as i have explained before i like using songs and videos in my infant school english lessons and i stg free youtube kids song videos are like descending through the pits of hell

this looks like family guy animation with craft eyes pasted on
also this did not need to be this fucking long

the baby looks like tony abbot

just damn

what is perspective
also i am ejoying imagining that whoever designed this character was just like what kind of character would appeal to children ah yes a greying generic man
also why the fuck does it get faster as it introduces more complicated body parts thats so unhelpful

this tempo is what i need but these kids clearly did not wear sunscreen to this beach
also why does one develop south park eyes sometimes and have dot eyes at other times
oh fuck the way that preview at the end for heads shoulders knees and toes ends made me break my staffroom pokerface fuck

why did this need a plot
it raises so many more questions
such as why they in dystopian egg purgatory
and what is the power of dance

this is cute but too distracting
again why does the hokey pokey need a b plot

this is pretty good apart from the demonic robot background vocals slightly off from the main singer like srsly make sure u got ur hokey pokey lyrics down guys

i didit, i finall reachted hell

another one?????? this isnt even the hokjey pokgued

If we are honest with ourselves, we have long known that masculinity kills men, in ways both myriad and measurable. While social constructions of femininity demand that women be thin, beautiful, accommodating, and some unattainable balance of virginal and fuckable, social constructions of masculinity demand that men constantly prove and re-prove the very fact that they are, well, men.

Both ideas are poisonous and potentially destructive, but statistically speaking, the number of addicted and afflicted men and their comparatively shorter lifespans proves masculinity is actually the more effective killer, getting the job done faster and in greater numbers. Masculinity’s death tolls are attributed to its more specific manifestations: alcoholism, workaholism and violence. Even when it does not literally kill, it causes a sort of spiritual death, leaving many men traumatized, dissociated and often unknowingly depressed. (These issues are heightened by race, class, sexuality and other marginalizing factors, but here let’s focus on early childhood and adolescent socialization overall.) To quote poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning, “tis not in death that men die most.” And for many men, the process begins long before manhood.

The emotionally damaging “masculinization” of boys starts even before boyhood, in infancy. Psychologist Terry Real, in his 1998 book I Don’t Want to Talk About It: Overcoming the Secret Legacy of Male Depression, highlights numerous studies which find that parents often unconsciously begin projecting a kind of innate “manliness”—and thus, a diminished need for comfort, protection and affection—onto baby boys as young as newborns. This, despite the fact that gendered behaviors are absent in babies; male infants actually behave in ways our society defines as “feminine.” As Real explains, “[l]ittle boys and little girls start off… equally emotional, expressive, and dependent, equally desirous of physical affection. At the youngest ages, both boys and girls are more like a stereotypical girl. If any differences exist, little boys are, in fact, slightly more sensitive and expressive than little girls. They cry more easily, seem more easily frustrated, appear more upset when a caregiver leaves the room.”

Yet both mothers and fathers imagine inherent sex-related differences between baby girls and boys. Even when researchers controlled for babies’ “weight, length, alertness, and strength,” parents overwhelmingly reported that baby girls were more delicate and “softer” than baby boys; they imagined baby boys to be bigger and generally “stronger.” When a group of 204 adults was shown video of the same baby crying and given differing information about the baby’s sex, they judged the “female” baby to be scared, while the “male” baby was described as “angry.”

Intuitively, these differences in perception create correlating differences in the kind of parental caregiving newborn boys receive. In the words of the researchers themselves, “it would seem reasonable to assume that a child who is thought to be afraid is held and cuddled more than a child who is thought to be angry.” That theory is bolstered by other studies Real cites, which consistently find that “from the moment of birth, boys are spoken to less than girls, comforted less, nurtured less.” To put it bluntly, we begin emotionally shortchanging boys right out of the gate, at the most vulnerable point in their lives.

Kali Holloway – Masculinity Is Killing Men: The Roots of Men and Trauma
(via misandry-mermaid)

extreme gendering produces miserable humans who are extremely vulnerable to the exploitative demands of a consumerist society. women are free to develop emotional depth and supportive webs of communication, but find their agency challenged at every turn. men have agency, but their identity as men— and hence as a person entitled to a man’s rights— is constantly challenged. further, each gender is pitted against the other and defined largely in opposition. this produces a society of people who need more than they’re getting but have enormous trouble conceptualizing what that might be, much less demanding it.