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"Hubby to Sissy" Photo-set Clip coming soon!

gynarchygoddess post "Hubby to Sissy" Photo-set
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"Hubby to Sissy" Photo-set Clip coming soon!

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Fun with e stim butt plug

Fun with e stim butt plug

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A little glimpse of what’s to come to my clipstores

A little glimpse of what’s to come to my clipstores

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Huda Shaarawi Huda Sharawi, also spe..

gynarchygoddess post ♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️

Huda Shaarawi

Huda Sharawi, also spe.. from onlyfans

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Huda Shaarawi Huda Sharawi, also spelled Huda Shaarawi or Hudā Shaʿrāwī, (born June 23,1879, Al-Minyā, Egypt—died December 12, 1947, Cairo), Egyptian feminist and nationalist who established numerous organizations dedicated to women’s rights and is considered the founder of the women’s movement in Egypt. Sharawi was born into a prosperous family in the Egyptian city of Al-Minyā and was raised in Cairo. Her father, Muhammad Sultan Pasha, a landowner, was active in Egyptian national politics, holding a variety of government posts and becoming a member of the Chamber of Delegates in 1876. As an upper-class female, Huda Sharawi grew up in the harem system, in which women were confined to secluded apartments within the home and wore face veils when going outside. She received an elite education at home, with the primary language of instruction being French, but also memorized the Qurʾān in Arabic. She was married at age 13 to her older cousin, Ali Sharawi, who was already in his late 40s. She lived separately from him for seven years, during which time she advanced her education, and in 1900, under pressure from her family, she reconciled with him. They had two children together: a daughter, Bathna, in 1903 and a son, Muhammad, in 1905. In 1908 Sharawi helped found the first secular philanthropic organization operated by Egyptian women, a medical dispensary for underprivileged women and children. She and her husband were strong supporters of the cause of Egyptian independence from Great Britain, and Ali Sharawi was a founding member of the nationalist Wafd party. She went on to found and serve as president of the Wafdist Women’s Central Committee in 1920. Egyptian women’s open participation in the nationalist movement marked a turning point in Egyptian society; never before had so many women publicly engaged in political activism. After the death of her husband, Sharawi shifted her efforts from the nationalist movement toward women’s equality. In 1923 she founded the Egyptian Feminist Union, which sought woman suffrage, reforms to personal status laws, and increased educational opportunities for girls and women. In March of that year she performed the act of protest for which she is best remembered: while returning home from a conference of the International Women Suffrage Alliance in Rome, she removed her face veil in a Cairo train station, causing a commotion. Sharawi remained president of the Egyptian Feminist Union for the rest of her life and became the founding president of the Arab Feminist Union in 1945. Under her leadership, the Egyptian Feminist Union launched the magazine L’Égyptienne (later Al-Misriyyah) in 1925, and the Arab Feminist Union launched Al-Marʾah al-Arabiyyah (“The Arab Woman”) in 1946. Mudhakkirātī (1986; Harem Years: The Memoirs of an Egyptian Feminist) is her memoir of growing up in a Cairo harem.

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A few snippets from yday

A few snippets from yday

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🖤

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A teaser from a strap on clip filmed yesterday

A teaser from a strap on clip filmed yesterday

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SLAVE TASK WEDNESDAY 🌈🕊 MAKE AN IMPACT 🕊🌈 Donate an afford..

SLAVE TASK WEDNESDAY 🌈🕊 MAKE AN IMPACT 🕊🌈 Donate an affordable amount to a charity today. It can be any charity you like. If you’re unsure, I have a list of some of my favourite charities listed on my website under tributes and gifts. Send proof to my inbox #slavetask #slavetaskwednesday

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All red latex

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All red latex

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A mini filming session today!

A mini filming session today!

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Gym time!

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Gym time!

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Currently happening at The Oubliette - sissy locked into a f..

Currently happening at The Oubliette - sissy locked into a feather duster gag

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Happy International Women’s Day

Happy International Women’s Day

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Lace, leather and nylon 👌🏻

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Lace, leather and nylon 👌🏻

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Last year I gave my friend and ex boyfriend $10,000 for a fe..

Last year I gave my friend and ex boyfriend $10,000 for a few additional months of chemo that he couldn’t afford after being diagnosed with stage 2 cancer. He’s now in remission. I wouldn’t have been able to do that without your support. So thank you from the bottom of my heart for allowing me to aid in the saving of my friends life.

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All red everything! #latex

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All red everything! #latex

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My day in a nutshell

My day in a nutshell

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Back of the camera from today’s filming!

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Back of the camera from today’s filming!

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Hypatia Hypatia, (born c. 355 CE—die..

gynarchygoddess post ♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️

Hypatia

Hypatia, (born c. 355 CE—die.. from onlyfans

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Hypatia Hypatia, (born c. 355 CE—died March 415, Alexandria), mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher who lived in a very turbulent era in Alexandria’s history. She is the earliest female mathematician of whose life and work reasonably detailed knowledge exists. Hypatia was the daughter of Theon of Alexandria, himself a mathematician and astronomer and the last attested member of the Alexandrian Museum (see Researcher’s Note: Hypatia’s birth date). Theon is best remembered for the part he played in the preservation of Euclid’s Elements, but he also wrote extensively, commenting on Ptolemy’s Almagest and Handy Tables. Hypatia continued his program, which was essentially a determined effort to preserve the Greek mathematical and astronomical heritage in extremely difficult times. She is credited with commentaries on Apollonius of Perga’s Conics (geometry) and Diophantus of Alexandria’s Arithmetic (number theory), as well as an astronomical table (possibly a revised version of Book III of her father’s commentary on the Almagest). These works, the only ones she is listed as having written, have been lost, although there have been attempts to reconstruct aspects of them. In producing her commentaries on Apollonius and Diophantus, she was pushing the program initiated by her father into more recent and more difficult areas. She was, in her time, the world’s leading mathematician and astronomer, the only woman for whom such claim can be made. She was also a popular teacher and lecturer on philosophical topics of a less-specialist nature, attracting many loyal students and large audiences. Her philosophy was Neoplatonist and was thus seen as “pagan” at a time of bitter religious conflict between Christians (both orthodox and “heretical”), Jews, and pagans. Her Neoplatonism was concerned with the approach to the One, an underlying reality partially accessible via the human power of abstraction from the Platonic forms, themselves abstractions from the world of everyday reality. Her philosophy also led her to embrace a life of dedicated virginity. An early manifestation of the religious divide of the time was the razing of the Serapeum, the temple of the Greco-Egyptian god Serapis, by Theophilus, Alexandria’s bishop until his death in 412 CE. This event was perhaps the final end of the great Library of Alexandria, since the Serapeum may have contained some of the Library’s books. Theophilus, however, was friendly with Synesius, an ardent admirer and pupil of Hypatia, so she was not herself affected by this development but was permitted to pursue her intellectual endeavours unimpeded. With the deaths of Synesius and Theophilus and the accession of Cyril to the bishopric of Alexandria, however, this climate of tolerance lapsed, and shortly afterward Hypatia became the victim of a particularly brutal murder at the hands of a gang of Christian zealots. It remains a matter of vigorous debate how much the guilt of this atrocity is Cyril’s, but the affair made Hypatia a powerful feminist symbol and a figure of affirmation for intellectual endeavour in the face of ignorant prejudice. Her intellectual accomplishments alone were quite sufficient to merit the preservation and respect of her name, but, sadly, the manner of her death added to it an even greater emphasis.

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Those balls are CRUSHED!

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Those balls are CRUSHED!

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Wish granted! 🧚🏻‍♀️ FF nylon stockings, 10 strap suspenders ..

Wish granted! 🧚🏻‍♀️ FF nylon stockings, 10 strap suspenders and stiletto heels

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Two more for you. Like and comment if you’d like me to uploa..

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Two more for you. Like and comment if you’d like me to upload a minute long video tease too!

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The key to his handcuffs hanging on my suspender strap. The ..

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The key to his handcuffs hanging on my suspender strap. The perfect tease.

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FF Nylons and pointed thin stilettos today

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FF Nylons and pointed thin stilettos today

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WEDNESDAY SLAVE TASK 😳 HUMILIATION 😳 In a patriarchal wor..

WEDNESDAY SLAVE TASK 😳 HUMILIATION 😳 In a patriarchal world in which we live, it is hard for men to keep their egos in check. Sometimes it takes a little more effort and sometimes more extreme tactics to keep yourself in line with the truth. The truth being that you will only ever be a speck of waste on the underside of a 🚽 seat next to an enlightened Goddess. So today you’re going to follow the wisdom of ‘you are what you eat’, ‘what you think, you become’ etc etc. Go and lock the underside of a 🚽 seat. The dirtiest bit you can find. Bonus points if it’s a public 🚽 at work, for example. You’ll get recognition if you record yourself doing it and send it to me. #slavetask #slavetaskwednesday

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