D
Trill.

Trill.

(Source: karysspace, via bitchiethoughts)

Beyonce with black hair…

Beyonce with black hair…

(via bitchiethoughts)

That’s hot

That’s hot

(Source: rihannathings, via elegantlytasteless)

megustamemes:

First World Problems


H
megustamemes:

(Via MeGustaMemes: Purely funny memes)


Lol!

megustamemes:

Lol!

(Source: mayavonfabulous, via bitchiethoughts)

blackandkillingit:

18-15n-77-30w:

thehiddencollectionof:

Elizabeth Almeida

http://18-15n-77-30w.tumblr.com/

Black Girls Killing It Shop BGKI NOW
shesillnotsick:

adrugcalledfashion:

This is one bad Barbie even though she got on a pastry shirt lol

lmmfao!^^


She has a twist out!!!!

shesillnotsick:

adrugcalledfashion:

This is one bad Barbie even though she got on a pastry shirt lol

lmmfao!^^

She has a twist out!!!!

(via elegantlytasteless)

For starters, black women make up only one percent of U.S. corporate officers, according to a 2011 survey conducted by the League of Black Women. This is despite the fact that 75 percent of corporate executives believe that having minorities in senior-level positions enables innovation and better serves a diverse customer base, the same survey found.

We are a different kind of one-percenter. We are the one percent who work hard and put in the overtime without getting promoted. We are the one percent that is the other—the unseen.

In Fortune 500 companies, black women don’t fare much better, holding 1.9 percent of board seats, compared with 12.7 percent for white women, according to a study called Missing Pieces: Women and Minorities on Fortune 500 Boards, conducted by by the Alliance for Board Diversity, a collaboration of five organizations including Catalyst and others.

Women of Color in america have grown up within a symphony of anger, at being silenced, at being unchosen, at knowing that when we survive, it is in spite of a world that takes for granted our lack of humanness, and which hates our very existence outside of its service. And i say symphony rather than cacophony because we have had to learn to orchestrate those furies so that they do not tear us apart. We have had to learn to move through them and use them for strength and force and insight within our daily lives. Those of us who did not learn this difficult lesson did not survive. And part of my anger is always libation for my fallen sisters.

Audre Lorde, “The Uses of Anger: Women Responding to Racism” (via so-treu)

(via elegantlytasteless)

Money isn’t everything.

staypozitive:

  • it can buy a bed, but not sleep
  • it can buy a clock, but not time
  • it can buy a book, but not knowledge
  • it can buy a position, but not respect
  • it can buy medicine, but not health
  • it can buy blood, but not life
  • it can buy sex, but not love

(via theresathuginmylife)