royaltylites by SASHA

May 20
“Love never dies a natural death. It dies because we don’t know how to replenish it’s source. It dies of blindness and errors and betrayals. It dies of illness and wounds; it dies of weariness, of witherings, of tarnishings.” Anais Nin (via kari-shma)

(via quote-book)


Mar 11
JUMPING AROUND 2009
Photo from Reuben Ng

JUMPING AROUND 2009

Photo from Reuben Ng


Mar 4

Typical Classroom

1: The stoners in the back like:

2: The class clowns are like:

3: Girls on their period are like:

4: The bestfriends are like:

5: That one dude who is ready to fight at all times is like:

6: The teacher’s pet is front in center like:

7: That one person who is always texting is like:

8: Nobody is learning so the teacher like:

Wanna LAUGH OUT LOUD?! Follow this blog.

(via thatfunnyblog)


Feb 9

That walk of shame when you have to put something back in a store after your mom says “no.”

Need a laugh? Click here!

(via lmaogtfo)


Dec 16

Setting the record straight - again.

oh-so-coco:

The other evening I joined an interesting group of doctors, editors, models and lawyers in order to speak with Dr. Herzog, director of the Massachusetts General Hospital, about his work with the CFDA’s Health Initiative. Along with fellow model Doutzen Kroes, I had the chance to speak before the group.

Today I’ve seen some positive and some rather negative feedback regarding the parts of my speech that have been made public. With this in mind I have decided to publish my entire speech below - Coco Rocha.

I would like to thank the Harris Center for inviting me to speak today. I’m deeply appreciative of the research, education and advocacy you provide, as well as for your outreach program to the CFDA.

I’m sure to many in the audience, my industry - fashion - must appear to be something like the Wild West. Specifically within the field of modeling, a smaller part of that industry, we are essentially entirely unregulated and this is the way it’s been for a long time now. The models who make up this highly visual workforce are mostly teenage girls, many of whom are largely seen as disposable commodities. It’s no secret that there’s an immense pressure put on these girls to maintain a specific look and, for quite a while now, that specific look has been impossibly thin. Models know they have a shelf-life, and they know that if they can’t maintain the look, they will be replaced.

Often the pressure is very direct with some designers, stylists and agents in no uncertain terms, pushing these young girls to take measures that often lead to anorexia or other health problems in order to remain in the business a few extra seasons. I myself felt this pressure very early in my career as a fashion model. I recall being specifically told by someone of authority, much older and supposedly wiser than I, that the “look” that year was anorexia. He said to me, “We don’t want you to be anorexic but that’s what we want you to look like.”  For a young girl of 15 you can imagine how confusing and disturbing that statement was.

A large part of the problem is that models come into this business at 13, 14 or 15, before their bodies are even close to being finished developing. Often they are the tall, skinny girls in middle school, with none of the curves that they will one day inherit. Within a year or two these girls are developing into women and they are not told that this is OK. On the contrary, they’re told that they are losing their edge, losing money, and losing favor in the eyes of their clients, and so they struggle to take measures that will please those they look up to. When I was younger, many miles away from home, I turned to diuretic pills to lose weight. One day, I took so many on an empty stomach that I spent hours doubled over and racked with pain. At that time I promised myself that I would never again take such drastic measures in order to please others.

To this day I question how anyone can justify an aesthetic that reduces a woman or child to an emaciated skeleton. Surely fashion’s aesthetic should enhance and beautify the human form, not destroy it.

Why should there be a difference between being healthy and being a model? In my mind, the two should be one and the same. We demand and we legislate that our sports stars achieve success without the use of dangerous drugs and supplements that would otherwise harm their bodies in the long run. Why should we not encourage and even require that our runway and editorial stars also hold themselves to a higher standard?

Read More


Nov 1
This pug is so adorable, I am missing our pug back home. Nugget is her name

This pug is so adorable, I am missing our pug back home. Nugget is her name

(via sexandstilettos)


(via emptypromise)


youknowyoureadancerwhen:

I love dance because it lets my heart speak (wick3dshin3).

youknowyoureadancerwhen:

I love dance because it lets my heart speak (wick3dshin3).


Oct 31

Oct 24
The Lion CitySingapore September 15, 2011Shot with:Fisheye2, 35mm ISO400 Film

The Lion City
Singapore 
September 15, 2011

Shot with:
Fisheye2, 35mm ISO400 Film


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