I'm Scarlett, I'm a hufflepuff and second in command of the smuggling ship serenity. I briefly worked at the Umbrella Corp but flew the nest to catch a job at initech. One day I hope to be Patrician to help clean up the hellish streets of Sunnydale like the good mayor did before me.

If someone counters that, marry me.

By the by, I am british and I am loving it.
projectunbreakable:






Grace, I wanted to write to tell you how grateful I am for the opportunity to participate in Project Unbreakable and talk with you and Yvonne and everyone on your crew who’s helping you with this project. That day, I focused on “What can I give back about my experiences being raped, to this community of men and women, and this outpouring of reality that has helped me come to terms with being a survivor of sexual abuse. A survivor. Not a victim.” There are a lot of things I didn’t say, that I couldn’t say at the time about what my abuser would tell me that was all designed and aimed at normalizing the sexual abuse. Like I’d asked for it. Like he was doing me a favor. Always framed in a way that, even though I was begging for the abuse to stop, I felt ashamed and responsible, because at 14, I could never find a form of “No,” that he would listen to. “I like the idea that when you’re old enough to date, you’ll be ahead of all the boys.” “I am a sex god.” “You’re a natural at this.” “I wish you visited more often… I don’t recognize your clothes anymore.” Instead of focusing on my abuser, I focused on how my family responded to the abuse, because so much of the fear of the stigma of sexual abuse is related to what others will say when you tell them you were raped. And that fear and shame is what keeps survivors from disclosing. The amazing thing about Project Unbreakable is you and everyone you photograph are creating a community where it’s safe to disclose — not just to safe friends, but disclose to our culture at large. Because you are giving survivors a forum to speak and creating this compendium of the uncomfortable reality of abuse, you are also giving everyone else a glimpse into the fundamental nature of sexual abuse and the the overwhelming prevalence of rape in our culture. The national dialog about rape and what the average person knows about the kind of people rape, or what rape even looks like, is abysmal — and I think it’s abysmal because of honest ignorance. No one enjoys difficult topics, so they turn a blind eye. But one photograph at a time, one survivor at a time, Project Unbreakable is changing that. The “Old Way” built this wall of silence and stigma around sexual abuse, so every survivor suffered alone. Project Unbreakable is changing that. You’re bringing us together. When I first saw Project Unbreakable, my stomach dropped and I thought, “Oh God, I’m not the only one.” And, months later, when I picked up a marker to expose what I’d been through, it hurt so much that I thought I might die. But I survived. And since then, for the first time in 16 years, I feel entirely like myself.  Nothing anyone says to me, ever again, can ever take that away. Thank you so much. Please take care.
—
Photographed in Boston, MA on April 25th.
—
Not sure what Project Unbreakable is? Click here.
Want to be a part of Project Unbreakable? Email us at projectunbreakable@gmail.com
—
Find us on Facebook & Twitter
View submissions here

projectunbreakable:

Grace,

I wanted to write to tell you how grateful I am for the opportunity to
participate in Project Unbreakable and talk with you and Yvonne and
everyone on your crew who’s helping you with this project.

That day, I focused on “What can I give back about my experiences
being raped, to this community of men and women, and this outpouring
of reality that has helped me come to terms with being a survivor of
sexual abuse. A survivor. Not a victim.”

There are a lot of things I didn’t say, that I couldn’t say at the
time about what my abuser would tell me that was all designed and
aimed at normalizing the sexual abuse. Like I’d asked for it. Like he
was doing me a favor. Always framed in a way that, even though I was
begging for the abuse to stop, I felt ashamed and responsible, because
at 14, I could never find a form of “No,” that he would listen to.

“I like the idea that when you’re old enough to date, you’ll be ahead
of all the boys.”

“I am a sex god.”

“You’re a natural at this.”

“I wish you visited more often… I don’t recognize your clothes anymore.”

Instead of focusing on my abuser, I focused on how my family responded
to the abuse, because so much of the fear of the stigma of sexual
abuse is related to what others will say when you tell them you were
raped. And that fear and shame is what keeps survivors from
disclosing. The amazing thing about Project Unbreakable is you and
everyone you photograph are creating a community where it’s safe to
disclose — not just to safe friends, but disclose to our culture at
large. Because you are giving survivors a forum to speak and creating
this compendium of the uncomfortable reality of abuse, you are also
giving everyone else a glimpse into the fundamental nature of sexual
abuse and the the overwhelming prevalence of rape in our culture. The
national dialog about rape and what the average person knows about the
kind of people rape, or what rape even looks like, is abysmal — and I
think it’s abysmal because of honest ignorance. No one enjoys
difficult topics, so they turn a blind eye. But one photograph at a
time, one survivor at a time, Project Unbreakable is changing that.
The “Old Way” built this wall of silence and stigma around sexual
abuse, so every survivor suffered alone. Project Unbreakable is
changing that. You’re bringing us together.

When I first saw Project Unbreakable, my stomach dropped and I
thought, “Oh God, I’m not the only one.” And, months later, when I
picked up a marker to expose what I’d been through, it hurt so much
that I thought I might die. But I survived. And since then, for the
first time in 16 years, I feel entirely like myself.  Nothing anyone
says to me, ever again, can ever take that away.

Thank you so much.

Please take care.

Photographed in Boston, MA on April 25th.

Not sure what Project Unbreakable is? Click here.

Want to be a part of Project Unbreakable? Email us at projectunbreakable@gmail.com

Find us on Facebook & Twitter

View submissions here

Notes
111
Posted
21 hours ago

I want to get a table like the one in forest of the dead and draw the library world on it a la the doctor.

that would be ultimately the coolest thing i would ever own.

Posted
1 day ago

eddplant:

Was he in character or is he just

amazing

no wait don’t answer that

i know

(Source: loveatomb)

Notes
30716
Posted
1 day ago
xmy-wonderland:

Soft Grunge/Vintage ☯

ohmotherfucker i want my hair this colour.

xmy-wonderland:

Soft Grunge/Vintage

ohmotherfucker i want my hair this colour.

(Source: upsiz3d, via ohna-nasuckmydick)

Notes
5891
Posted
1 day ago
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

hitsof80s:

A Little Respect - Erasure - 1988

Videoclip

more

(via kanyelujah)

Notes
33
Posted
2 days ago
heygirlsaygirl:

I would get along with DJ’s dad

heygirlsaygirl:

I would get along with DJ’s dad

(via mileyhighrus)

Notes
8538
Posted
3 days ago