LORENA ALEXIS

Brazillian- multicultural-24-California state of mind

Longboarder*Free spirit*Adventure seeker*Gluten free & Organic food devourer

**Currently living and working abroad in Slovakia **

Just be yourself and fuck the world's opinion!
  • “Things I tell myself when I feel as though the world is too big for me” (via hairspr4y)

    (via taurus-princess)

  • "Stop acting
    so fucking wounded.
    The only person
    that can pick you up,
    push back your shoulders,
    wipe the tears,
    mend the broken bones
    and get you out of your slump
    is you.
    Now go and live,
    there is so much to be
    happy about."
  • "One evening, an old Cherokee tells his grandson that inside all people, a battle goes on between two wolves. One wolf is negativity: anger, sadness, stress, contempt, disgust, fear, embarrassment, guilt, shame, and hate. The other is positivity: joy, gratitude, serenity, interest, hope, pride, amusement, inspiration, awe, and above all, love.
    The grandson thinks about this for a minute, then asks his grandfather, “Well, which wolf wins?”
    The grandfather replies, “The one you feed.”"
  • thepeoplesrecord:

    Gather, 2014
    By Alice Walker

    It is still hard to believe
    that millions of us saw Eric Garner die.
    He died with what looked like a half dozen
    heavily clad
    policemen
    standing on his body, twisting and crushing
    him
    especially his head
    and neck.
    He was a big man, too.  They must have felt
    like clumsy midgets
    as they dragged him down.

    Watching the video,
    I was reminded of the first lynching
    I, quite unintentionally, learned about:
    it happened in my tiny lumber mill 
    town before the cows were brought in
    and young white girls
    on ornate floats
    became dairy queens.
    A big man too,
    whom my parents knew,
    he was attacked also by a mob
    of white men (in white robes and hoods)
    and battered to death
    by their two by fours.

    I must have been a toddler
    overhearing my parents talk
    and mystified by pieces of something
    called “two by fours.”

    Later, building a house, 
    i would encounter the weight,
    the heaviness, of this varying length
    of wood, and begin to understand.

    What is the hatred
    of the big black man
    or the small black man
    or the medium sized
    black man
    the brown man
    or the red man
    in all his sizes
    that drives the white lynch mob
    mentality?

    I always thought it was envy:
    of the sheer courage to survive
    and ceaselessly resist conformity
    enough to sing and dance
    or orate, or say in so many outlandish
    ways:
    You’re not the boss
    of me!
    Think how many black men
    said that: “Cracker,* you’re not the boss
    of me;” 
    even enslaved.  Think of how
    the legal lynch mob 
    so long ago
    tore Nat Turner’s body
    in quarters
    skinned him 

    and made “money purses”
    from his “hide.”

    Who are these beings?

    Now we are beginning to ask 
    the crucial question.

    If it is natural to be black
    and red or brown
    and if it is beautiful to resist
    oppression
    and if it is gorgeous to be of color
    and walking around free,
    then where does the problem
    lie?

    Who are these people
    that kill our children in the night?
    Murder our brothers in broad daylight?
    Refuse to see themselves in us
    as we have strained, over centuries, 
    to see ourselves in them?
    Perhaps we are more different
    than we thought.
    And does this scare us?
    And what of, for instance,
    those among us
    who collude?

    Gather.
    Come see what stillness
    lies now
    in the people’s broken
    hearts.

    It is the quiet force of comprehension,
    of realization
    of the meaning
    of our ancient

    and perfect
    contrariness;
    of what must now be understood
    and done to honor
    and cherish
    ourselves:
    no matter who
    today’s “bosses”
    may be.

    Our passion
    and love for ourselves
    that must at last
    unite
    and free us.  As we put our sacrificed
    beloveds
    to rest in our profound
    and ample caring:
    broad,
    ever moving,
    and holy,
    as the sea.

  • Dr Vernon Coleman (via alternative-health)
  • "My own personal view is that vaccines are unsafe and worthless. I will not allow myself to be vaccinated again. …..The bottom line is that infectious diseases are least likely to affect (and to kill) those who have healthy immune systems. I no longer believe that vaccines have any role to play in the protection of the community or the individual. Vaccines may be profitable but, in my view, they are neither safe nor effective. I prefer to put my trust in building up my immune system."
  • "be you. whoever that is. your purest truth. be a blinding anomaly."
  • mapsontheweb:

    Linguistic map of Czechoslovakia, 1930

    (Source: commons.wikimedia.org, via judah-lions-son)

  • "Renew, release, let go. Yesterday’s gone. There’s nothing you can do to bring it back. You can’t “should’ve” done something. You can only DO something. Renew yourself. Release that attachment. Today is a new day!"
  • Leo Buscaglia (via psych-facts)

    (via psych-facts)

  • "Don’t hold on to anger, hurt or pain. They steal your energy and keep you from love."