“Learning from the experiences of queer femmes of colour is paramount to building an inclusive, anti-racist queer movement. Too often, femmes of colour find that only parts of their identities are recognized; they do not conform to acceptable standards of heterosexual…
(Source: writingforstrangers.com)
My entire life — or my entire out life, for what that’s worth — people have told me that I don’t look gay. This is relevant now because a girl I’m sleeping with said it to me yesterday, casually and effortlessly and factually. You don’t look gay. I can’t totally parse what it is about this that gets so deep under my skin. It’s an insult uttered flirtatiously. It undermines my identity while implying there’s something hot or alluring or sexy about a girl who doesn’t present queerly. It shamelessly buys into a history of systematic sexist oppression. It says to me that I am too pretty, too soft, too normal looking to be gay.

We are already othered by nature of our sexual orientation. Why do we do this to ourselves? I am 26, and I have come to terms with my sexuality based on the fact that I enjoy fucking girls. Not based on my haircut, or my clothing, or whether or not I paint my nails. I refuse to conform to the conceit that we need to look a certain way to be taken seriously as queer. She actually said to me: “You’re secretly queer”, which I find so deeply offensive as it implies that the way I present to the world is a farce. That I am playing a game and the game is that I am secretly gay. I am not secretly gay. I am openly gay, I am out to everyone I know. I have radical politics, and I am loudly outspoken. My gayness is absolutely core to my identity. It is not inconsequential, it’s not a sidelined fact about me, like my having brown eyes. It, like my feminism, shapes my worldview, my interests, my personhood. It is deeply and truly and in the most essential way who I am.
To look a woman in the eye and tell her that she doesn’t look gay, that she doesn’t check off the goddamn boxes on the lesbian checklist, is absurdly unfair. It trivializes her identity. It is sexist. It reinforces dangerous stereotypes. And it doesn’t feel good. We need to stop.
Abisha Uhl via Autostraddle Hot 100
sasha mallory via 50 queer women with outrageously good hair
what a cutie!
Swoonable queer alert.
ahhh <3
sweet merciful jesus look at this BABE
this is the hottest women i have ever seen dear lord
Morgan photographed by Robin Roemer via Autostraddle Calendar GIrls: Morgan is Miss April (In addition to being beautiful and smart and politically active and nerdy and interesting, Morgan is our first trans calendar girl and our first redheaded calendar girl!)
“If you, feminine as your wiles, feel every reason to publicly honor the sexuality that brands you a defector from the woman you’re “supposed to be”; if you put love of bodies like yours on the forefront of your politics, never forgetting to never let people forget: you are what it looks like to be queer—you’re an activist.
Understaning how flaunting fluidity can be as problematic as ignoring it; that coming out isn’t a public service, it’s a personal decision; speaking out is as powerful as looking at hatred in the eyes and making sure it knows to keep quiet. The real-life balance. You’re an activist.”
Read the whole thing here.
My girlfriend and i with a fake ghetto waterfall. (Taken with instagram)