teardropnation
Teardropnation
teardropnation

I love it— I think she looks unbelievable! Soft, elegant, vintage-inspired, expensive. Kate has a very straight-up-and-down figure and that neckline + peplum combo is perfection.

Billowing? Too many yards? Is that what we’re calling dresses with hemlines that cover the kneecaps now?

*shrugs* I think she looks very pretty and that small-busted women can wear much more dramatic necklines while still looking demure than us chestier gals can. (Also lol I am Catholic too, and everything raises eyebrows with that certain type of busybody tut-tting elder, good grief! :p)

It is very very pretty (it’s custom McQueen if anyone is curious). I love how demure and appropriate is deemed “old lady.” She’s the Duchess of Cambridge at her sister’s daytime wedding yet some people would still rather see her in, IDK, a sequined cocktail dress at 11 a.m. Would that we all be old ladies who look

am i the only one who thinks the kids look kinda cute? i don’t even like kids, and i tend to extra-not-like kids in wedding parties, but i dunno, i think the hose-and-short-pants thing actually works

Me, I’m partial to someone with a keen understanding of how our government functions and prior experience, but I’ve always been an odd duck.

Too me it looks more vintage than grandma. I like it but then I’m an old lady.

How is it the case that he still enjoys ~80% favorability ratings from the republicans? How?

Sorry, I’m so over choice feminism. If there is no baseline in the fight for equality, then feminism means nothing. Enjoy porn if you want, but I don’t call it progress. And “owning sexuality” is a weak argument, imo, when the sexuality that’s being “owned” is tightly conscribed by the same old patriarchal norms. Does

Wow. Of all the lame “feminist” justifications for stripping, “If men are gonna objectify women, it’s only right that women demand to be paid for it” is the lamest. Write your book, give good advice to your fellow strippers, stay safe and healthy, express yourself. But you can’t participate in the objectification

“Contrasting the straight lines of the product and the cool metal against the beautiful curves and warmth of the human body is art, and I had no other intention besides but to show that contrast, and the desire [to] “take” that away to see the complete beauty.”

THIS!! Fat shaming is wrong and repugnant and based on a misogynistic and false narrative about women and their bodies and what they owe society. But I understand old shaming even less because...what the hell are they even supposedly doing wrong? They’re just continuing to exist, and age will happen to everybody

girl, why aren’t you doing feminine performance the way people who are looking at you want? disrespectful!

When I was in my 2o’s, I had a cute butt, perky tits and tiny waist. (But no silicone tits right under my chin.) Now I’m almost 67. After two pregnancies and a hard bout with breast cancer 18 year ago, I have a saggy ass, thick waist, poochy tummy and lopsided boobs. I still go to the gym to increase my muscle mass,

Did she consider that maybe you don’t want a dramatic look? I like to be comfortable when I’m shopping, and personally, I think that dramatic makeup would look silly with jeans and a t-shirt.

Seriously! I do deep-water fitness because I have shit knees and ankles, and most of the people in my class are people in their 60s and 70s. I’ve seen them naked in the locker room, (though I keep my smartphone in my locker and don’t take pictures of them because I am not a monster), and guess what? They look like

Yes, this. To quote Chancellor Clarendon, who was being mocked by one of Charles II’s mistresses as he hobbled past (back in the 17th century):

Mathers has been told, rather explicitly, that she exemplifies Western beauty standards, so I imagine it was easy to unthinkingly pass judgment on another woman who, in her eyes, falls short.

I hate it when people do awful things and then distance themselves by saying “That wasn’t me! That’s not who I am!”

“That was absolutely wrong and not what I meant to do,”