The first week of college has come and gone, and the semester is officially underway. Now it's time for another semester full of all of our favorite things. Sometimes it can all be a bit overwhelming but have no fear, the cast of Friends can relate to all our struggles.
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EntertainmentJan 23, 2017
College As Told By The Cast Of Friends
"Welcome to the real world. It sucks. You’re gonna love it!"
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Entertainment
Going Back to IUP after Winter Break as told by Drake
It's Been a Long Winter Break
11h
753
Hypetrak
1. Nails done hair done everything did / Oh you fancy huh
Strut GIFfrom Drake GIFs
You're pretty much feeling yourself. New haircut, clothes, shoes, everything. New year, new you, right? You're ready for this semester to kick off.
2. They just spent like two or three weeks out the country /Them boys up to something they just not just bluffing
Forget two or three weeks, it feels like you've been gone forever and you're ready to get into some trouble with your crew.
3. I know way too many people here right now that I didn't know last year / Who the f*ck are y'all?
You've been so isolated at home that you forgot you actually have a lot of friends at IUP. Yet when you go out you still manage to see a million people you've never seen. How this is possible after so many semesters at IUP I’ll never know.
4. No new friends
Your squad is solid.
5. I got the drink in me goin' back to back
SYLLABUS WEEK!
6. If I ain't the greatest then I'm headed for it
Drake GIFfrom Drake GIFs
Syllabus week dies and once the semester starts to kick in you slowly realize how much work you have to do, but you’re ready to go and put the work in. You feel like after you’ve had a break full of rest you can put your full effort in. This is about to be your best semester yet, you hope.
7. Everything's adding up, you've been through hell and back
You know it’s going to be a rough semester trying to accomplish all of your goals.
8. Drinking every night because we drink to my accomplishments
That’s not to say some good won’t come out of your hard work this semester and you plan to celebrate your successes. Every. Last. One.
9. I was runnin' through the 6 with my woes
And through the ups and the downs you’re glad to be back with your woes to make it through it all.
10. So just hold on we're going home
We’ll be back soon enough.
11. Man what a time to be alive
I love you, IUP.
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Politics and Activism
7 Ways to Make Your Language More Transgender and Nonbinary Inclusive
Making the world safer through language.
12h
2892
With more people becoming aware of transgender and non-binary people, there have been a lot of questions circulating online and elsewhere about how to be more inclusive. Language is very important in making a space safer for trans and non-binary individuals. With language, there is an established and built-in measure of whether a place could be safe or unsafe. If the wrong language is used, the place is unsafe and shows a lack of education on trans and non-binary issues. With the right language and education, there can be more safe spaces for trans and non-binary people to exist without feeling the need to hide their identities or feel threatened for merely existing.
1. Use singular they for people whose pronouns you don't know, people who use those pronouns, and stop using him/her.
One of the most common, and often cluttered, phrases I hear when people try to talk about a person whose gender is unknown is he/she, him/her, (s)he. This is not only clunky and annoying to say, but ignores the fact that not everyone uses those pronouns or identifies as a man or a woman. When you say he/she you're really forgetting part of the population and making a lot of assumptions about people you don't know. This also goes for assuming a stranger's gender -- how someone presents isn't an indication of the gender they are or the pronouns they use. By assuming, you're misgendering someone before you even know them, when it is totally easy to use them, where you are assuming nothing. Singular they has been in use for hundreds of years. Using it will declutter language and create an environment in the world that allows for transgender and non-binary people to not be misgendered.
Source: genderqueerid.com
2. Stop using the words "opposite sex" or "both sexes" or "opposite gender" or "both genders".
Not only is this language erasing of transgender people outside the binary, but it is also erasing intersex people. The idea of the opposite of gender or sex, first of all, makes no sense. There is no opposite when it comes to biology, and since there are more than two sexes and more than two genders, there can be no opposite and no both (both implies two). Replace this language with all sexes or all genders and just get rid of the idea of opposite gender or sex from your mind and vocabulary entirely.
3. Ask people's pronouns when you meet them.
In order to help create a safer environment for trans and non-binary people, asking for pronouns and educating others on why you're asking is an important step. This allows the person to give you the pronouns they want you to use and stops you from assuming their gender, misgendering them and making them uncomfortable and hurt. This is something that is good to normalize is every conversation, not just in LGBTQIA+ spaces or in spaces that you suspect trans and non-binary people might be. Trans and non-binary people are everywhere and the more common asking about pronouns becomes, the less people will be misgendered.
4. Use the word cisgender.
The word cisgender means that you identify with the gender you are assigned at birth. Basically, not transgender or non-binary. Using the word cisgender helps stop the idea that being trans or non-binary is 'abnormal' and that cisgender is the norm. It is a term that has existed for a long time. Using the term cisgender also, as the picture above says, helps to maintain that all gender experiences are valid, and all right rather than abnormal.
5. Stop saying "born a boy/girl" about a transgender or non-binary person.
I can't stress how annoying and upsetting this phrasing is and I hear it all the time by people who claim to be allies and people who are completely ignorant. No one is 'born' anything. Your gender and sex assignment are things that are given to you when you are born. This also is essentially outing trans and non-binary people to people who they don't know, misgenders them, and continues to hold up cis-sexist and transphobic ideas that one is born a gender and that their gender is innate and unchanging. It provides people with unnecessary and personal information about someone's genitals (since that is really what someone is saying when saying born a boy/girl). If someone is saying this, they are telling you the make up of someone's genitals, which is completely unnecessary and invasive. You don't need to mention what someone was assigned at birth.
Source: flavorwire.com
6. Stop using the term 'preferred pronouns'.
While the term is better than not asking at all, it still really isn't a good term. The word preferred implies that these pronouns are wanted, but optional when that is not the case. My pronouns and other transgender people and non-binary people's pronouns are not optional; they are absolutely required. If you want to ask for someone's pronouns just ask 'what pronouns do you use?'. The word preferred isn't needed because it isn't preferred, it's required.
Source: nytimes.com
7. Stop using a transgender or non-binary person's dead name.
The term dead name means someone's name before they changed it (if they changed it). You have no right to use or know that name. It isn't a name the person uses anymore and to use it is disrespectful and violent. Saying things like 'Before Doug was Doug he went by ____" is not okay. Not only does it out someone as transgender or non-binary, it gives someone very personal and unnecessary information. Having a dead name used is hurtful and makes me instantly not trust someone. Do not ask for someone's dead name: there is no need for you to know it; it is not their name. Before you say something like the above example, think about why you're saying it. Is that really relevant to the conversation? Why do you feel the need to share this incredibly personal information that you have no right to share? Plain and simple: don't use someone's dead name. It's disrespectful and cruel.
While this list is only a basic introduction to improving language and making spaces safer, there are plenty more ways and articles that can provide more information and education. Learning and unlearning is a process that is incredibly important to making spaces safer for trans and non-binary people.
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Entertainment
What It’s Like To Be A Strong Woman, As Told By Blair Waldorf
Queen B sums it up for us.
12h
971
Stop Hollywood
For those of you who have watched "Gossip Girl" before (and maybe more than just once), you know how important of a character Blair Waldorf is. Without Blair, the show doesn’t have any substance, scheme, or drama. Although the beginning of the show started off with Blair’s best friend Serena returning from boarding school, there just simply is no plot without Blair. With that being said, Blair’s presence in the show in much more complex than that. Her independent and go-getter ways have set an example for "Gossip Girl" fans since the show started and has not ended even years after the show ended. Blair never needed another person to define who she was and she certainly didn’t need a man to do that for her. When she envisioned a goal, she sought after it, and took it. This is why Blair’s demeanor encompasses strong women like her.
“Destiny is for losers. It’s just a stupid excuse to wait for things to happen instead of making them happen.”
Things don’t happen out of pure coincidence. You set yourself up for everything that comes and goes from your life. Just like Blair, knowing that you have the power to control your own life and future makes you unstoppable.
“If you really want something you don’t stop for anyone or anything until you get it.”
Any strong woman knows that if she wants something she cannot rely on any other person but herself. Having a mind like Blair’s means that if there is something you want to achieve, then you will have no problem getting it on your own and without letting roadblocks get in the way.
“You can’t make people love you, but you can make them fear you.”
Love is complicated. Only we get to decide whom we love and we cannot force another person to love us if they truly do not. Having a strong head on your shoulders and being able to accept this is one thing, but knowing that you can have other influences on people makes you not only strong, but powerful.
“You need to be cool to be queen. Anne Boleyn thought only with her heart and she got her head chopped off.”
What Blair is trying to say here is that you can’t just “think” with your heart. You need to have a mind before you can let your feelings get the best of you. Being an independent woman comes with distinguishing when to use your brain and when to follow your heart.
“Once men have tasted caviar, it baffles me how they settle for catfish.”
When it comes to men, Blair has never been but brutally honest. Being a strong woman means knowing and acknowledging your worth.
“They say Rome wasn’t built in a day. And yet what a difference a day makes.”
Each day we are given a new chance to start fresh. As days build up we see changes and improvements within ourselves. As Blair suggests, each day counts.
"Ladies you can give your tiny brains a rest. Once again the world has proven that anything you can do, I can do better."
Confidence is one of Blair’s strong suits. She isn’t afraid to admit who she is, and that’s something that speaks volumes about a person. She’s as strong as she is because she can tell people who she is before they get a chance to make their own opinion of her.
Some say that Blair Waldorf can come off as a bitch. I find that to be the case with most women who assert their presence and have a strong sense of self such as Blair. Just because a woman knows what she wants and sets no limitations for herself does not mean that she’s a bitch. It means that she is a strong, beautiful, and confident individual. More women should aspire to be like Blair Waldorf. Her life lessons and traits are what sets her aside from others.
All hail the real Queen B.
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Entertainment
20 Feelings Anyone Who Loves To Sing Has
Sometimes, we just can't help the feelings we have
22h
1027
Cambio
Singing is something I do all day, every day. It doesn't matter where I am or who's around. If I feel like singing, I'm going to. It's probably annoying sometimes, but I don't care -- I love to sing! If I'm not singing, I'm probably humming, sometimes without even realizing it. So as someone who loves to sing, these are some of the feelings and thoughts I have probably almost every day.
1. Wow. My voice sounds amazing with this song.
2. Okay, if you can't sing, don't do it.
3. But wait, I don't think I can be friends with someone who isn't going to jam out in the car with me.
4. Dance part in the car! Even when I'm alone. Because every song is my favorite.
5. Stop light. Act calm. Be cool.
6. Yes! Green light! Back at it!
7. I don't know this song, but I'm going to sing along anyway.
8. Why am I not famous yet?
9. Being next to someone who can't sing so you feel good about yourself because you rock!
10. OK, I'm so good. I need to sing louder so I can help these people out.
11. My voice doesn't reach some of those notes, maybe I should sit this one out.
Who am I kidding? I'll just switch octaves and harmonize randomly throughout the song.
12. Randomly bursting out in song and getting weird looks because of it.
13. God, thank you so much for giving me a good voice.
14. Man, I feel bad for people who can't sing.
15. Was I just humming? Did they hear me?
16. Having dance moves to go along with most songs.
17. Not being able to stop yourself at correcting people when they mess up.
18. Maybe I should post myself singing.
19. Nah, can't do it. Dumb idea.
20. Having my own personal concert in the shower. Every single time.
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Student Life
11 Small Victories That Mean A Lot To College Students
Normal people wouldn't understand
14 January
1096
Degrassi.Wikia
Being a college student is one of the most difficult task known to man. Being able to balance your school life, work life and even a social life is a task of greatness. Here's an ode to some of the small victories that mean a lot to us college students.
1. Having time to nap between classes or at all.
2. Waking up 10 minutes before your class starts and making it there in time.
3. Making it to class in general
4. Only having to hit the snooze button three times.
5. When you didn't do the homework and the teacher decides not to collect it for that day.
6. Getting that "I'm sorry, but class is cancelled" email.
7. Finding a quiet seat in the library.
8. Actually enjoying a class and understanding all of the material.
9. Having a friend to eat lunch with.
10. Finishing an assignment before the due date.
11. When there is free food on campus.
Another small victory in the eyes of college students would be just being a college student in the first place. College is not easy and it's definitely not something that everyone can do. So give yourself a pat on the back for at least trying, not everyone makes it this far. While it may be a time of sleepless nights and never ending stress, college is one of the most amazing experiences ever! Some of these little victories are the reasons why we don't give up so let's always remember to be thankful for the little things.
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