Deya Muniz is a Brazil-based cartoonist who draws Brutally Honest comics about what it means to be a woman in modern society. Yes, she sometimes plays on stereotypes, and no, not all woman are like this, but hey, they're just cartoons so lighten up already. Also, you might just be able to relate to some of the funny situations below. Like shaving your legs only to discover you've missed a patch when you're absolutely nowhere near a razor, or the almost impossible task of trying to save a brownie for tomorrow instead of eating it today. Check out a bunch of our favorites below.
More info: Deya Muniz | Facebook | Twitter
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That, and having the stylish at the salon, give you a scalp massage while they wash and shampoo your hair ... OH EM GEE!
Nothing is quite as unflattering as opening your camera on your phone, to find it front facing, and staring into your nostrils and double chin from the most ungodly angle!
I wish I even had that option. I have long, and fine hair. If I don't wash it daily it gets oily (Dry shampoo doesn't help much), I envy the girls who can go a couple days without washing their hair.
I used to just brush my hair in the morning she I was kid and come home from school like I was electrocuted!
The mom's eyes in the third frame say she's thinking the same as Deya, lol!
So, it looks like your plan is to make being around you so awkward that he decides not to bother taking your soul and you can be immortal. Could work.
Me at the funeral scene of My Girl movie, when Vada asks for his glasses... "where are his glasses?!"... s**t.
Classmate : Pokemon is for kids. Me : You don't belong in my world >:(
The ponytail swoosh is so spot on. I always have a good day when my hair cooperates and does the adorable bouncy swoosh ^.^
What is that? It looks like a soccer ball with too many corners inside a gyroscope.
I'm extremely tired of these posts that are titled like they're about someone's "struggles as a woman" when it's really just about personal experiences that people of any gender can relate to.
Well this perfectly sums up PEOPLE in general, not just woman. In all of these posts, men can relate to them too.
These were funny at first, but quickly degraded into worrying and whining about things that don't matter.
I'm getting kind of tired of these BP posts depicting women as these helpless, psychotic creatures. Everyone has good and bad days.
I can relate to 4 or 5 but not more. So maybe I'm not a real woman after all
Not only does this contribute to stereotypes, but as a guy I can relate to some of these
I laughed so much and so hard to this. This is beyond perfection to me 😂
I hate that these never credit the artist, her name is Deya Muniz and you can find her work here including these mini comics actually titled Brutally Honest. https://tapastic.com/deyamuniz They clearly knew the name of the comic so why they didn't credit her is ridiculous.
I'm extremely tired of these posts that are titled like they're about someone's "struggles as a woman" when it's really just about personal experiences that people of any gender can relate to.
Well this perfectly sums up PEOPLE in general, not just woman. In all of these posts, men can relate to them too.
These were funny at first, but quickly degraded into worrying and whining about things that don't matter.
I'm getting kind of tired of these BP posts depicting women as these helpless, psychotic creatures. Everyone has good and bad days.
I can relate to 4 or 5 but not more. So maybe I'm not a real woman after all
Not only does this contribute to stereotypes, but as a guy I can relate to some of these
I laughed so much and so hard to this. This is beyond perfection to me 😂
I hate that these never credit the artist, her name is Deya Muniz and you can find her work here including these mini comics actually titled Brutally Honest. https://tapastic.com/deyamuniz They clearly knew the name of the comic so why they didn't credit her is ridiculous.