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@llamamedio

Vi luz y entré. Busco una salida.

En el aire. Katılım Kasım 2021
82 Takip Edilen274 Takipçiler
DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@manchasbellas Ahora dilo en castúo y sin comas. Afirmas pomposamente que Extremadura es desconocida y lo haces mostrando tu ignorancia sobre el resto de España, ejem... A mí lo que más me gusta de Extremadura son los extremeños, buena gente.
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@uPDCR Ah, vale. Déjale disentir.
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CaraLargaJill
CaraLargaJill@uPDCR·
Puedo ser absurdamente banal, y aspiro serlo más.
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Sprinter Press Agency
Sprinter Press Agency@SprinterPress·
A good photographer is worth his weight in gold
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@oficial_resaca Ni idea de que hablas pero siempre a favor de los huevos fritos.
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Resaca oficial
Resaca oficial@oficial_resaca·
Propongo subir todos una foto de un huevo frito en solidaridad y apoyo por el linchamiento que de broma hemos hecho, pero que se ha ido de verdad y no es para tanto.
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Arii2
Arii2@ariiguay2·
Omg
The Husky@Mr_Husky1

In May 1860, she kissed her six children goodbye. She thought about the dinner she would cook later. She thought about the laundry. She thought about the quiet life of a mother in Illinois. She had no idea that when the front door clicked shut, it would stay locked for three long years. Her husband, Theophilus Packard, was a respected minister. To the neighbors, he was a man of God. But inside their home, he was a man who could not stand a wife who thought for herself. Elizabeth Packard liked to read. She liked to debate religion. She had her own opinions about life and faith. In the 19th century, for a woman to have a brain was considered a danger. Theophilus decided to end the argument once and for all. He didn’t need a crime. He didn't need a witness. In those days, the law in Illinois said a man could commit his wife to an insane asylum without any evidence or a public hearing. He simply had to say she was "disturbed." One morning, a group of men arrived at her home. They didn't listen to her logic. They didn't care about her tears. They dragged her away to the Jacksonville Insane Asylum. Elizabeth was 43 years old, perfectly sane, and suddenly a prisoner. When she entered the asylum, she expected to see people who needed medical help. Instead, she found a warehouse of "inconvenient" women. There were wives who had argued with their husbands about money. There were daughters who refused to marry men they didn't love. There were women who were simply too loud or too independent. "This is not a hospital," Elizabeth realized. "It is a cage for the unwanted." The doctors tried to break her spirit. They told her that if she just admitted her husband was right and she was wrong, she could go home. They wanted her to say she was crazy for wanting her own thoughts. Elizabeth looked them in the eye and said, "I cannot buy my liberty by a lie." She didn’t give up. Instead, she started to write. She hid scraps of paper in the linings of her clothes. She tucked notes under floorboards. She recorded every abuse, every scream in the night, and every story of the women around her. She became a secret journalist inside a living nightmare. After three years, she was finally released, but her husband locked her in a room at home. He planned to move her to another asylum in a different state. This time, Elizabeth’s friends helped her get a message to a judge. A trial was finally ordered to determine if she was actually insane. The courtroom was packed. Theophilus was confident. He brought "experts" to say that her religious doubts proved her mind was broken. But then, Elizabeth stood up. She didn't shout. She spoke with the calm power of the truth. She explained her beliefs. She showed the jury that having a different opinion is not a disease. The jury only needed seven minutes. They came back with a single word: Sane. Elizabeth walked out as a free woman, but she found that her husband had taken everything. He had sold their furniture, taken her money, and disappeared with their children. She was alone and penniless. Most people would have disappeared into the shadows. Elizabeth did the opposite. She spent the next forty years traveling the country. She stood before the legislature and demanded new laws. She said, "A woman's mind is her own, and the law must protect it." Because of her, states changed their laws. They made it illegal to lock a person away without a fair trial and a medical exam. She turned her private pain into a public shield for thousands of other women. She proved that even if you take away a woman’s home, her money, and her children, you can never truly take away her voice.

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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@ariiguay2 Eres alavesa. Vasca de llano. Una cosa más que sé.
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Arii2
Arii2@ariiguay2·
Llamo a mi padre me contesta de mala manera digo qué coño pasa y esto era lo que pasaba pf en fin
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
Soy cántabro pero para algunas cuestiones sigo siendo castellano. Por ejemplo: Te dije una vez que te amaba, si cambio de opinión te lo haré saber. No hay que andar preguntando.
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@anitaalfin Introduje el matiz del protagonismo personal, y sí, dijimos lo mismo.
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Anita Fin
Anita Fin@anitaalfin·
@llamamedio No creo que tu afirmación y la mía se excluyan. De hecho, estoy en buena medida de acuerdo con lo que dices.
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Anita Fin
Anita Fin@anitaalfin·
El confort auténtico no te lo da el colchón (real o figurado), sino las personas con las que lo compartes.
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@Sra_Cigarra Aventuré... Uno de mis malos hábitos.
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@BerlinNoir Eso me gusta poco. Hasta en las cosas obligatorias me gusta poner pasión. Finjo que mi vida merece ser vivida.
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Berlin Noir
Berlin Noir@BerlinNoir·
Amanecí entregado a lo comercial y rentable.
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@oficial_resaca Ahora cuando estás bebiendo se le dice estreñido? Yo ahora mismo bastante estreñido.
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Resaca oficial
Resaca oficial@oficial_resaca·
Estoy estreñida, qué crucero me recomendáis?
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@elenadesaa1999 Qué barbaridad. El mundo está necesitado de almas heridas. Reducir esos autores a una especie de autoayuda es lo más ridículo que he leído en mucho tiempo.
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Ele 🌻
Ele 🌻@elenadesaa1999·
No puedes herir a alguien que ha leído a Tolstói, Dostoievski, Kafka, Nietzsche, Kierkegaard y Camus por diversión. Su serotonina abandonó el chat hace años.
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@ariiguay2 Bendita quimioterapia, la más perfecta disculpa para escudar problemas del alma que el alma debe resolver.
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DíO
DíO@llamamedio·
@Sra_Cigarra Me da que una parte de ti está angustiada por un caso real difícil que te ha hecho dudar de ti misma. O no.
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Sra Cigarra
Sra Cigarra@Sra_Cigarra·
¿Que si el sueño introduce una paradoja interesante: la función terapéutica no desaparece porque exista duda interna? Quién sabe.
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