c8isnotgr8
c8isnotgr8
cait
27 posts
21!!! she / theylocal poet / art hoe / modern love(r)(^-^)socal x nyc
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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I hope one day I get to peel oranges for the ones that I love and even though I won’t tell them the words “I love you” when I hand over their peeled orange, I hope they’ll know that when I hold that broken orange peel in my hands, that means love.
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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i recall that you like kiwis,
pineapples and mandarins
so i made it my sole mission
to learn how to slice,
to peel them perfectly
then i might write my very own orange poem
an ode to hope of you'll keep me
~stella
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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there should be more poetry describing the timeless beauty of sharing food and love through convoluted, intimate orange metaphors that get really personal. just sayin.
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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I think I deserve a tattoo and a trip to the book store
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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#Tell Her You Love Her Without Telling Her You Love Her
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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So you're telling me Peeta practically ran to 12 the moment he was discharged by that therapist guy, and the first thing he did upon his arrival was to look for primroses, to plant them by the windows of Everdeen's house so Katniss could not only, even though metaphorically, finally bury her baby sister and mourn in peace, but also have a tiny piece of Prim living nearby every time the flowers bloomed. Thus, comforting her was on his mind throughout the entirety of his recovery, and by heart, he always knew what to do to help her?
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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"this changed my life!" me at a multitude of things bc i'm dynamic and have an open and big heart
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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Dana’s last ‘fuck you’ to Disney
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He/they collector
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Genderqueer/bi-gender papa king
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TWO girlfriend kisses
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Onscreen mlm kiss
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Implied aladarius
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a happy ending to the bi/enby couple
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A happy ending to the aro/ace character
And
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Death to the white Christian puritain
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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four tickets to barbie please
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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I watched the second season of Modern Love today, and decided I would not do the foolish mistake of completing the entire season in one day like I did last year, instead watched just two stories and went back to re-watch some of the episodes of the previous season. Needless to say my emotions are all a sloppy mess. It’s a strange phase of life when you do not really relate to most of love stories yet find yourself moved and significantly shifted to something else when you witness one. I wasn’t even particularly salty about why my own life did not have an iconic story, except for the one episode starring Kit Harrington which went by the name of “Strangers on a (Dublin) train”. The meet cute happened in a train journey which was almost similar to the kind of solo journeys I used to take for all four years of my undergrads, yet never encountered a single romantic gesture from the universe barring the love stories in the books I read during the journey.
The story ended on a cliffhanger of sorts, with the lead guy camping outside the girl’s street hoping to run into her because he did not want to contact her by the normal method of collecting her number or looking for her socials. And me, determined to find out what happened after, dug through the internet to find out the original column from the New York Times written by Cecilia Pesao. But the article which was in the form of a miniature, under 100 words essay classified as a “Tiny Love Story” was unfortunately behind a paywall, so I settled for an interview of the writer instead. And maybe it was a harsh reality check to get me down from my romantic lala land I was so resentful about never having to experience, because I think the creators of the show took an awful lot of creative liberty to tweak the story.
Unlike the show, the guy didn’t end up camping like a roadside Romeo, but just searched for her on Twitter and they began talking. And despite the chemistry they did share in the train ride which inspired a show by Amazon Prime, it actually fizzled out after a few months and the irl couple stopped talking, and never even got to meet again. I mean the irony of it all is that our dude right here doesn’t even possibly know there was a story published in NYT in the first place, let alone the fact that John Snow is playing him on television. And that was enough to put my romantic ass into my place.
I think, if we start asking this same question for almost all of the iconic love stories we grew up idolizing, our expectations from a romantic relationship would turn a lot more realistic. The question of “What happens after the happy ending?” Or “What does happily ever after really look like?” Because the truth of a romantic relationship is that it is a platter of an overwhelmingly diverse group of emotions, and love is just one of them trying to balance it’s equally potent negative counterparts like jealously, anger, resentment, and worst of all, indifference. I once read that the scary thing about relationships is that most often the quirks that made you fall in love turn into the very thing you fall out of love. I do not think there is anything more effed up than that, and there is certainly something to be admired about the foolish courage with which I used to deep dive into relationships. Courage, which I most certainly have run out of.
People who truly know what love entails are the ones most scared of it, and most scarred by it. And people who seemed to have cracked the code for a successful romantic relationship, have put in tangible efforts beyond love alone, to sustain it. But in either case, despite the overwhelmingly monumental mess it is, either way it ends up with a good story to share and an even better show to watch.
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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Modern Love: He Made Affection Feel Simple
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[courtesy of Brian Rea]
"Dating as a transgender woman, in my experience, meant low expectations and casual sex. Then I met Jack."
This piece is part of the Modern Love column at The New York Times
by Denny
My bio on Grindr read: “Be trans friendly. Send face to chat.”
It was difficult to be on a gay hookup app as a trans woman. Most men in my feed desired to only sleep with each other. But I knew there were straight men on Grindr who hungered for a woman like me. I wanted them too.
That’s where I met Jack. At 22, he was a few months older than me, and, other than his age, his entire profile was blank, usually an indicator of a cisgender straight man who was guarded about his attraction to trans women. Typically, the messages I received would start with a vulgar sext, sometimes an unwanted nude photo.
Living in Morningside Heights, I was attending Fordham University for my master’s degree in strategic communication. One night I was up late working when I received a Grindr message from him, a selfie. Amid his light brown hair, two-day scruff and meek gaze, his lacrosse T-shirt stood out to me the most. He looked like a sporty boy I would have crushed on in high school.
He followed up his photo with “Hello.”
Messages in my Grindr inbox tended to cut to the chase: “Down for now?” “Car sesh?” Men who contacted me because they fantasized about trans women made it difficult for me to feel seen as a person in general, let alone a person worthy of respect.
Although my interest was piqued by Jack’s picture, it was his gentleness that drew me in.
Our sporadic small talk was harmless, spanning two months. I brushed him off, but as I commuted to school and spent hours in the library, he was persistent.
“My sex drive is pretty low these days,” I wrote. “Give me a bit and I’ll hit you up.”
“OK.”
When I turned back to my studies, he added, “Just so you know, we can do non-sex things and hang out too. It would be fun.”
This became our pattern: he being distant enough to show interest without pressure, and me appreciating his laxity, given my demanding schoolwork. His ease led me to trust him, so we set up a day to meet.
The first afternoon Jack came over, he admired my bathtub and drank his cup of water with two hands. His poised demeanor in a beige wool peacoat and long scarf reminded me, in a good way, of John Bender in “The Breakfast Club.” In my bedroom, he fixated on my yellow Power Ranger figurines, noticing my framed academic award next to them on the windowsill.
“You went to SUNY Oneonta?” he said. “I went to SUNY Potsdam.”
I pictured my friends who also attended Potsdam eating in the same cafeteria as Jack, getting drunk at the same frat party. Suddenly, the person I’d seen as a stranger now fit into my world.
I imagined what the deer looked like from his dorm room window, roaming the grass at dawn. Or how he spent his day when the school canceled classes because of snow. Or where he would have gone if his parents were able to afford private school.
We sat on my bed, my back leaning against the wall. He slouched his head onto my hip and wrapped his arms around my waist. “This is weird,” I thought. Aside from sexual intimacy, my hookups were typically aromantic, absent of cuddling and expressions of affection.
I kissed him and rolled on top. I took off my shirt and he hugged me tight. His face dug into my chest as he said, “I like you. I think you’re really cool.”
Unsure how I actually felt, I said, “Oh. I think you’re really cool, too.”
The next time I saw Jack, he spent the night at my place. It was then, awake in bed at 4 a.m., that I realized I had never let a guy sleep over before. His heat warmed the bed, so I crept to the bathroom to cool off. I Snapchatted a disoriented selfie to my friends, my hair messy and eyes bloodshot.
“How do you guys do this sleepover thing?” I wrote. “I can’t sleep at all.”
Customarily, my flings with strange men were brief. The men did not take note of my bathtub or my educational history before sex, and they did not linger after.
I came back into bed, disturbed by the rumble of his snoring, but his sleeping face on my pillow struck me. For the first time, the thought of sharing a bed with a man did not come from pure imagination. I now had a real image for this fantasy; I could pretend Jack was my boyfriend, reach for his face and whisper “I love you, good night,” then fall asleep and meet him somewhere in his dream as if we had done this a hundred times before.
The next day, he flew off to see his family for the holidays and the first weeks of the new year.
“merry crimmus,” I texted.
“u too, babygirl,” he replied.
After our sleepover, I didn’t hear from him unless I initiated — an unexpected change. Instead of giving in to my insecurity that the sleepover meant little to him, and therefore I meant little, I imagined other scenarios: him asking me to sleep at his place, for a change, or spontaneously calling me while I’m in line for my morning coffee. But because I had presumed a sex-only expectation from the start, I shamed myself for developing feelings.
“miss u,” he texted one random morning.
“really?”
We stayed in touch and occasionally saw each other, weeks in between. On a hot morning, he snored behind me as I sat on the floor beside my bed, working on my final thesis. He put his hand up to my face, letting me know he was awake. With my eyes on the laptop screen, I took his hand and planted kisses in his palm, wallowing in these ordinary joys — the kind of affection I slowly grew comfortable displaying.
Longing to be more than casual with him, I sought a therapist to guide me through my growing feelings.
Jack’s periodic “miss u” texts progressed with heart emojis, an unprecedented closeness. And I returned the sentiment. It felt thrilling to express my adoration so directly, until the weeks between seeing each other and texting ultimately turned into months of silence I knew to be ghosting.
I relied on Grindr as my safe dock because dating as trans is complicated. Sleeping around was easier for me. I had set the bar low, then met Jack, who saw me as more than a fantasized body, only to have his mysterious exit echo a looming insecurity I avoided for years: Being trans implies I am not real enough to deserve decency.
I broke down in therapy, mustering the courage to say out loud what was undeniably true: “He left me.”
“I don’t mean to put this on you,” my therapist said, “but could him being a cis straight man and you being a trans woman play a part?”
I didn’t want to blame Jack, who showed me a new realm of affection that made desire feel as simple as just a boy and a girl who liked each other. But he made leaving simple, too; all of this could still not be enough.
Deep down, I denied how my mere existence as a trans woman could ever cost him. Jack, in wooing me, nurtured the possibility that my romantic fantasies could come true, that I could be seen as a complex person rather than a fetishized token of someone’s imagination. After being deserted by him, I ruminated on my insecurity that being trans denied me of even a simple goodbye.
And yet I know myself to be real because my transition, as a teenager, required exceptional certainty. Doctors and psychiatrists double-checked my decision constantly.
“Yes, I’m sure,” I repeated, and I became more real each year. With Jack, I felt even realer. Not only had he seen me as a woman, but as a woman worthy of being held.
I could blame my being trans for Jack’s ghosting, but maybe it had nothing to do with that. Maybe he hated his job. Maybe his family fell apart. Maybe the pleasure we felt together contrasted whatever pain remained of our baggage.
On lonely days, I imagine myself at SUNY Potsdam. At a frat party, I drunkenly dance across from Jack, cheap blue lights grazing the curves of our cheekbones, sweat dripping like cyan fireflies. Neil Diamond’s “Sweet Caroline” roars through the party. “Good times never seemed so good,” everyone shouts. “I’ve been inclined to believe they never would.”
I put myself in the cafeteria, where Jack and I approach the salad bar at the same time. When he sees me, he steps back and says, “You go first,” with a grin so big I would need both hands to hold it.
———
Denny is a writer, actor and musician living in New York City.
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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“A Bookmark Near the End He loves history. He wanted to write a biography of John Quincy Adams. I, shamefully, knew almost nothing about John Quincy Adams, so I went online and bought every biography of him I could find. One day, he called me, claiming that we wouldn’t work out long term. He said he loved me but that we had different interests. “What does love mean to you?” I said. “That’s an impossible question,” he replied. I, however, find love to be quite simple. Love is the stack of biographies on my nightstand with a bookmark near the end.”
— Julia Nicole Camp, in an New York Times “Modern Love” piece.
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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MODERN LOVE Season 2, Episode 3: Strangers on a (Dublin) Train
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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GRIEF AND LOVE
Wandavision - episode 8 ( written by. Laura Donney ) // All The Hues Of Blue - chapter 13 ( written by. @myfalsedevotion ) // Andrew Garfield on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert // Jamie Anderson // Modern Love - season 2 episode 1 ( written by. John Carney ) // Francesca Cox
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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c8isnotgr8 · 2 years ago
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its crazy that being in your early 20s so often feels like you're running out of time. we are at the beginning..................... what on earth
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