I thought it wouldn’t be possible for me to adore Neil Gaiman any more than I already do, but I was wrong. I just learned that he keeps bees. Have I told you how much I love bees? How much I hope to one day be an urban beekeeper? Le freaking swoon.

Dear Mr. Gaiman,

you’re so cool.

Sincerely,

Julia 

11 notes

The Real Katie West: Neil Gaiman, I love you, and I'm not wearing any clothes.

therealkatiewest:

If you think seeing a naked woman 
is a disappointment 
because what you had imagined was so much 
better than what was there, may I suggest looking at it in a new way.

Maybe instead of pondering
the tentacles and mouths beneath 
her clothes, 
you could ponder the bright things 
that lurk beneath her skin. You can look 
at her glistening pussy lips and wonder, 
my god, 
             what rivers 
must run through her body to create 
that overflow of wetness. You can look at her breasts, 
dark and sensitive and soft, feeling 
in your hands like the greatest of treasures, and come 
up with multiple theories as to what lies 
beneath them that could possibly make them mould 
so perfectly 
to your touch and respond so enthusiastically 
to your tongue.

Her body is so much more 
miraculous and dream-worthy and mysterious 
when naked than when she wears clothes.

The mystery has never been what might be 
found under her clothes; that is just something of hers 
she lets
            you enjoy 
because she thinks you to be clever. The mystery
is in imagining what writhes under her skin that makes her body move the way it does; 
what worlds are inside her that create a gravitational pull so unyielding; 
what makes her body a fertile ground, enough to grow the tenderness 
of her gaze, the audacity of her courage, and the ferocity of her tongue.

The mystery has always been 
how you plan on maintaining your cleverness 
for just long enough
to convince her to let you stay
with her, there,
                        and naked, too, beside her.


(This is a response to a (much better) poem by Neil Gaiman about nudity. The poem is a collaboration with artist Olivia De Berardinis and you can buy a poster of it here. The art is beautiful, and so is the poem, especially if you read it out loud, which I suggest you do. It’s just that, I have never in my life been disappointed when a woman has taken off her clothes for me. I could never be disappointed by nakedness because I know the basics of what to expect, but I will never know what’s underneath the nakedness that makes the person suddenly more mysterious, more miraculous, more dream-worthy, more interesting, more perfect as soon as they’re standing naked in front of me.)

I love Neil Gaiman. And I love love. And I love the way he describes hating love, because you can tell he kind of loves it too, even though it sometimes hurts a whole bunch.

I love Neil Gaiman. And I love love. And I love the way he describes hating love, because you can tell he kind of loves it too, even though it sometimes hurts a whole bunch.

(Source: , via windblownworld)

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