lunariagold:

I don’t often say that much in the open, but I hope Tumblr can sort out their shit this time. I don’t know where else to go at present. We complain a lot about this place around here, but sticking it to users and making their experience hell is now an internet-wide issue (don’t get me started on Facebook and Etsy). Looking at not only myself but most of my creative, artist friends trying to maintain a vital online presence, it is a serious concern to see how many platforms are crumbling around their users no matter how dedicated or law-abiding they are.    

I’m not flouncing out of here (unless I get outright kicked out). I’ve created accounts with so many art/networking sites in this lifetime and they inevitably end up being the same issues served up by different chefs. But just in case something happens here and you want to keep up with the art, I’m lunaria_gold on Instagram (until they start swatting users willy-nilly there too)  

blackbearmagic:

kyraneko:

fierceawakening:

star-anise:

feathersescapism:

lireavue:

celeloriel:

pendragyn:

wodneswynn:

lewd-plants:

wodneswynn:

Regular reminder that there’s literally nothing stopping white people from enjoying their own heritages and that all that bonehead noise about how “the SJWs” are gonna come after you because you wanna learn Irish or you think Vikings are cool is just straight-up a lie.

Y’know what robs white people of culture?  White supremacy does.  And you can take that to the fuckin bank.

This is actually something I’ve felt for a long time but was afraid of talking about because I wasn’t sure if anyone else felt the same way. We’re losing any and all important ways of positively and benevolently performing, expressing, sharing, and celebrating our cultures because they keep getting invaded and corrupted by white supremacists.

It’s the white supremacists we need to annihilate. Then we can have our celebrations.

Gatekeep white supremacists from white culture. Separate them from it, remove them from it.

They’re not white culture, they’re hate culture.

When Urgroßvater fled the Rhineland way back in the day, he wound up in Mississippi. All the kids grew up as monolingual Anglophones, because the last thing you want to be in a place like that is different; better to identify with the dominant group, if you’re lucky enough that that’s an option. Any meaningful sense of heritage was gone by the time the next generation learned to talk. Now it’s 2018 and all the German I have is Berliner Hochdeutsch from school and Duolingo. Whatever songs and stories and traditions I could’ve had are just gone, like a fart in the wind.

Deep down in my bones, I feel like I was cheated out of something. And it was the pressure and desire to assimilate into whiteness that did the cheating.

The same thing happened to me with Italian on both sides, children raised to fit in without any real heritage or traditions passed on.

My grandfather told his Prussian parents, “We’re in America. Speak English.” He spoke Polish, Russian, German, and English. My grandmother spoke German, Norwegian, and English. My parents used to have arguments in German but refused to teach us. I’m a monolingual Anglophone. I’m still upset about it.

My grandmother’s family assimilated so hard because they were Russian Jews. I am continually working my way back to my ancestress’ list of languages and crafts skills.

(There is probably an argument that I’m carrying a lot of Nanna around here, but hey.) (She spoke English, French, German, Russian, and probably some Latin. I’ve swapped Latin for Spanish and am kinda crappy at German. She also could look at a piece of finished clothing and go home and put together a replica; I’m working towards it with knitting instead.)

And yes: I was named for her.

One of the truths about European colonization of the world was that most of those who were most emphatic about assimilating or eradicating non-European cultures were usually those who’d already had the same thing done to them. Which can go all the way back to distinctions of rank and station in what we think of as “the same” society – some of the areas of the USA and Canada that were/are the worst in terms of anti-Indigenous and anti-Black racism were those colonized by the Welsh, Scottish, Irish and even English farmers and peasants who’d had their entire generations and centuries of culture, ancestry and livelihood ripped up and thrown out by Enclosure or forced relocation or the Famine or what have you.

They came to the Americas and thought now we can be on the top and acted out the worst parts of their own (often intergenerational) trauma on everyone vulnerable to them. It’s a very very common human pattern and all over the world it continues today.

I’m relatively connected to Scottish culture for a western Canadian—my mother and uncle did Highland dance when young, my brother was in pipe bands, I’ve been to a lot of Highland games, my grandmother took me to Scotland when I was young.

And it’s basically all because my Orkney ancestors REMEMBER and are still VERY PEEVED about being invaded by the English, having their language, culture, and traditional forms of dress outlawed and stolen, and losing political autonomy.

So even though they were still kinda racist, when my grandparents went up to the Arctic to exploit the environment and learned about how Canada’s Indigenous people had been colonized and had their language, culture, and traditional forms of dress outlawed and stolen… even then they were like, “Hey, that sounds shittily familiar” and worked in small ways (in between drilling oil wells) to help preserve Inuit culture and help individual Indigenous people.

Imagine what might happen if white people remembered what it was like for their families to be fed into the meatgrinder that took in their heritage and spat out mayonnaise, and decided that maybe it wasn’t so great after all.

I was always very, very pissed off that my grandparents steadfastly refused to teach me Greek.

If it weren’t for “We’re in America, speak English,” I might have grown up speaking Norwegian, German, Dutch, and maybe some Gaelic.

“We’re in America, speak English” is also “We’re in America, speak only English,” and that is loss beyond measure.

Sometimes I want to cry because I want want want the Czech culture that my great-great-grandparents were raised in… but when they came over, they renounced it all. They were Czech, but their children (my great-grandparents) were American. Their children’s children (my grandparents) were American. They spoke English and they participated in American culture; even their last name had to be pronounced the American way. They might speak Czech to their friends when they went to Mass at St. Wenceslaus, but at home, they worked hard to learn English and practice American traditions.

My grandfather knew a little Czech, and remembered some of the traditions his grandparents had brought over. But when he died in… 2013, 2014? we lost anything he didn’t pass on, because he was the last child of that line.

I once had someone at a pagan gathering say to me “oh, you’re Czech? that means you can worship the Slavic gods!” But even if I could trace my family back to pre-Christianity Prague and Bohemia, would those gods even recognize me? Through Americanization, my family’s Czechness was reduced to a fun fact and a way of excusing our weird last name.

And sometimes that really just boils my blood.

flaroh:

Excited to finally reveal what I have been working on for the past month!! My winter series 2018 is “Ancient Knits”, inspired by ancient pottery, murals, mosaics, and carvings from all over the classical world. Click on images for descriptions 🙂

Tshirts, Totes, Mugs, and More! // Socks here only!!

random-spooky-missile:

rue-withadifference:

thecrackshiplollipop:

tina-belcher:

dabeatnik:

bob-belcher:

Eva Longoria is everything

Yet she can’t even speak Spanish 😂😅😂😅😂

That’s pride alright lmfao

She don’t have to, but don’t talk all that shit if you don’t even learn your own culture #lame

you were saying @dabeatnik???

ummm

“When I was growing up, my parents spoke to each other in Spanish, but they didn’t speak to us in Spanish because they were told not to. In school we weren’t allowed to speak it.”

and also???

“… But America is the only country that promotes monolingualism. Here it’s English, English, English. Every other country makes their children learn a second language very early on. So as my political and social activism grew, I was like, ‘I really need to learn Spanish.’ So I did.“ 

idk how many people i’ve known growing up in texas whose parents speak fluent spanish but they don’t speak a lick solely because their parents were afraid or told not to teach their children. it’s unspeakably common and doesn’t in any way shape or form diminish someone’s claim to or pride in their heritage. 

fuck that guy. you go eva. 

lack of intergenerational language exchange is one of the leading causes of language death for endangered and indigenous languages because of this culture of shame attached to “lesser” coded languages so frankly if yr mocking people for not speaking their mother tongue without taking the colonial reasons for this into account, you’re an ignorant prick and you can go fuck yourself like

Te Reo Maori (the mother tongue of New Zealand) was almost exterminated in the 1950′s-60′s because white people tried to eradicate it. Only a very small and very determined group of Maori activists were able to keep it alive. 

This was so recent my dad remembered it happening.

Now the language is mandatory to learn at Primary School level. Language extermination is awful and a lot of countries suffer/have suffered from it.

Don’t slander Eva Longoria like this

maevowavo:

My second sheet mulch victim! The sidewalk strip in front of our house, which come spring will be home to a peach tree, pea shrub, and hazelnut!

I’m always shocked by how much materials you really need for it to be effective. My recipe this time around: step 1 – brown paper roll, leaf bags, and newspaper for weed supression. Step 2 – a sprinkling of compost (because I didn’t really buy enough)

Step 3 – leaves from the yard

Step 4 – trusty straw!

Things I did differently from the other sidewalk strip – using the roll of brown paper was so much faster than newspaper! And easier to get a hold of. I just bought it at the hardware store, whereas the newspaper I spent months hoarding from my office. Also didn’t do seaweed this time. It’s good for adding minerals to the soil but also takes time and effort to go collect, which is the only reason I skipped it.

Already excited for spring and it isn’t even really winter yet!!