(Source: comicsalliance.com, via smoot-it-and-boot-it)

vxu:
shake ya ass but watch ya self
(Source: iamcule, via anothertoristory)

vxu:
shake ya ass but watch ya self
(Source: iamcule, via anothertoristory)
watching this video again now brings absolute tears to my eyes
(via fuckyeah-harto)
Oh hey, an appreciation post about Hannah’s eyes! What a co-inki-dink.
But, you (and I) know you love it.
(All photos from Hannah’s Instagram.)
(Grace’s eyes & butt)
(via fuckyeah-harto)
Dat bed head (+ crazy and/or nice hair times.)
Hannah Hair syndrome, I get it sometimes… It’s a surprise every morning!
(via fuckyeah-harto)
YA Books About Transgender Characters
There haven’t been a lot of young adult books published about transgender characters. This list is not meant to be a “best of” list — it is simply a list of the titles that we are aware of, and we are sure there are more we aren’t aware of. This list is limited to titles published specifically for a young adult audience, which means titles published for adults that teens might still enjoy aren’t included.
- I am J by Cris Beam (Little, Brown)
- One in Every Crowd by Ivan E. Coyote (Arsenal Pulp)
- Beautiful Music for Ugly Children by Kirstin Cronn-Mills (Flux)
- Happy Families by Tanita S. Davis (Knopf)
- f2m: the boy within by Hazel Edwards and Ryan Kennedy (Ford Street Publishing, Australia)
- Being Emily by Rachel Gold (Bella Books)
- Jumpstart the World by Catherine Ryan Hyde (Knopf)
- Almost Perfect by Brian Katcher (Delacorte)
- Luna by Julie Anne Peters (Little, Brown)
- Parrotfish by Ellen Wittlinger (Simon & Schuster)
Do you have a favorite YA book about a transgender character? Please tell us why you loved it!
I want to give special shout-outs to Luna and Parrotfish, two of my favorite YA novels.
I’d also add that Every Day by David Levithan is, in a way, a really good book about a non-binary character. Part of what makes A and Rhiannon’s love story so unique and compelling is that it exists outside of binary constructions of gender and sex identity.
The kindness and care that Hannah shows towards her Hartosexuals, never ceases amaze me.
(via fuckyeah-harto)
- If you surround yourself with teachers who are regularly negative, they will bring you down as well. It will affect your teaching. Be professional, but stay out of negative discussions when possible.
- Always, always communicate with parents about the GOOD things….
(Source: positivelypersistentteach, via positivelypersistentteach)
Maybe sunglasses emoji is actually blind
(Source: rupindre, via backtobrittana)

My ideal classroom.
No idea what I will have available to me this year though.
(Source: positivelypersistentteach, via positivelypersistentteach)