ikkimikki:

philtippett:

ithelpstodream:

Once the children were asleep, Sajjad headed out on an urgent shopping mission. “We are Muslims and we’d never had a Christmas tree in our home. But these children were Christian and we wanted them to feel connected to their culture.”

The couple worked until the early hours putting the tree up and wrapping presents. The first thing the children saw the next morning was the tree.

“I had never seen that kind of extra happiness and excitement on a child’s face.“ The children were meant to stay for two weeks – seven years later two of the three siblings are still living with them.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/dec/03/muslim-foster-parents-it-has-been-such-a-blessing?CMP=fb_gu

this is a beautiful article and i just want to include a few other highlights from the above family as well as another profiled:

…she focuses on the positives – in particular how fostering has given her and Sajjad an insight into a world that had been so unfamiliar. “We have learned so much about English culture and religion,” Sajjad says. Riffat would read Bible stories to the children at night and took the girls to church on Sundays. “When I read about Christianity, I don’t think there is much difference,” she says. “It all comes from God.”

The girls, 15 and 12, have also introduced Riffat and Sajjad to the world of after-school ballet, theatre classes and going to pop concerts. “I wouldn’t see many Asian parents at those places,” she says. “But I now tell my extended family you should involve your children in these activities because it is good for their confidence.” Having the girls in her life has also made Riffat reflect on her own childhood. “I had never spent even an hour outside my home without my siblings or parents until my wedding day,” she says.

Just as Riffat and Sajjad have learned about Christianity, the girls have come to look forward to Eid and the traditions of henna. “I’ve taught them how to make potato curry, pakoras and samosas,” Riffat says. “But their spice levels are not quite the same as ours yet.” The girls can also sing Bollywood songs and speak Urdu.

“I now look forward to going home. I have two girls and my wife waiting,” says Sajjad. “It’s been such a blessing for me,” adds Riffat. “It fulfilled the maternal gap.”

[…]

Shareen’s longest foster placement arrived three years ago: a boy from Syria. “He was 14 and had hidden inside a lorry all the way from Syria,” she says. The boy was deeply traumatised. They had to communicate via Google Translate; Shareen later learned Arabic and he picked up English within six months. She read up on Syria and the political situation there to get an insight into the conditions he had left.

“It took ages to gain his trust,” she says. “I got a picture dictionary that showed English and Arabic words and I remember one time when I pronounced an Arabic word wrong and he burst out laughing and told me I was saying it wrong – that was the breakthrough.”

The boy would run home from school and whenever they went shopping in town, he kept asking Shareen when they were going back home. She found out why: “He told me that one day he left his house in Syria and when he had come back, there was no house.” Now he’s 18, speaks English fluently and is applying for apprenticeships. He could move out of Shareen’s home, but has decided to stay. “He is a very different person to the boy who first came here,” she says, “and my relationship with him is that of a mother to her son.”

What a beautifully loving family.

Some more context to why this is an extra welcome story, for people outside the UK: https://moongalleon22.tumblr.com/post/168639722687/down-w-hate-ithelpstodream-once-the-children

Lads, I just bought a new wheelchair and I have to tell the world about it because I’m so excited, I can’t wait for it to get here, everyone needs to see it!

kelpforestdweller:

marauders4evr:

marauders4evr:

Ahem.

It’s called the Zinger Chair.

Here’s a picture of it:

It’s an electric wheelchair that’s controlled by the levers on the sides (so yes, you do need two hands to operate it, just like a manual). It’s only 40 pounds and can be folded down to fit into any trunk. The creators/managers all seem to be wheelchair users. I personally talked to one on the phone who told me the features he uses.

You don’t understand, I’ve been in New York City for almost four months now and it’s been incredible and in that time, I’ve wheeled my manual chair about 300 miles (there are times I’m going up to 40 blocks a day) and I am so sore and so bruised and so tired and it’s going to s n o w soon and even though the city won’t get nearly as much snow as upstate, it’s still not going to be fun, but I’ve always been afraid to get a big, bulky, electric chair because I don’t want to:

A.) Completely give up my autonomy.

B.) Have a 500 pound electric chair run out of power and have to figure out how the heck I’m getting it and me home.

But this chair, this chair, lads…

This chair can get me all the way from my apartment down the island to Times Square and into Amorino for the world’s best waffles/gelato/hot chocolate before it even considers running out of power. And it only takes 3 hours to fully charge AND if for some reason, something happens, it can be folded up and put into any NYC cab and I’m just so, so, excited. NYC is filled with so many hills that I’ll now be able to go up/down without straining myself. I’ll be able to take the M5 down Riverside and still get to the center of the island without heaving and huffing and sweating. I just really, really, hope it all works out!

Note: Absolutely none of this is sponsored. I’m just really excited about this wheelchair. The Amorino part isn’t sponsored either but seriously, you should all go to Amorino at some point in your lives, I should stop going to Amorino because at this point, I go once a week and that is what we call Unhealthy. But I don’t care because life is short and Amorino is good. And so is this wheelchair (hopefully).

Whyyyy did this get 400+ notes?

Was it the Amorino? It was probably the Amorino.

In all seriousness, listen, I’m glad you’re all excited about this wheelchair too but I haven’t received it yet. I only just got the confirmation email. I mean I made this post like five seconds after I clicked ‘Submit Order’. It should be here by this weekend so I can tell you all how it is and if it’s worth it. And hey, I think you and I can both get money if I recommend you so just…if you’re looking at this for yourselves, that’s fantastic, but just give it a few days okay? Let me be the guinea pig for us all. The very…very broke guinea pig whose insurance wouldn’t cover this. (FYI: Yours probably won’t either.)

Hopefully this all works out but if it doesn’t, I’d hate for you all to spend the money as well. (But I’m really, really, hoping it does.)

I really hope this works out for you!

I can attest to a different but similar chair, the PW 1000-XL from Wheelchair88.

It weighs a little more, closer to 60 lbs than 40, but that comes with suspension, a conventional joystick, armrests, a speed of 7 mph, the ability to go 10 km on each of up to 3 batteries.

I’ve had it for several years, used it lots of places and love it unequivocally. The things that have gone wrong with it have been minor and easily fixed. The company are sometimes slow to respond but always help you in the end.

I hope you’ll let us know how it goes with your chair! It’s so important to let people know these things exist. My previous chair was the lightest available within a reasonable budget and weighed twice as much. I’m not affiliated with this company.

Flint’s lead-poisoned water had a ‘horrifyingly large’ effect on fetal deaths, study finds

melaninaire:

erikkillmongerdontpullout:

veryfemmeandantifascist:

WHERE IS THE NATIONAL OUTRAGE

Where’s the pro life outrage?? They should be screaming about this mass death….

the people in power in this country don’t see the veritable genocide of poor people as outrageous, they see it as business as usual. 

which in turn affects how much or how little the private media conglomerates that they own highlight these issues. 

Flint’s lead-poisoned water had a ‘horrifyingly large’ effect on fetal deaths, study finds

fierceawakening:

argumate:

utnapishtim89:

I’m not against bashing modern art, but whenever I see others doing it, they’re always casting a net large enough to include works I genuinely like. Go ahead and mock my tastes, just don’t accuse me of pretending to have them.

spend five minutes on Tumblr and you realise that if you show any image to the world there will be people who want to fuck it and people who collapse into a sobbing mess at the sight of it; the span of aesthetic preferences across all of humanity is ridiculously wide.

Pretty much this, yes.

But I’m the kind of Horrible Apparently Rich Person (where’s my money, Lebowski?) who thinks kids of all backgrounds should be taken on field trips to art museums and shown all kinds of art, even the weird shit, so.

Lads, I just bought a new wheelchair and I have to tell the world about it because I’m so excited, I can’t wait for it to get here, everyone needs to see it!

marauders4evr:

marauders4evr:

Ahem.

It’s called the Zinger Chair.

Here’s a picture of it:

It’s an electric wheelchair that’s controlled by the levers on the sides (so yes, you do need two hands to operate it, just like a manual). It’s only 40 pounds and can be folded down to fit into any trunk. The creators/managers all seem to be wheelchair users. I personally talked to one on the phone who told me the features he uses.

You don’t understand, I’ve been in New York City for almost four months now and it’s been incredible and in that time, I’ve wheeled my manual chair about 300 miles (there are times I’m going up to 40 blocks a day) and I am so sore and so bruised and so tired and it’s going to s n o w soon and even though the city won’t get nearly as much snow as upstate, it’s still not going to be fun, but I’ve always been afraid to get a big, bulky, electric chair because I don’t want to:

A.) Completely give up my autonomy.

B.) Have a 500 pound electric chair run out of power and have to figure out how the heck I’m getting it and me home.

But this chair, this chair, lads…

This chair can get me all the way from my apartment down the island to Times Square and into Amorino for the world’s best waffles/gelato/hot chocolate before it even considers running out of power. And it only takes 3 hours to fully charge AND if for some reason, something happens, it can be folded up and put into any NYC cab and I’m just so, so, excited. NYC is filled with so many hills that I’ll now be able to go up/down without straining myself. I’ll be able to take the M5 down Riverside and still get to the center of the island without heaving and huffing and sweating. I just really, really, hope it all works out!

Note: Absolutely none of this is sponsored. I’m just really excited about this wheelchair. The Amorino part isn’t sponsored either but seriously, you should all go to Amorino at some point in your lives, I should stop going to Amorino because at this point, I go once a week and that is what we call Unhealthy. But I don’t care because life is short and Amorino is good. And so is this wheelchair (hopefully).

Whyyyy did this get 400+ notes?

Was it the Amorino? It was probably the Amorino.

In all seriousness, listen, I’m glad you’re all excited about this wheelchair too but I haven’t received it yet. I only just got the confirmation email. I mean I made this post like five seconds after I clicked ‘Submit Order’. It should be here by this weekend so I can tell you all how it is and if it’s worth it. And hey, I think you and I can both get money if I recommend you so just…if you’re looking at this for yourselves, that’s fantastic, but just give it a few days okay? Let me be the guinea pig for us all. The very…very broke guinea pig whose insurance wouldn’t cover this. (FYI: Yours probably won’t either.)

Hopefully this all works out but if it doesn’t, I’d hate for you all to spend the money as well. (But I’m really, really, hoping it does.)