We need to be as good at lifting up as we are at calling out

realsocialskills:

In advocacy/activist space, we’ve gotten really good at noticing and naming oppression. We’ve gotten really good at criticizing the things that people are doing wrong, and demanding change. We’re also good at noticing organizations and people who shouldn’t be supported, and explaining why people shouldn’t support them.

This is important — and it’s not enough. We need to be equally good at noticing and naming things that *are* worth supporting. We need to be equally good at noticing what people are doing well, describing why their approach is good, and finding ways to support it. Calling out isn’t enough. We need to seek out things to lift up.

When we focus exclusively on finding things to call out, we send the implicit message that nothing good anyone is doing is worthy of our attention. But none of the work of building a better world happens by itself. It depends on the people who are putting the effort into doing the work. When we ignore the value of the work people are doing, we both harm those people and the work itself.

The work is hard, exhausting, and vital. It’s also often thankless — because we’re not acknowledging it in the way we need to be. Often, doing activism and advocacy means signing up for a life of being paid less than a living wage (or volunteering your very limited time), having your work ignored, and being noticed by your community only when people are angry at you.

This is particularly common when the work is done by marginalized people. Our culture socializes us to ignore the work that women and other marginalized groups do, except when we find reason to criticize it. This dynamic carries over into activism/advocacy spaces. It’s just as toxic when we do it as when corporations do it.

There’s nothing inevitable about this. We can make it stop. We can pay attention to the work people are doing, and we can show respect to the people doing it. We can describe the worthwhile things people are doing, and talk about why they should be valued. We can seek out ways to support what people are doing, whether that means donating, signal boosting, going out and voting, connecting people to each other, or any number of other things. By getting just as good at support as we are at call outs, we can make the world much better.

URGENT ALL AUSSIES!!!

sheepytina:

kazooie:

prinxiety-logicality-ss:

finnreyy:

i know!!! the stupid liberal government has decided on the plebiscite and even tho it’s a waste of money….. please vote!! IF YOU ARE GOING TO BE 18 BEFORE NOVEMBER 25 ENROLL TO VOTE!!! PLEASE DO NOT THROW YOUR VOTE AWAY THIS IS SO IMPORTANT TO ME AND SO MANY OTHERS!!!!!!! PLEASE VOTE YES ON MARRIAGE EQUALITY!!!!!! WE CAN DO THIS!!!!

HEY AMERICANS/THE REST OF THE WORLD WE REBLOGGED YOUR STUFF REBLOG THIS PLS

Stupid ass fuckin’ government, afaik Abbott is in favour of this method because if it were simply a parliament vote, they would all vote yes, and Abbott is a dick who hates his gay sister. ANYWAYYY, time to vote, too bad my grandparents don’t know I’m gay.

I’ve seen a few people who want to boycott the vote on principle, but here’s the thing: we all know the plebiscite is a real fucking shitty thing, a massive waste of money and time, but it doesn’t matter anymore because IT’S ALREADY HAPPENING. It’s shitty, but it doesn’t make voting in it any less important. 

Please, make sure you’re enrolled to vote, and for god’s sake, PLEASE VOTE “YES”!! 

The plebiscite may be non-binding, but it’s still incredibly important that you vote in it. We’re finally getting a chance, maybe not on our terms, but god damn are we going to fucking take it and show them that MARRIAGE EQUALITY MATTERS to the majority of Australia!

strategicscientificreserve:

lifeisajourney10:

gloriousbacchus:

religiousmom:

tumblr friendships are hard to maintain like im sorry i know i havent talked to you in 5 months but you’re still super rad and i still consider us friends im just dumb

If I have ever messaged you or messaged me and never heard from me again, I still consider us friends. I just suck

also I’m awkward and don’t know how to start conversations, sorry.

deckerprestonsmoak:

blacksmithanode:

blacksmithanode:

The concept of credential inflation has pissed me off ever since I learned it

If college being free for everyone would make a college education worthless you are blatantly admitting a college education exists to be a class gateway

I have two things to say for this as someone living in a country with free university/college education: credential inflation doesn’t happen, and college teaches skills that are necessary for many professions and isn’t just a “class gateway”. When it costs it is a class gateway, yes. When you have no income during the years you spend at school it is a class gateway. On its own it’s not. 

I wondered what on earth SNC was doing in the kitchen, but turns out it was actually helpful this time! I dropped a piece of sandwich turkey earlier, couldn’t immediately find it, and forgot to look again.

No worries about that turning unpleasant in August, though. He wasn’t even in here then, but he successfully sniffed it out 😸

d1rtypaws:

When someone is explaining something to you and you get hit with the realization that you haven’t retained anything that has been said to you and the moment they stop talking you won’t be able to recall any part of it