ME. TOO.

ME. TOO.

Me Looking For The Fucks I Give
Me Looking For The Fucks I Give
Me Looking For The Fucks I Give

me looking for the fucks i give

More Posts from Igenderidentifyasapizzaroll-blog and Others

DEAD. THIS IS SO PERFECT.

Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 
Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 
Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 
Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 
Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 
Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 
Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 
Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 
Favorite Book Couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 

favorite book couples → [2/?]  Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase 

                             ★ does she know that we bleed the same? ★

Proof That Someone Has Bitched And Will Bitch About Young Peoples’ Technology Throughout All Of Time

Proof that someone has bitched and will bitch about young peoples’ technology throughout all of time and space.

Why Rick Riordan is my favorite author. He is literally the greatest human or ever walk this earth, and an inspiration to all writers.

Rick Riordan won a Stonewall award today

for his second Magnus Chase book, due to the inclusion of the character Alex Fierro who is gender fluid. This was the speech he gave, and it really distills why I love this author and his works so much, and why I will always recommend his works to anyone and everyone.

“Thank you for inviting me here today. As I told the Stonewall Award Committee, this is an honor both humbling and unexpected.

So, what is an old cis straight white male doing up here? Where did I get the nerve to write Alex Fierro, a transgender, gender fluid child of Loki in The Hammer of Thor, and why should I get cookies for that?

These are all fair and valid questions, which I have been asking myself a lot.

I think, to support young LGBTQ readers, the most important thing publishing can do is to publish and promote more stories by LGBTQ authors, authentic experiences by authentic voices. We have to keep pushing for this. The Stonewall committee’s work is a critical part of that effort. I can only accept the Stonewall Award in the sense that I accept a call to action – firstly, to do more myself to read and promote books by LGBTQ authors.

But also, it’s a call to do better in my own writing. As one of my genderqueer readers told me recently, “Hey, thanks for Alex. You didn’t do a terrible job!” I thought: Yes! Not doing a terrible job was my goal!

As important as it is to offer authentic voices and empower authors and role models from within LGBTQ community, it’s is also important that LGBTQ kids see themselves reflected and valued in the larger world of mass media, including my books. I know this because my non-heteronormative readers tell me so. They actively lobby to see characters like themselves in my books. They like the universe I’ve created. They want to be part of it. They deserve that opportunity. It’s important that I, as a mainstream author, say, “I see you. You matter. Your life experience may not be like mine, but it is no less valid and no less real. I will do whatever I can to understand and accurately include you in my stories, in my world. I will not erase you.”

People all over the political spectrum often ask me, “Why can’t you just stay silent on these issues? Just don’t include LGBTQ material and everybody will be happy.” This assumes that silence is the natural neutral position. But silence is not neutral. It’s an active choice. Silence is great when you are listening. Silence is not so great when you are using it to ignore or exclude.

But that’s all macro, ‘big picture’ stuff. Yes, I think the principles are important. Yes, in the abstract, I feel an obligation to write the world as I see it: beautiful because of its variations. Where I can’t draw on personal experience, I listen, I read a lot – in particular I want to credit Beyond Magenta and Gender Outlaws for helping me understand more about the perspective of my character Alex Fierro – and I trust that much of the human experience is universal. You can’t go too far wrong if you use empathy as your lens. But the reason I wrote Alex Fierro, or Nico di Angelo, or any of my characters, is much more personal.

I was a teacher for many years, in public and private school, California and Texas. During those years, I taught all kinds of kids. I want them all to know that I see them. They matter. I write characters to honor my students, and to make up for what I wished I could have done for them in the classroom.

I think about my former student Adrian (a pseudonym), back in the 90s in San Francisco. Adrian used the pronouns he and him, so I will call him that, but I suspect Adrian might have had more freedom and more options as to how he self-identified in school were he growing up today. His peers, his teachers, his family all understood that Adrian was female, despite his birth designation. Since kindergarten, he had self-selected to be among the girls – socially, athletically, academically. He was one of our girls. And although he got support and acceptance at the school, I don’t know that I helped him as much as I could, or that I tried to understand his needs and his journey. At that time in my life, I didn’t have the experience, the vocabulary, or frankly the emotional capacity to have that conversation. When we broke into social skills groups, for instance, boys apart from girls, he came into my group with the boys, I think because he felt it was required, but I feel like I missed the opportunity to sit with him and ask him what he wanted. And to assure him it was okay, whichever choice he made. I learned more from Adrian than I taught him. Twenty years later, Alex Fierro is for Adrian.

I think about Jane (pseudonym), another one of my students who was a straight cis-female with two fantastic moms. Again, for LGBTQ families, San Francisco was a pretty good place to live in the 90s, but as we know, prejudice has no geographical border. You cannot build a wall high enough to keep it out. I know Jane got flack about her family. I did what I could to support her, but I don’t think I did enough. I remember the day Jane’s drama class was happening in my classroom. The teacher was new – our first African American male teacher, which we were all really excited about – and this was only his third week. I was sitting at my desk, grading papers, while the teacher did a free association exercise. One of his examples was ‘fruit – gay.’ I think he did it because he thought it would be funny to middle schoolers. After the class, I asked to see the teacher one on one. I asked him to be aware of what he was saying and how that might be hurtful. I know. Me, a white guy, lecturing this Black teacher about hurtful words. He got defensive and quit, because he said he could not promise to not use that language again. At the time, I felt like I needed to do something, to stand up especially for Jane and her family. But did I make things better handling it as I did? I think I missed an opportunity to open a dialogue about how different people experience hurtful labels. Emmie and Josephine and their daughter Georgina, the family I introduce in The Dark Prophecy, are for Jane.

I think about Amy, and Mark, and Nicholas … All former students who have come out as gay since I taught them in middle school. All have gone on to have successful careers and happy families. When I taught them, I knew they were different. Their struggles were greater, their perspectives more divergent than some of my other students. I tried to provide a safe space for them, to model respect, but in retrospect I don’t think I supported them as well as I could have, or reached out as much as they might have needed. I was too busy preparing lessons on Shakespeare or adjectives, and not focusing enough on my students’ emotional health. Adjectives were a lot easier for me to reconcile than feelings. Would they have felt comfortable coming out earlier than college or high school if they had found more support in middle school? Would they have wanted to? I don’t know. But I don’t think they felt it was a safe option, which leaves me thinking that I did not do enough for them at that critical middle school time. I do not want any kid to feel alone, invisible, misunderstood. Nico di Angelo is for Amy, and Mark and Nicholas.

I am trying to do more. Percy Jackson started as a way to empower kids, in particular my son, who had learning differences. As my platform grew, I felt obliged to use it to empower all kids who are struggling through middle school for whatever reason. I don’t always do enough. I don’t always get it right. Good intentions are wonderful things, but at the end of a manuscript, the text has to stand on its own. What I meant ceases to matter. Kids just see what I wrote. But I have to keep trying. My kids are counting on me.

So thank you, above all, to my former students who taught me. Alex Fierro is for you.

To you, I pledge myself to do better – to apologize when I screw up, to learn from my mistakes, to be there for LGBTQ youth and make sure they know that in my books, they are included. They matter. I am going to stop talking now, but I promise you I won’t stop listening.”

*cries from how true this is*

If You Are A Student Follow @studentlifeproblems​

If you are a student Follow @studentlifeproblems​

Aww

Tom Meeting Pino The Guy Who He Will Be Playing In The Upcoming Television Series “Beneath A Scarlet

Tom meeting Pino the guy who he will be playing in the upcoming television series “Beneath a Scarlet Sky” in early April. Photo Courtesy of Michael Lella

Article:

The bestseller “Beneath a Scarlet Sky” is based on a true story. The hero plays “Spider-Man” Tom Holland in the film adaptation. Actor Tom Holland (22, “Spider-Man: Homecoming”) will star in the film adaptation of Mark Sullivan’s (60) bestseller “Beneath a Scarlet Sky.” The book is based on a true story - and Tom Holland has already met the man he is to portray: Pino Lella. Silent for 60 years Pino Lella is an Italian teenager who is interested in music, food and girls. But when his hometown of Milan is bombed during World War II, Pino joins a underground organization that helps Jews fleeing across the Alps and begins to spy for the Allies. He falls in love with the six-year-older Anna. The well-known US author Mark Sullivan has written the story. When he met the real Pino for the first time, he initially did not want to talk about his story, “because he saw himself more as a coward than a hero,” it says in an interview to “Beneath a Scarlet Sky.” Nevertheless, Sullivan persuaded him and eventually heard the story of him in Italy: “We laughed and wept together and eventually became friends, which became one of the most emotional and valuable experiences of my life,” the author says. Why Pino Lella has not talked about his experiences for more than sixty years, the writer explains: “This is not unusual: Pino and many, many others who survived the war in Italy, blinded their experiences, burying their memories and telling stories none of it. ” The readers seem to be fascinated by the story, the novel on the US side of Amazon has nearly 19,000 customer reviews - more than 80 percent of them with maximum

WHY IS IT SO TRUE

You have an ATM that gives you the exact amount of money you need to survive for the day, how you spend it is your choice. Today you are given $70,000,000.


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People think it’s beautiful that no two snowflakes are exactly alike. But neither are potato chips

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igenderidentifyasapizzaroll-blog - My URL is a joke. I'm female.
My URL is a joke. I'm female.

I'm just here bc I'm bored. She/her=me That is my cat. A lot of people here like cats. I like cats too.

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