May 26, 2012
Bébinn: For All Your Pro-Choice Needs!: Methods of Illegal Abortion

bebinn:

I’ve written about the methods of legal abortion: procedures performed by licensed medical professionals in a clean, sterile environment, with clean, sterile tools. But what about illegal abortions?

Those who push for more restrictions on abortion access - really, those who push…

9:05am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Z_fYXwMABsqP
  
Filed under: birth pregnancy abortion 
May 26, 2012
"

I know I’ve told this story before, but my abusive ex refused to let me take birth control. I was on the pill until he found them in my purse.

I went to the Student Health Center—they were completely unhelpful, choosing to lecture me about the importance of safe sex (recommending condoms) instead of actually listening to my problem.

Then I went to Planned Parenthood. The Nurse Practitioner took one look at my fading bruises and stopped the exam. She called in the doctor. The doctor came in and simply asked me: “Are you ready to leave him?” When I denied that I was being abused, she didn’t argue with me. She just asked me what I needed. I said I need a birth control method that my boyfriend couldn’t detect. She recommended a few options and we decided on Depo.

When I told her that my boyfriend read my emails and listened to my phone messages and was known to follow me, she suggested to do the Depo injections at off hours when the clinic was normally closed. She made a note in my chart and instructed the front desk never to leave messages for me—instead, she programmed her personal cell phone number into my phone under the name “Nora”. She told me she would call me to schedule my appointments; she wouldn’t leave a message, but I should call her back when I was able to.

And that was it. No judgment. No lecture. She walked me to the door and told me to call her day or night if I needed anything. That she lived 5 blocks from campus and would come get me. That I wasn’t alone. That she just wanted me to be safe.

I never called her to come to my rescue. But I have no doubt that she would have come if I had called. She kept me on Depo for a year, giving me those monthly injections in secret, helping me prevent a desperately unwanted pregnancy.

I cannot thank Planned Parenthood enough for the work they do.

"

Curious Georgiana (via sexistmorons)

Doctors: This is the right way to do it.

(via logiccontroldeck)

Best doctor ever.

(via browneyednerd)

Current personal career goal of: become nurse practitioner, work at Planned Parenthood……. now reaffirmed. (via shankyourjory)

(via waterfall)

May 23, 2012
Cooking

whatshouldwecallme:

Expectation:

Reality:

7:26pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Z_fYXwM0rQcf
  
Filed under: gif 
May 19, 2012
When a guy asks to split the bill on the first date

whatshouldwecallme:

(Source: JMACC)

I have no reason to but I would love to do that one day.

May 17, 2012
After graduation, when anybody asked if I had gotten a job yet

whatshouldwecallme:

7:36am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Z_fYXwLeHmLS
  
Filed under: 3 years jobs 
May 15, 2012
FACT: The number of students who have to go into debt to get a bachelor’s degree has risen from 45% in 1993 to 94% today.

fishingboatproceeds:

The next debt crisis.

(Source: think-progress, via pantslessprogressive)

May 14, 2012
androphilia:

Barber Shop By Akshay Mahajan, 2007


“glass store front, rimmed with wooden blue welcomes me. Etched in red on the glass are the styles and fashions the ‘Hair Cutting Saloon’ deals in. Barber shops in India come in various avatars viz. the corner nahee [barber] who sets up his unpolished mirror and rickety chair under some tall tree or a puccha [brick] barber establishment that employs several such masters of the trade. Scissors, brushes, stainless steel blades, and circular foldable plastic razors are the versatile tools of their trade. Inside men wait patiently on worn-out rexine sofas, hiding their faces behind a local newspaper or a glossy gossip-spilling film magazine. As I enter the men make space for me, bunching up together almost by reflex and one of them hands me an old issue a film magazine.
Stylised posters of popular Bollywood actors and screen starlets adorn the walls. Barber shops often become tiny Meccas to Indian film culture and the sense of style derived from Bollywood or the local cinema. If a film becomes a ‘super hit’ fans want to emulate their favourite stars’ hairstyle. It is a place for music and entertainment as well. No shop is complete without an old pocket TV in a corner or a grungy loud cassette player or a small portable transistor radio.
y turn finally arrives and I am lead by the smiling wrinkled man (who I assume is going to be my barber today) to the chair. I prop myself up sloppily on the chair and stare into the mirror right back at myself. The barber chair is old and is a cross between a “lazy-boy” recliner and a dentist chair. Parallel mirrors have this magically quality of affixing me with a sense of wonder. Myriad images of me, my barber and everybody else in this tiny colourful room give me a sense that I am part of something big, a momentous occasion when a man and his sharp tools are going to rid me of some excess dead tissue. I am woken up from my day dream by tiny droplets of water sprayed from a mobile dispenser. The barber observed my long hair for a moment and then softly whispered into my ears,
“Sahib aap ko dandruff ho gaya hai.”[Sir you seem to have dandruff]
I nodded in the affirmative. He continued talking to me as he now tried with some difficulty to comb my hair into some shape,
“Sahib apko kaise baal katana hai?”[How do you want you hair cut]
I looked at him sullenly through the mirror as I said,
“Bhai sahib sab kuch kat lo, bilkul gunja kar do”[Brother, cut it short - real short, just short of making me bald.]
Thirty minutes later, I emerged from the shop satisfied - a presentable man .”
— Akshay Mahajan

[See also: Trivial Matters (Akshay Mahajan’s blog), No Time for Love, in Srinagar: Akshay Mahajan | Galli Magazine, I don’t want to sleep alone. by Akshay Mahajan | FotoVisura, Queer Life in Bangalore Captured by Akshay Mahajan | Feature Shoot]

androphilia:

Barber Shop By Akshay Mahajan, 2007

glass store front, rimmed with wooden blue welcomes me. Etched in red on the glass are the styles and fashions the ‘Hair Cutting Saloon’ deals in. Barber shops in India come in various avatars viz. the corner nahee [barber] who sets up his unpolished mirror and rickety chair under some tall tree or a puccha [brick] barber establishment that employs several such masters of the trade. Scissors, brushes, stainless steel blades, and circular foldable plastic razors are the versatile tools of their trade. Inside men wait patiently on worn-out rexine sofas, hiding their faces behind a local newspaper or a glossy gossip-spilling film magazine. As I enter the men make space for me, bunching up together almost by reflex and one of them hands me an old issue a film magazine.

Stylised posters of popular Bollywood actors and screen starlets adorn the walls. Barber shops often become tiny Meccas to Indian film culture and the sense of style derived from Bollywood or the local cinema. If a film becomes a ‘super hit’ fans want to emulate their favourite stars’ hairstyle. It is a place for music and entertainment as well. No shop is complete without an old pocket TV in a corner or a grungy loud cassette player or a small portable transistor radio.

y turn finally arrives and I am lead by the smiling wrinkled man (who I assume is going to be my barber today) to the chair. I prop myself up sloppily on the chair and stare into the mirror right back at myself. The barber chair is old and is a cross between a “lazy-boy” recliner and a dentist chair. Parallel mirrors have this magically quality of affixing me with a sense of wonder. Myriad images of me, my barber and everybody else in this tiny colourful room give me a sense that I am part of something big, a momentous occasion when a man and his sharp tools are going to rid me of some excess dead tissue. I am woken up from my day dream by tiny droplets of water sprayed from a mobile dispenser. The barber observed my long hair for a moment and then softly whispered into my ears,

“Sahib aap ko dandruff ho gaya hai.”
[Sir you seem to have dandruff]

I nodded in the affirmative. He continued talking to me as he now tried with some difficulty to comb my hair into some shape,

“Sahib apko kaise baal katana hai?”
[How do you want you hair cut]

I looked at him sullenly through the mirror as I said,

“Bhai sahib sab kuch kat lo, bilkul gunja kar do”
[Brother, cut it short - real short, just short of making me bald.]

Thirty minutes later, I emerged from the shop satisfied - a presentable man .

— Akshay Mahajan

[See also: Trivial Matters (Akshay Mahajan’s blog), No Time for Love, in Srinagar: Akshay Mahajan | Galli Magazine, I don’t want to sleep alone. by Akshay Mahajan | FotoVisura, Queer Life in Bangalore Captured by Akshay Mahajan | Feature Shoot]

May 11, 2012
warwithinaframe:

Corporal Nathaniel Matos from Lima Company of the 3rd Battalion 6th Marines, looks away from the body of Gulmakay, a fourteen-year old Afghan girl killed by a U.S. Marines mortar strike in Abdullah Jan Village in Marja District, Helmand Province, Afghanistan, on July 28, 2010. U.S Marines from 3/6 Lima Company came under attack while on patrol in northern Marja District, returning fire and suppressing the insurgent attack with 81 mm mortar rounds. Corporal Nathaniel Matos called in the coordinates for the morter strike that Gulmakay sustained fatal shrapnel wounds from.
Adam Ferguson

warwithinaframe:

Corporal Nathaniel Matos from Lima Company of the 3rd Battalion 6th Marines, looks away from the body of Gulmakay, a fourteen-year old Afghan girl killed by a U.S. Marines mortar strike in Abdullah Jan Village in Marja District, Helmand Province, Afghanistan, on July 28, 2010. U.S Marines from 3/6 Lima Company came under attack while on patrol in northern Marja District, returning fire and suppressing the insurgent attack with 81 mm mortar rounds. Corporal Nathaniel Matos called in the coordinates for the morter strike that Gulmakay sustained fatal shrapnel wounds from.

Adam Ferguson

6:36am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Z_fYXwLH5NHx
  
Filed under: Afghanistan war 
May 9, 2012

storyboard:

Razistan: Afghanistan’s Land of Secrets

President Obama may have declared a “new chapter” in Afghanistan last week, but to the creators of Razistan, a new photography project about the region, his words were more rhetoric than reality. For more than 10 years now, American troops have been fighting an expensive and bloody war in Afghanistan: 88,000 U.S. troops remain in the area, and last year was the deadliest so far for civilian casualties. Yet even in an election cycle — and amid the dire statistics — the conversation is focused elsewhere. Coverage of Afghanistan accounts for barely 2 percent of U.S. news stories.

“It’s appalling,” says Marcos Barbery, the cofounder and publisher of Razistan, which launched on Tumblr this month. “People’s lives, how the war is impacting them on a daily basis … it’s just completely cut from the conversation.” Barbery hopes to change all that by showcasing Afghanistan from beyond the veil of war.

Read More

May 9, 2012
I feel like I was in an awkward moment like that. Even getting up and leaving the room felt awkward.

I feel like I was in an awkward moment like that. Even getting up and leaving the room felt awkward.

(Source: revolvver)