Pasithee
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My names is Charlotte; I live in Australia and watch too many documentaries. I post the images I'm looking at/thinking about here.
PIZZA. What if every post from here on was just an image with one word in caps.

PIZZA. What if every post from here on was just an image with one word in caps.

pasithee:

I like the way this photo turned out. I did not take it but it is of me. It was a lucky one out of the many we took that day.
Also: Oh fine then.

I’m surprised by how many notes this has now… Also, hello new followers! I hope you enjoy queer vegetarians talking about their feelings.

pasithee:

I like the way this photo turned out. I did not take it but it is of me. It was a lucky one out of the many we took that day.

Also: Oh fine then.

I’m surprised by how many notes this has now… Also, hello new followers! I hope you enjoy queer vegetarians talking about their feelings.

I made this! This dress. It isn’t saying much as it’s essentially a glorified sack with three holes. But still.
I sold a painting yesterday. The first time I sold something to someone I didn’t know personally. I recognized her when I met her, though, as she’d asked me about the same painting at the opening. “Are you Charlotte?” she asked me. She said my last name. I nodded. She asked me other questions, mostly about the other people participating in the show. I’m not used to being sought out by people I don’t know. I had my photo taken twice: once in a group and then by myself. I realised I was holding my beer close to my throat, a defensive gesture.
After the opening T and I went down a few blocks and ate panipuris and saag paneer. It felt indulgent; the luxury of affording not to cook. I tucked one of my legs under me in the booth seat. It was late. The plates were made of metal and spun each time we touched them. We’d both taken a bottle of beer from the opening, the condensation pearling on the necks of them. “I feel fraudulent,” I said to him, ripping off a piece of flatbread. “As though I don’t deserve to have my paintings hung there,”. He gave me an incredulous look and shook his head but he didn’t reply for a while, chewing. “That’s normal,” he said eventually. “That happens,”.
I told myself I should spend the sale money on something sensible, but I rather promptly bought a second pair of Doc Martens instead.

I made this! This dress. It isn’t saying much as it’s essentially a glorified sack with three holes. But still.

I sold a painting yesterday. The first time I sold something to someone I didn’t know personally. I recognized her when I met her, though, as she’d asked me about the same painting at the opening. “Are you Charlotte?” she asked me. She said my last name. I nodded. She asked me other questions, mostly about the other people participating in the show. I’m not used to being sought out by people I don’t know. I had my photo taken twice: once in a group and then by myself. I realised I was holding my beer close to my throat, a defensive gesture.

After the opening T and I went down a few blocks and ate panipuris and saag paneer. It felt indulgent; the luxury of affording not to cook. I tucked one of my legs under me in the booth seat. It was late. The plates were made of metal and spun each time we touched them. We’d both taken a bottle of beer from the opening, the condensation pearling on the necks of them. “I feel fraudulent,” I said to him, ripping off a piece of flatbread. “As though I don’t deserve to have my paintings hung there,”. He gave me an incredulous look and shook his head but he didn’t reply for a while, chewing. “That’s normal,” he said eventually. “That happens,”.

I told myself I should spend the sale money on something sensible, but I rather promptly bought a second pair of Doc Martens instead.

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