
“I am no bird; and no net ensnares me; I am a free human being with an independent will.” - Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte
(Source: indoor-exploration)

Our Lady of the Shimmering Wildwood
Sink your roots deeply into the rich soil of life.
Stand tall and know your importance in the universal plan.
Allow yourself the gift of slowing down to grow at your perfect pace.
Protect, nourish, and respect Mother Earth.
Open your arms to the sky and embrace everything around you, seen and unseen.
Provide comfort, shelter, inspiration, and renewal for your fellow creatures.
Enjoy and dance in all the seasons of life.
Be still and listen as the wind calls your name and invites your soul to rest.
Open to the interconnected world of nature of which you are a vital part.
Shiloh Sophia McCloud

Basically by being pro-life you are advocating for women to be treated like incubators, like their lives don’t matter. Being pro-choice doesn’t mean being pro-abortion. No one likes the idea of an abortion but women have rights too. Women have the right to live their lives and not be forced to carry through a pregnancy and have a child they don’t want. You are taking away part of their life. Even if she were to choose adoption. Adoption is not simple, not everyone is happy and just goes on with their lives. Yeah sometimes the baby finds a home but that isn’t always the case. The woman most likely suffers more trauma from putting a baby up for adoption than she does from getting an abortion. Most of the stress caused by an abortion comes by all of the shame that people place on the woman for getting them.
I’m not saying that people should go out and get abortions whenever, but it’s not my right to treat another woman like her life doesn’t matter, like she is being punished for having sex. Pregnancy should feel like a blessing, a child should feel like a blessing not a punishment. You are taking away the woman’s life by forcing her into a pregnancy. Everyone knows that there is a risk of pregnancy if you have sex, but why would you want pregnancy to feel like a punishment for sex? Accidents happen, sometimes people are stupid. In the heat of the moment you can lose your head. So you want to punish people for it? You want to make them have a kid they don’t want because they had sex? You don’t know her circumstance, you don’t know what has led her to an abortion. You have no right to judge her.
I will also say this, the majority of pro-lifers I encounter on tumblr are in their teens and are virgins. In your teens you have no idea what its like in the real world. You don’t know what its like to budget, make sure you have enough money for rent, food, gas, and other bills. You don’t know what its like to take care of yourself at all. You have no idea what its like to have to take care of everything yourself. Until you do, you have no idea what it would be like to have to make sure you have diapers and still have enough money for rent. When you’re a virgin, you have no idea what its like to be a sexual person. You have no idea what happens when you’re having sex. Accidents happen, condoms break, pills are so easy to miss. You can’t judge someone when you haven’t even been there. You don’t know what happened. You have no right to pass judgement when you have never been in her shoes.
Abortion should never be used as birth control, I believe that people still need to do whatever they can to prevent pregnancy. The birth control pill should be made easily available to all women and the stigma should be removed from purchasing condoms. If you want to prevent abortion advocate for birth control. You have to give her the opportunities to have safe sex and prevent pregnancy so abortion doesn’t have to be an option. She should however still have the option. Stop treating women like they’re nothing but an incubator, nothing but just a vessel for another human being. She has a life, she has dreams, goals. Why take her life, that she’s already living, away?
Probably one of the best opinions on abortion I have ever read.
I had an abortion.
I’m not going to tell you how old I was when I had it.
I’m not going to tell you what the circumstances around the pregnancy were.
I’m not going to tell you whether birth control was used or not.
I’m not going to tell you whether it was a wanted or an unwanted pregnancy.
I’m not going to tell you how far along the pregnancy was.
I’m not going to tell you whether there was a genetic abnormality, or whether my life was endangered by the pregnancy.
I’m not going to tell you any of those things because I think answering those questions, creating the situation from which my experience unfolds offers someone, everyone, anyone, the chance to say, “She deserved to access abortion,” or “How dare she get pregnant and have an abortion,” or find some pity in their heart for whatever piece of my situation offers them the opportunity to justify their judgment, or their sense of false safety.
When I was in high school (so many years ago) we had a speaker come to talk with us about HIV and AIDS. He told us about what living with AIDS was like. What it was like to defecate in his bed at 3am and be unable to move by himself and having to call for his parents to come clean him. To live with the stares that people gave him when they saw the sores on his arms. To be asked, over and over and over, “Well, how did you contract the disease?” He said it was a question he never answered. Because the answer would muddy his message with pity or feelings of false safety. How he contracted the disease was irrelevant to the fact that he had it.
This is how I feel about my abortion. None of the, “How did it happen?” matters. It’s irrelevant.
What matters is that I was able to access abortion when I needed to. When I wanted to. When I was pregnant and had the need to no longer be pregnant. When I was desperate to not be pregnant.
I walked past anti-choice protestors with their signs, and listened to their shouting, “Don’t do this! Think of your baby! We’re praying for you!” I pushed past them as they blocked the sidewalk.
The facility that did the abortion had, what I’ve come to understand is, an abortion doula. She held my hand, asked me if I was okay. If I needed anything. She tucked the stray hairs from my ponytail behind my ear and told me that everything was going to be all right.
When it was over, I threw up.
I have never regretted my abortion. For a long time I didn’t talk about it. In fact, I’m only just beginning to talk about it. I’ve always felt that my experience was just that, my experience and didn’t need to be shared. (I will admit, I did fear negative repercussion. I feared facing hostile judgement.) But I’m learning that things we don’t talk about – abortion, miscarriage…are things that we NEED to talk about. *I* need to pipe up when I hear someone struggling and say, “I’ve had this experience, too. This was how it went for me.”
Silence equals shame. And I am not ashamed.

By Erwin Olaf.
I ran across this photo earlier this week on Pinterest, and I felt like I had to share. We don’t often see images of mature women in our culture, much less mature women in lingerie. It really is a disservice. After all, should women stop feeling good about themselves once they’re past the age of 30?
it’s hard to move foward when you can’t even see
Women take note and stand up for yourselves and other women in whatever ways you can.