Bài đăng

Đang hiển thị bài đăng từ Tháng 8, 2023

10 puberty books your kids will actually enjoy

Inside: 10 puberty books that will help you to prepare your child for the changes that will be happening to them. UPDATED August 2023. One of the most natural ways to start a conversation with … 10 puberty books your kids will actually enjoy Read More » The post 10 puberty books your kids will actually enjoy was written by Cath Hakanson appeared first on Sex Ed Rescue - A better way to talk to kids about sex from Sex Ed Rescue https://sexedrescue.com/10-puberty-books/ via https://sex2k.cc/

Let Her Be Frank: An Interview with Tracy Dawson

Hình ảnh
Author:  Gabriel Leão Women who had to, or chose to, dress as men to access masculine environments to follow their calling are often overlooked in history. Enter the book Let Me Be Frank: A Book About Women Who Dressed Like Men to Do Shit They Weren’t Supposed to Do by Tracy Dawson, who talks here with Gabriel Leão. Women who had to, or chose to, dress as men to access masculine environments to follow their calling are often overlooked in history. Enter the book Let Me Be Frank: A Book About Women Who Dressed Like Men to Do Shit They Weren ’ t Supposed to Do (HarperCollins, 2022), published last year by Tracy Dawson . Dawson is an award-winning actor, TV writer, comedian, and now author, whose first book impressed the likes of Samantha Bee, Amber Tamblyn, and Patton Oswalt. Let Me Be Frank presents in-depth profiles of women throughout different eras, and of varied ethnicities, races, sexualities and cultural backgrounds, who both challenged the patriarchy and decide

She Cheers for Awkward! An interview with Bevin of Fat Kid Dance Party

Hình ảnh
Author:  Sam Wall and Bevin Branlandingham All bodies are worthy of love exactly as they are! We only ever get to have one body in this life and having a peaceful relationship with it is quality of life. If humans could learn to honor the wisdom coming through our bodies as children and understand every body is unique I think we could transform our society. I grew up dancing; my mom had been a high-level Tahitian dancer, and with her encouragement I spent from about age six to age eighteen taking some kind of dance classes. Self-consciousness and the stress of teenage-me’s schedule eventually sapped the joy from it. I quit once I went to college. Two years ago, hunting around for a new way to exercise, I discovered a cluster of dance and aerobics instructors who were queer , joyful, and rejecting the idea that you had to look or move a certain way to dance. Bevin Branlandingham, founder of Fat Kid Dance Party , is one of those teachers. Not long after finding her video