tied in knots art. thats how it's supposed to be read. oh my god oh my GOD it took me SO LONG to see that. i see your url in my activity and I'm like "tied ink not sart? I don't know what that means" but I just saw it. jesus CHRIST
😅 once upon a time i tried starting a business with this blog. i never use it, but now it's stuck as my main
dressed up for the first time in months to go zoom with a couple friends last night
My inbox is hungry for asks :D
so in the last couple of months two families i know have had children come out as trans, and i’ve offered to help the families find resources. aside from not always remember what i wish i would have known when i came out - i’m finding a lot of resources about parenting trans children that are written by cis people, or published by cis-led organizations.
does anyone have recommendations on parenting resources
1. written by trans people
2. published by trans-led orgs
TSER is there obviously, but i’m looking for resources for parents rather than teachers? and PFLAG & Gender Spectrum both seem pretty cis-lead.
Once again, another submission to the local college magazine Blackbird fro the July edition. This particular poem is based on the legend of St. Kenelm, an Anglo-Saxon prince who ascended the throne at the age of seven upon his father's death. He was quickly martyred/assassinated by his jealous sister Cwendred, who asked her lover to carry out the dirty work.
    "Once a good King past to Death
Cynewulf by name
And left he but a stripling heir
Young Cynehelm by name.
    "Had Cynehelm two sisters great
Yet scarcely 'like, the twain
Burgenhild' a maiden loyal
And Cwendred, woman vain.
    "To slay her kith and gain the crown
Was Cwendred's only want
And so she bid her lover dear
To do a task so gaunt.
    "Slay the child for me, my love
Cooed Cwendred to her man
Finish him with scarce a word
And take his life in hand.
    "So Ascbert went a' riding then
With Cynehelm one day
Hunting in the forest deep
For a prince to slay.
    "Stopped they for a brief respite
For Cynehelm to rest
And up behind did Ascbert come
At his dame's behest.
    "But Cynehelm spake Nay my lord
You shall not slay me here
Yet take this rod and plant it there
And bid my end come near.
    "So planted he a rod of thorn
And sprung from it an Ash
Then 'neath that tree did Ascbert strike
And Cyn'helm breathed his last.
    "But from the grave his Soul did fly
In likeness of a dove,
 - As prophecy foretold by dream -
Beyond the boughs above."
Again, you may re-post or share this this as you like, but please remember to cite my name (Benjamin Spick) and the name of my blog (tiedinknotsart) as your source! This is my original work and is very important to me. Don't steal it!
La pétrification de la papesse, 1945, Victor Brauner
https://www.wikiart.org/en/victor-brauner/la-p-trification-de-la-papesse-1945
if this blog likes or follows you, it's me at assignedcatholicatbirth.tumblr not much else to say here, this used to be an arts blog
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