foxglove

joined 2 months ago
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[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

pretty great, finally shaved my legs for the first time in over a month 😡

how about you?

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 2 points 1 week ago

Movies, tv shows, browsing the internet, reading a book, playing an instrument. Honestly, making a complicated dinner is how I fill a lot of weekend afternoon / weekends, and when I feel like having a drink while doing it, I usually just get a non-alcoholic wine or beer, it fills that fun vibe without making me feel like shit later.

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

This sounds a bit related to David Graeber's concept of "Bullshit Jobs".

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 2 points 1 week ago

That all makes sense, desiring looking at something beautiful or attractive.

Re envy: that's interesting, so you would like to be able to be like women in that you would like to be able to be beautiful, delicate, desirable and so on?

I think some men can be considered beautiful and desirable - I'm sure women would describe men like Pedro Pascal as being beautiful and desirable πŸ˜… But I hear what you mean that in general women are seen as desired and men as the one desiring, in a sense. I think that's largely social, though I do think estrogen does create traits that we might see as beautiful, such as soft skin, for example.

I guess I wonder if you have any examples of beautiful, delicate, or desirable men, and whether you would prefer to be that, or if you could press a button if you would just choose to have been born a woman instead?

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

I've never heard of the term "LUG", but I am vaguely familiar with the idea that some women feel free to have sex or relationships with women until they graduate and then intend to marry a man.

However, this is very different from political lesbianism, which is basically when a small group of extremist feminists suggested that men are inherently bad, all penetrative sex is inherently violence against women, and as a result heterosexual relationships are immoral and all women should be ethical lesbians (i.e. choose to only be in relationships with women for moral & political reasons).

This is of course not how human sexuality works, and political lesbianism failed. These ideas were connected to separatist movements in second wave feminism, the ideas of women forming their own separate, utopian society away from men and so on.

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 1 points 1 week ago (2 children)

That's interesting, why do you think in video games you want to play a pretty character that can wear gorgeous outfits?

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 0 points 1 week ago (2 children)

probably not, tbh; this question reminds me a little of political lesbianism within second wave feminism

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 1 points 1 week ago

Confirmed with @LadyButterfly@piefed.blahaj.zone that this is an approved post βœ…

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 27 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Izzard identifies as genderfluid[94][95] and calls herself "somewhat boy-ish and somewhat girl-ish".[18] She uses the word "transgender" as an umbrella term.[96] When asked in 2019 what pronouns she preferred, Izzard responded, "either 'he' or 'she'" and explained, "If I am in boy mode, then 'he', or girl mode, 'she'".[97] In 2020, she requested she/her pronouns for an appearance on the TV show Portrait Artist of the Year and said she wants "to be based in girl mode from now on".[98] In March 2023, she announced that she would begin using the name Suzy in addition to Eddie, saying that she is "going to be Suzy Eddie Izzard".[2][1] Explaining that she had wanted to use the name Suzy since she was 10 years old, she added that people "can choose" which name they want to use to refer to her,[1][2] and that she would keep using Eddie Izzard as her public name since it is more widely recognised.[99]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddie_Izzard#Personal_life

for the lazy ^

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 7 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Have you ever worn women's clothes outside that, or wanted to? How has it felt if you did?

[–] foxglove@lazysoci.al 5 points 2 weeks ago

What do you already have on hand? What tools and materials?

If you had a cinderblock, log, car-jack, or other heavy / sturdy item, you could use that to rest the sofa on temporarily while you work on it. Since it's a sofa, you could even just tip the sofa on one of its sides (if there is room). Even a stack of books could work, assuming nobody sits on the sofa or uses it (which is a good idea while it's being repaired). Either way, you probably don't need to buy something to rest the sofa on.

In terms of re-attaching the leg to the sofa, it depends on what you are working with, whether there is a way to screw something into the leg. Imagining a wooden leg, I could imagine drilling a hole into the leg and into the sofa, then driving a wooden dowel into the leg and putting wood glue into the hole and around the dowel and then softly tapping the leg into the hole you made into the sofa - the dowel going in the hole, I mean. Sometimes screws can be driven in at angles, or you can make or use brackets that screw into both.

 

It's fairly well established that feminism is broadly the movement to bring about the equality of the sexes (i.e. the movement against sexism).

Why does it feel like "anti-sexism" as a term might be born from a misunderstanding of feminism as being misandrist? I don't see any articles on "anti-sexism", anyone have clarity?

 

When something great happens in your life how do you celebrate?

Here are a few things I do:

  • buy a bouquet of flowers for my partner
  • go to a nice restaurant
  • bake or cook something special, esp. a sweet treat like cake, cookies, etc.
 

From a UN Development Programme statement:

In 62 countries, consensual same-sex sexual relations between adults in private are criminalized, with 12 of these countries even imposing the death penalty for such relations.

The 2025 edition of the Rainbow Map has been released:

https://rainbowmap.ilga-europe.org/

Here were some key findings:

  • Conversion practices are only banned in 10 countries.
  • 6 is the number of countries where LGBTI people do not have any protection from discrimination.
  • Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Iceland, Montenegro, Serbia and Spain are the only countries that have full coverage of SOGIESC in their anti-discrimination legislations.
  • Hate crime and hate speech on the grounds of sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics are prohibited in Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Iceland, Malta, and some regions in Spain and the UK.
  • Marriage equality for same-sex couples is only available in 22 countries.
  • 18 is the number of countries without any legal protection of same-sex partnerships.
  • Trans parenthood is fully recognised only in 8 countries.
  • Only Germany, Greece, Iceland, Malta, Portugal and Spain prohibit unnecessary surgical or medical interventions on intersex children.
  • 11 countries still don’t have any legal or administrative procedure for legal gender recognition.
  • In addition, Bulgaria, Hungary and Russia have laws that make legal gender recognition completely impossible.
  • Only in 12 countries, trans people can have legal gender recognition based on self-determination.
  • Freedom of assembly and association for LGBTI communities are restricted or under attack in at least 14 countries.
  • Sexual orientation and gender identity are qualification criteria for seeking asylum in 27 countries. Intersex asylum seekers are protected in the law only in 6 countries.

EDIT:

wanted to boost this comment by this community's founder and lead moderator:

WomensStuff is 100% committed to LGBT inclusion. We are women only, and trans+ women and non binary are totally welcome here. Homophobia, transphobia, biphobia and gender critical is not. πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆπŸŒˆπŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ

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