23 5 / 2013
23 5 / 2013
*moves vibrating playstation controller near my crotch area*
23 5 / 2013
During a math test
- 1: my answer = 23
- 2: 170, 195, 264, 362
- 1: well 170 is closest to 23, so that must be the answer.
23 5 / 2013
I just need to check something
Reblog this if you find Misha Collins attractive. Want to prove to my friend that he is.
how can
someone think
this man
isn’t
Attractive?
(via gonesherlocking)
23 5 / 2013
23 5 / 2013
I pulled this picture off of google images a while back. It’s been in my drafts and on my phone ever since. This is my goal body. I still want to have meat on my bones. I just want a flatter stomach and smaller boobs… and maybe trim a little off of my thighs.
I don’t know what weight I’d have to be to achieve this (considering this model looks tall and I’m short as fuck) but I hope I’ll find out one day.
23 5 / 2013
(submitted by beardedcomposure)
[photo of a chubby light-skinned man taking a photo of himself in a mirror, looking at the camera phone and smiling. He has a long brown beard and is wearing a black cap, blue-and-black-framed glasses, a purple plaid shirt.]
23 5 / 2013
"
It remains a radical act to be fat and happy. If you’re fat, you’re not only meant to be unhappy, but deeply ashamed of yourself, projecting at all times an apologetic nature, indicative of your everlasting remorse for having wrought your monstrous self upon the world. You are certainly not meant to be bold, or assertive, or confident—and should you manage to overcome the constant drumbeat of messages that you are ugly and unsexy and have earned equally society’s disdain and your own self-hatred, should you forget your place and walk into the world one day with your head held high, you are to be reminded by the cow-calls and contemptuous looks of perfect strangers that you are not supposed to have self-esteem; you don’t deserve it. Being publicly fat and happy is hard; being publicly, shamelessly, unshakably fat and happy is an act of both will and bravery.
Rare indeed is the fat person who manages to find contentment in hir own skin, because everything around hir is designed so that zie will not. Thusly, the idea of a culture that maintains an inclusive attitude about a spectrum of natural (and acceptable) shapes and sizes is almost impossible to imagine—and yet important enough to imagine and set as goal nevertheless, because the person who is healthy but fat is not being served by our scorn, and the person who is unhealthy but thin is not being served by our approbation.
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