must've stabbed her.


Any questions?Shoot me an email!

Brandy, 22, post-apocalyptic Michigan, insurance verifier by day, screenwriter by night.


I'm a ridiculously lucky and enthusiastic fat lady with nonstop ideas and really great hair. Life is really starting to go my way, and I'm working towards my big goal of being paid to make fantastically bloody/punny grindhouse films and help others do the same. I like bright colors, puns, popcorn, and lipstick.

The various goodies you'll find here include a rather significant amount of gore, horror and zombies; fat acceptance posts, Corgis!; anything to do with Bruce Campbell; makeup and nails I like; Britney Spears; and good old fashioned reblogs of anything that amuses or inspires me.

At some point in your adult life, you’ve probably walked into a party and felt a frisson of relief upon discovering at least one woman there who was fatter, uglier, and/or dressed more inappropriately than you. We sure have. But if you want to have any hope of making peace with your own body, you need to knock that shit off.

We’re not even telling you to stop just because it’s nasty, petty, and beneath you to judge other women so harshly; it is, but because you’re not a saint, and neither are we. We’re telling you to stop because it’s actually in your own self-interest to stop being such a bitch. ‘Cause you know what happens when you quit saying that crap about other women? You magically stop saying it about yourself so much, too.

Judging other women negatively creates a constant stream of nasty thoughts in your head. It is inevitable that you will end up applying those same standards to yourself. We think we’re building ourselves up when we do this but, really, we’re just tearing other people down to our level. And we hate to go all Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood on you, but tearing other people down isn’t really productive. It leaves you in the same place you started, which is full of loathing for your own body.

http://www.allenandunwin.com/default.aspx?page=94&book=9781741758498 (via natalie)

If I was Oprah I would buy 10 billion copies of this book (Screw Inner Beauty/ Lessons from the Fatosphere) and distribute them everywhere.

(via definatalie)

Wow, this is such an awesome reminder. Women are the harshest critics of themselves and each other and we need to remember that it (the judgement, the pressure, the self-hate, the imposed hate, etc) is a nasty spiral that won’t stop until we stop it.

(via ilikeprettyclothes)

This book forever

(via freestate)

  1. katerinariddle reblogged this from rachellephant
  2. amassofgaugesanddials reblogged this from if-our-worlds-collide
  3. if-our-worlds-collide reblogged this from stophatingyourbody
  4. acquire-ataraxia reblogged this from edna-musgraves
  5. katfishhh reblogged this from macgyvers-mistress
  6. macgyvers-mistress reblogged this from dsilza
  7. clankerskank reblogged this from stophatingyourbody
  8. jemsy reblogged this from idroppedmyglasses
  9. dsilza reblogged this from annitaaaaa
  10. annitaaaaa reblogged this from yellowcardigans
  11. lexiez reblogged this from yellowcardigans
  12. thepajmahal reblogged this from stophatingyourbody
  13. timeywimey-wibblywobbly reblogged this from stophatingyourbody
  14. mollierosie reblogged this from stophatingyourbody
  15. suprastarsara reblogged this from fearlessly-thin
  16. centraluncommons reblogged this from entrujiasm
  17. morgannicolecawley reblogged this from belle-grove
  18. balanceinlife reblogged this from fearlessly-thin
  19. madamdoesnothing reblogged this from viciouslysweetval
  20. unheartedx reblogged this from edna-musgraves
  21. mindlesslylovely reblogged this from rachellephant
  22. teresafoo reblogged this from stophatingyourbody
  23. quietkitsch reblogged this from stophatingyourbody
  24. keyox reblogged this from stophatingyourbody