305 civilians have been killed in Pakistan; The Bureau of Investigative Journalism gives a range of 475 - 891. All of the counts are much higher than the very low numbers of deaths the administration claims. (We’ve detailed inconsistencies even within those low estimates.)  Some analyses show that civilian deaths have dropped proportionally in recent years.

The estimates are largely compiled by interpreting news reports relying on anonymous officials or accounts from local media, whose credibility may vary. (For example, the Washington Post reported last month that the Yemeni government often tries to conceal the U.S.’ role in airstrikes that kill civilians.)

The controversy has been compounded by the fact that the U.S. reportedly counts any military-age male killed in a drone strike as a militant.”




And this is the war on “terror” that the Obama Administration continues to wage?


12,437 notes
reblogged via softhings
~ Saturday, February 2 ~
Permalink
Teachers are often unaware of the gender distribution of talk in their classrooms. They usually consider that they give equal amounts of attention to girls and boys, and it is only when they make a tape recording that they realize that boys are dominating the interactions.

Dale Spender, an Australian feminist who has been a strong advocate of female rights in this area, noted that teachers who tried to restore the balance by deliberately ‘favouring’ the girls were astounded to find that despite their efforts they continued to devote more time to the boys in their classrooms. Another study reported that a male science teacher who managed to create an atmosphere in which girls and boys contributed more equally to discussion felt that he was devoting 90 per cent of his attention to the girls. And so did his male pupils. They complained vociferously that the girls were getting too much talking time.

In other public contexts, too, such as seminars and debates, when women and men are deliberately given an equal amount of the highly valued talking time, there is often a perception that they are getting more than their fair share. Dale Spender explains this as follows:

The talkativeness of women has been gauged in comparison not with men but with silence. Women have not been judged on the grounds of whether they talk more than men, but of whether they talk more than silent women.

In other words, if women talk at all, this may be perceived as ‘too much’ by men who expect them to provide a silent, decorative background in many social contexts. This may sound outrageous, but think about how you react when precocious children dominate the talk at an adult party. As women begin to make inroads into formerly ‘male’ domains such as business and professional contexts, we should not be surprised to find that their contributions are not always perceived positively or even accurately.
— [x] (via neighborly)

(Source: colinfirthhasmoved)


29,130 notes
reblogged via stfusexists
~ Friday, February 1 ~
Permalink
When you grow up as a girl, the world tells you the things that you are supposed to be: emotional, loving, beautiful, wanted. And then when you are those things, the world tells you they are inferior: illogical, weak, vain, empty. The world teaches you that the way you exist in it is disgusting — you watch boys cringe backward in your dorm room when you talk about your period, blue water pretending to be blood in a maxi pad commercial. It is little things, and it is constant. In a food court in a mall, after you go to the gynecologist for the first time, you and your friend talk about how much it hurts, and over her shoulder you watch two boys your age turn to look at you and wrinkle their noses: the reality of your life is impolite to talk about. The world says that you don’t have a right to the space you occupy, any place with men in it is not yours, you and your body exist only as far as what men want to do with it. At fifteen, you find fifteen-year-old boys you have never met somehow believe you should bend your body to their will. At almost thirty, you find fifteen-year-old boys you have never met still somehow believe you should bend your body to their will. They are children. They are children.
— Stevie Nicks  (via clingy)

(Source: whisperingwordsofwisdom)


54,046 notes
reblogged via stfuconservatives