lysikan:

jenroses:

crpl-pnk:

crpl-pnk:

a culture fixated on sniffing out “fakers” to protect “real disabled people” inevitably harms every single disabled person within that culture & only maybe a relative handful of “fakers”, who are usually mentally ill or economically disadvantaged to the point of having no alternative. stop saying your skepticism is for my benefit. stop saying my oppression is for my benefit. yes the idea of people with no grasp of my struggle claiming it is infuriating & insulting beyond belief. yes that is also oppressive. but in practice, i’d rather a dozen able bodied people successfully pass themselves off as disabled than one disabled person die in poverty because they couldn’t “prove it” to an abled person’s content

setting aside the fact that People Die From This, just the impact of faker witchunting on the emotional wellbeing of disabled people is enough to make it inexcusable
i’ve heard someone crying, literally sobbing & vomiting from pain frantically promise me that they’re not exaggerating when i never indicated for a moment that i disbelieved them, because they’re so used to the accusation. i’ve heard someone in the aftermath of a seizure quietly mumble as they regained lucidity, “are you sure i’m not faking?”
i don’t know a single chronically ill person who hasn’t at one point or another seriously questioned if they were ever really that sick at all because we’ve been so brainwashed to challenge the validity of disability that we begin to doubt the reality of our own definitive lived experiences

Things that have been said to me:
“You just need to lose weight.” (That won’t fix the genes that are off)
“Are you sure your problems aren’t psychological?” (The majority of my “psychological problems” come from PTSD and anxiety stemming for a lifetime of not being believed. And no, exercise intolerance is NOT psychological)
“You really like getting diagnoses, don’t you? Why do you want another one?”

I almost died because I was “too young to have a pulmonary embolism.” So no one investigated until it was massive and involved both lungs despite me literally saying in so many words, “I”m short of breath, I’m on birth control pills and my mother had an embolism while pregnant” to every doctor I spoke to in a 3 week span.

I had a person ask me if I had a hang tag once when I parked in a handicapped spot AND HAD A HANG TAG. 

To people like that I say the following:

Look, that thing is my state license to NOT DISCUSS my medical history with random strangers, but hey, if you really, really want to know, I can tell you about how my collagen is shit, so my ankles are shit, my intestines are literal shit and if you keep talking to me I might actually shit myself because I have alternating IBS, but maybe, just MAYBE you shouldn’t be harassing anyone because not all disabilities are visible. 

And your response to “I am really frustrated with how many people accuse people of faking it” should NOT EVER be to immediately jump in with “Well, I know so and so and they are able to run a marathon and used their kids hang tag to park in the handicap spot the other day” because that is LITERALLY the least helpful thing you can possibly say.

There is such a stigma, such a pervasive notion that people fake things, and the fact of the matter is that while yes, some people misuse these things, there’s a far more troubling tendency for people who legitimately need them to be shy about using them because they don’t want to be questioned about it.

A friend of mine has a child with spina bifida, and while talking to people with spina bifida about what they wish they’d done as kids… almost all of them said, “I wish I had used a wheelchair more, sooner, rather than pushing so hard to avoid being seen as a wheelchair user.”

It took me nearly shutting myself in to actually realize that it made more sense to go to events and rent a scooter for them, so that I could enjoy them. I’ll likely be getting a motorized wheelchair in the next year so that I can go to things I want to do and actually enjoy them rather than being too tired to even try. 

There’s an argument made that “if you become dependent on a wheelchair you’ll never get better” and it’s bullshit. 

Adaptive devices are there to help us be in the world. They tend to be more work than just “doing the thing” if we are able to do the thing, so people need to just get over the idea that they’re anything but a tool, to be used as needed.

I’ve had a wheelchair since I was pregnant with my son. I now take it to school functions because I can lean on it when I walk, and then sit without shooting pains from the tiny little kiddy chairs they make the grownups sit in. I’m not “confined” to it, but it actively helps preserve spoons, and I’m never going to apologize for that.

Peoples get mad a LOT because we have hang tags in our vehicles but all they see is two hyperactive children running out of control and either an ancient man with cane trying to get them to stop by whispering ‘knock it off’ or a muscly man shaking his head and scooping them up in his arms because it’s easier than trying to tell two deformed (we like that word, don’t tell us not to use it) Autistic Adults that don’t do words well what to do.

http://lysikan.tumblr.com/post/163191644400/candidlyautistic-i-would-rather-let-a-special

Fictional doctors: this patient has a medical mystery and is suffering and we can’t solve it, we need to invest more time, effort and resources in figuring out what’s wrong and helping this patient live a happy life
Real doctors: idk what’s wrong so im going to assume you’re faking lol good luck

sbroxman-autisticquestions:

I’ve noticed when ableist people use “high functioning” to try and silence autistic people when we try to give our views about it, it’s almost as if they perceive us to not have any of the more negative symptoms. Like they’ll say things like, “There’s autistic people who can’t do….” and so on, as if we have no idea what we’re talking about

Thing is, those people are making assumptions about us with no evidence. A lot of us “high functioning” people, we go nonverbal, we can have meltdowns, we can have shutdowns, we can use stimming to cope, we can have trouble speaking, some of us who type here are completely nonverbal and don’t speak at all

But some people seem to think, “They can communicate, therefore they must not have any difficulties.” And that way of thinking needs to stop, because a lot of autistic people suffer because of it

fieldbears:

britneyjustin:

britsanity:

Witnesses say they asked Britney why she shaved her head and her response was, “I’m tired of plugging things into it. I’m tired of people touching me.”

i can never not reblog this

T-Pain: “That was the most beautiful thing in the world. Do you know why she was shaving her head? Because it was so important to other people. She is like, “Listen. Don’t touch my hair anymore. Stop touching my hair.” People were like, “We’ve got to make your hair before you go outside. You can’t leave.” She went … “Now I don’t have hair. What you going to do?”

The older I get the more her breakdown seems less ‘unbalanced’ and more ‘completely understandable’

gothiccharmschool:

roachpatrol:

roachpatrol:

ultimately i think kindness is the most radical thing you can do with your pain and your anger. it’s like, you take everything awful that’s ever been done to you, and you throw it back in the world’s teeth, and you say no, fuck you, i’m not going to take this.  you say this is unacceptable. you say that shit stops with me.

humans are fucking terrible and this awful world we live in will fucking kill you but if you are kind, if you are brave and clever and try really hard, you can defy it. you can impose on this bleak and monstrous structure something beautiful. even if it’s temporary. even if it doesn’t heal anything inside you that’s been hurt.  

i’m gonna sleep and i’m gonna wake up and i swear by everything in this deadly horrible universe i’m gonna make someone happy. 

i’ve seen a number of comments and tags where people feel that they must swallow or repress their anger in order to engage in kindness. that is not at all what i am recommending here. radical kindness is an expression of anger. it is not passive. it is not repressive. it does not require you, in any way, to forgive those that have fucked you up. it does not require you to be quiet. 

it just requires that you be kind. viciously. vengefully. you fight back. you plant flowers. give to charity. play games. pet someone’s dog. scream into the dark. paint and write and dance, tell jokes, sing songs, bake cookies. you have been hurt and you don’t have to deny that hurt. you just have to recognize it in other people, and take their hand, and say: no more. enough. fuck this. no more

have a cookie.

i will say this again: we are all going to die. the universe is enormous and almost entirely empty. to be kind to each other is the most incredible act of defiance against the dark that i can imagine. 

it just requires that you be kind. viciously. vengefully.  

Bolding for emphasis. Because I am angry at the state of the world right now, so very angry. And I am trying to channel that anger into helpful, kind actions. 

fierceawakening:

thatonemushroom:

manalissasgf:

BI WOMEN, THEIR HISTORY AND CONTRIBUTION TO OUR COMMUNITY MUST BE PRIORITIZED AND CHERISHED

I’m all about the cherishing, but the word “prioritized” makes me feel weird and uneasy.

I don’t love the exact phrasing either, but I reblogged it because I get a strong sense from certain corners of Tumblr that bi women are sort of… annoyedly tolerated as Less Awesome than Real Lesbians™

I reblogged this for the idea that our contributions matter in their own right, rather than as some kind of copy that needs knockoff names and only matters when it’s time to *siiiigh* bring out the cheap knockoffs too

What is your opinion on white people adopting poc?

earlgraytay:

thesovereignempress:

darkvioletcloud:

invizible:

maybetheyrefireproof:

brieznutz:

guava-pussy-deactivated20181119:

Stay away from our precious babies

:/ my adoptive family literally made me feel so special and gave me so many opportunities I wouldn’t have had otherwise. And they worked tirelessly to make sure I was proud of who I was and what I stand for. I learned so much about loving differences and acceptance being brought up in such a diverse. To this day, my white adoptive mother (see also, my only mother) is the most open minded, loving , least judgmental person I know. My whole aspiration in life.

There are definitely people out there who won’t make the effort to truly care about the beautiful blood that runs through the COC that they’re raising but every time I see it being knocked as a whole I’m left feeling even more out of place and rejected by not only the black/white communities but even the adopted community.

Don’t invalidate my lifelong experience please, friends!

My adoptive family literally gave me life. Without international, interracial adoption, I might have grown up in the state orphanage in China, not being fed or held or cared for. I might not have lived very long at all. Luckily, I was adopted by a very loving white family, and I complain about my parents sometimes but I love them. I’ve gotten so many opportunities and have had an amazing life that I would not have had otherwise.

This backwards as fuck mentality hurts people. For some, it is/was a matter of life and death. If you think denying children the opportunity to have a loving home is “protecting pocs” or whatever bullshit you’re trying to spew, you’re not being progressive. You’re being a fucking asshole.

You realize that not everyone is as lucky as you right?

Not letting white people adopt POC children will just reduce their luck by a severe degree. Do you want kids to be adopted by a loving family, or do you want them to rot in a system where they don’t have any hope for the future?

Adopted children are wanted. There’s no doubt in their mind that maybe they were an accident. They know their family wanted them. Children stuck in the adoption program think they’re unwanted. Preventing a family, whatever race they might be, from adopting that child is preventing a child from being loved.

Like fireproof said, “This backwards as fuck mentality hurts people. For some, it is/was a matter of life and death.

I have a friend who was abandoned in a Chinese market as a newborn. She was put up for adoption and adopted by a white family who loves her and helped her grow to her fullest potential. If they were prevented from adopting my friend, she probably wouldn’t have gotten a chance to be the woman she is today.

Don’t reduce the luck of these children by preventing them the possibility of having a loving family. If the children are so precious, as you say, (which they are), then why would you prevent them from having a family?

Friendly reminder that the idea that you should only adopt within your own “race” so that they can grow up within their own “culture” (race and culture being synonymous in this line of logic) is a white supremacist idea. 

…It is a little more complicated than YES WHITE PEOPLE SHOULD ADOPT KIDS WHO AREN’T WHITE or NO WHITE PEOPLE SHOULD ONLY ADOPT WHITE KIDS.

There’s a number of white Christians who explicitly want to adopt not-white kids from other countries to ~civilize~ them and ~bring them to Jaysus~. The results range from “bad, but the kid survived to adulthood and needs therapy” to “tragic newspaper headline”. 

I’m sure there are plenty of other white people who want to adopt not-white kids to do the same thing, though they’re not thinking about it as clearly- they want to “do some good in the world” or “save kids from a war-torn country”, and they’re not clearly thinking about what that entails. 

These people can do a lot of damage. (cw: child abuse, child neglect, child death, all in the name of Christianity.) 

Other white people  – like the parents mentioned up above- can be fantastic parents for whatever kid they choose to adopt. They can choose to love and support their kid and learn what they need to to help their kid.

It’s not all or nothing here, this discussion needs some nuance.