Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 27 2008 | metal, fetish, blog, shoes, feet, art, sculptureShareViewed: 10 Times
Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - May 13 2008 | blog, sex work, sex, work
Deepthroated:Sex Workers Blog
Quoted: TODAY! Meditation remembrance for the DC Madame…and keeping it together.
Posted on May 12, 2008
Hey lovers,
Deborah Jeane Palfrey. I can’t stop thinking about her. Her death cut me deeper than I ever could have imagined.
Her death has been heavy on the hearts of many a sex worker, indicative as it is of this juggernaut of a system that could grind us into nothing if we get caught up. For me, I think her death translates into real fear. A fear that is about fighting the good fight, and still going down. If we manage to survive and thrive in a crazy industry; if we live ethically as sex workers and use all our faculties to operate our businesses and maintain what we believe is right, we still might end up dead.ShareViewed: 2 Times
Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 08 2008 | blogShareViewed: 3 Times
Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 31 2007 | blog, shoes, women, shopping, obsession
Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 30 2007 | blog, primates
Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 30 2007 | archive, collection, congenital anomaly, marketing, history, kayfabe, carney, sideshow, freaks, blogMedusa Van Allen was nothing like the mythical Medusa, though she was equally as strange. Born in Ohio on March 19, 1908, the bones in Medusa’s body never grew, with the exception of her head. Because of her undeveloped bones, Medusa could never sit or stand. She could only lay flat. Doctors could do nothing for her bizarre condition.
As an adult, Medusa’s head was a normal size, yet her body remained like that of a baby. With the help of a private tutor her brain also reached an adult level. She exhibited herself as one of Ripley’s human oddities in the 1930s. In her pamphlet pitched at shows, Medusa said, “I enjoy life in much the same way as any normal person, and find life filled with really worthwhile pleasures.”Billed as the “Thinnest Man in the World,” Harry V. Lewis stood 5 feet, 7 1/2 inches and weighed 80 pounds. He didn’t always hold such a title. Born in 1895 in Leon, Iowa, Lewis was a normal boy until the age of 12. That was when he began to notice .....
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Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 25 2007 | science, genome, DNA, blogShareViewed: 2 Times
Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 04 2007 | blog, clothing, fashionShareViewed: 7 Times
Wournos | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 28 2007 | blog, automata, art, design, craft"The Automata / Automaton Blog
The Blog for Makers and Collectors of Mechanical Automata and Mechanical Toys"ShareViewed: 4 Times





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