i might have gone out (and gone home) with a babyfaced wharton school graduate named enrique after work last night. i might not. what’s it to you huh? my punk points are already below zero. adema’s, fue tan bueno conmigo y me cayO simpAtico. hmmf.
benjamin: Do you want to read the last poem I wrote?
me: girl we’re on recipe sharing terms
but we are NOT on poem reading terms
benjamin: just asking.
— gchat convo with my ex
i might have gone out (and gone home) with a babyfaced wharton school graduate named enrique after work last night. i might not. what’s it to you huh? my punk points are already below zero. adema’s, fue tan bueno conmigo y me cayO simpAtico. hmmf.
I choose to study medicine because I realise only too well the moral impact one has as doctor on a female patient. While one soothes their physical suffering, women open their heart to you. I see medicine as a way to help women get out of their dull resignation, to get them to help each other and make them stronger so that they will demand that which they have a right to. —
Isala Van Diest (1842-1916), the first female physician in Belgium (via coolchicksfromhistory)
ok this is super interesting to me given that medicine as a profession only succeeded in killing off healthcare as a community tradition about 100 - 200 years prior to her birth. how piquant that she had to reclaim it and politicize it. yeesh.
(Source: flanderstoday.eu, via coolchicksfromhistory)
all i really want is to be a judge on rupaul’s drag race and become an abortion provider
why does everything take so long?
also, why is everyone so into heterosexuality?