mothermoonie:

fadeinto-gucci:

bubblegum-pwussay:

mothermoonie:

thirdfloorgarden:

mothermoonie:

qxessence:

figuringshitoutlane:

deebott:

the-indecorous-flower:

thatadult:

sungawddess:

ta-nehisicoates:

my girl poured her diva cup out into her plant and now the plant’s alive again her pussy voodoo

I have questions…

this is green consciousness and ecofeminism

Period blood is full of nutrients and can act as a plant fertilizer. Which isn’t much help if you use disposables like pads and tampons, BUT if you use moon cups you can pour them onto your plant OR if you use reusable pads you can soak/rinse them in warm water before you wash them and pour that water onto your plants.

Stop being scared of ya own blood 2k18. Do magic. Revive plants. Curse enemies.

Woah, plant tip of the year!

Wonderful fuckin post

To clarify

Blood contains nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus. All three of these macronutrients are good for plants.

This is a great alternative to blood meal fertilizers. While blood meal contains large quantities of nitrogen, some gardeners do not agree with its use due to potential animal cruelty nuances. For anyone who feels that this is gross, please understand that organic fertilizer is usually full of poo – this is hardly different than period blood. They’re both great fertilizers that are produced in different ways.

ok but won’t it introduce pathogenes to plants and soil?

@thirdfloorgarden Excellent question! The answer in general is no (assuming that the person does not have any type of menstrual disease or a disease like HIV). Menstrual blood also does not contain elements that are necessary for coagulation. Before you decide to use it as a fertilizer for your plants, I recommend understanding it, and if you have a menstrual disease/STD, as a preliminary step.

This is so disgusting

Interesting. But if rather my plant die before my apartment smells like period blood

@fadeinto-gucci You add water to it to. The nutrients is absorbed by your plants anyway. I’d also like to highlight that it’s only 2-4 teaspoons of blood in general, which is hardly enough to create any strong odor that lingers.

To anyone who keeps sending me messages about how menstrual blood is not sustainable for farmers

I realize this – this isn’t intended to sustain farmers with acres of crops. A women couldn’t produce that much menstrual blood within a given cycle.

edgebug:

edgebug:

hot take of the evening: nb ppl and other trans folk can romanticize their genders all they want, cis ppl have been doing the same gotdamn thing for ever and if it makes u feel good to compare your gender to flowers blooming or a raging river or the moon’s phases or a bag of skittles or what the Fuck ever, you just, you go for it

as nb ppl we are constantly made to feel like our genders are weird or somehow a burden on others so like, to publicly feel good abt ur nb gender is a radical act

reblogging this hot take from last night at like 2am because you know what? it’s still a good take

randomishnickname:

rururinchan:

I found sources. 

The word “man” was gender neutral and referred to both sexes until the 13th century

The female specific pronoun “she” was invented in the 12th century. 

The word “girl” was gender neutral and referred to children of both sexes until the 15th century

High heels were invented for men and were worn predominantly by men until the 16th century

From the mid 16th century to the 19th century boys would typically wear dresses until the age of 7

Until the early 1930s pink was considered the appropriate colour for baby boys and blue was the colour for baby girls

In 2017, a Christian couple pull their 6yo son out of a primary school because his classmate is transgender citing their “traditional beliefs”  IMPORTANT NOTE: Last source is transphobic and from a pro-life website that attempts to defend the dumb ass couple. Feel free to ignore it if you prefer, but it was included for the sake of accuracy. 

Reblogging because verifiable sources make every information 70% better. Thanks for the addition!