Change a single letter and change the word game

t0rnado0fs0uls:

krystallkitty:

t-witch-y:

adenamara:

starvingcuttingcryingdying:

catchaglimpseofalleble:

prolifeproliberty:

aspiretocadence:

dreaming-for-meaning:

erin-the-psychopomp:

mcfreakin-childproof-caps:

holdyourbreathfornow:

fantazyiskey:

confinesofpersonalknowledge:

prinxiety-sandersides:

tomorrow-will-be-good:

tulipscomeinallsortsofcolors:

toujours-fidele:

theinvisiblespoon:

ammirite:

friendlyinternetmeerkat:

emi-loves-them:

demonickittykat:

goldxxage:

pjo-for-life:

jetblackaffair:

thiam-cb:

blurryfeather:

readenheim:

softmushie:

madicanhandleit:

mimiiqyu:

n-oy-a:

theinsanelycooljordanmichael:

majinie:

maddstarr:

assbutt2402:

cassstopgivingmeincorrectquotes:

themigitqueen:

fluentreferencespeaker:

demonicsymphony:

azriona:

toooldforthissh–stuff:

cloakstone69:

hugealienpie:

ailuromatron:

computerkat:

carmillapie:

prettilyphil:

infinitylester:

twentyoneparades-to-panic-at:

hetaliagurl5:

blugh-blu:

broadwaytheanimatedseries:

hamilspntrash:

lilbeanblr:

mydogsaresofuckingstupid:

silly-aesthetic-me:

fandomsandanythingelse:

virgils-jacket:

heyimslightlyobsessed:

princeyssash:

theartsyskeleton:

tinymugs:

actual-dorito-steve-rogers:

bluedays13:

that1nonymous:

patotaes01:

kiwikagari:

boomsakebam:

genderless-scientist:

fanfictionsandfood:

chris-the-mighty:

identityconstellations:

foobar-the-great:

youvegotthatonering:

win-build-equip:

child-of-tanavast:

a-singing-dragonfly:

i-got-that-bible-swag:

darkhairedgirlfromgallifrey:

when-we-get-over-yonder:

destyni-is-me:

arsenicgodhead:

shaelthefangirl:

ghost-buster-john:

ninfiaholic:

terezi:

ukuleleshitpost:

disc-horsey:

lifefilledwithstories:

sneakysnorlax:

atlas-prime:

kandrakelsier:

fuckyeahdiomedes:

lightspun:

answersfromvanaheim:

j4ckwynand:

akedhi:

texasflutes:

clarawebbwillcutoffyourhead:

trueconfessionsofacurvygirl:

wasmnowf:

seanarain:

popppy–girl:

dharuadhmacha:

chiami-jishin:

hiddenpleasures100:

chiami-jishin:

inanna76:

superdupersafeforwork:

hiddenpleasures100:

missmirim:

hiddenpleasures100:

inanna76:

superdupersafeforwork:

I want to play a game with you all.

You have to make a new word by changing only one letter of the last word.

Dirt

Dire

Dare

Bare

Bard

Card

Care

Mare

Male

Made

Mode

Code

Cone

Core

Cord

Lord

Lore

Lyre

Pyre

Pare

part

Fart

farm

Fare

Fore

Sore

Sort

Soft

Sift

silt!

silk

Milk

Mill

Mull

Mule

Male

Rale

Rule

Rile

Vile

Tile

Time

Lime

Like

Hike

Bike

Bake

Cake

Lake

Like

Bike

Bile

File

Tile

Tilt

Wilt

Lilt

Kilt

Kill

Bill

Jill

Dill

Doll

Dole

pole

Hole

sole

sold

cold

mold

meld

mend

fend

send

Tend

Tent

Sent

Rent

Bent

Best

Beat

belt

Bell

well

weld

held

help

Hell

Heel

Feel

Peel

Keel

Keen

Seen

Been

Bean

Bear

Tear

Teal

Seal

Meal

Real

Reel

Reef

Beef

Beet

Feet

Feel

Peel

Keel

Heel

Heal

Real

Read

Reed

Seed

Seep

that-eds-life:

If your condition stops you from doing something, then it is a disability. 

If your condition makes it difficult for you to complete a task, then it is a disability.

Dont let others tell you you “arent disabled enough” and invalidate your experience. 

bittersnurr:

Also because a post under that just reminded me

Can we in general stop acting like traumatized people are the same as ones with regular generalized anxiety and depression?

Like half the mental illness division on this site is probably because people act like Every Mental Illness is just anxiety/depression to begin with, but with ptsd (also usually bipolar) it is worse because usually it is full on erase the condition in favor of labeling it as depression/anxiety. I appreciate people find it relateable but it kind of sucks for example to see Every Single Post about lapis from SU calling her “depressed” when it is CANONICALLY explained as trauma and not a normal mood disorder which does not present the same way at all. It is far worse when celebrities kill themselves ans bipolar is rewitten as being depressed because you know, suicide. Only depressed people commit suicide despite there iirc, the numbers being worse for bipolar people.

Using these things interchangeably is not helpful and leads to condecending posts about how if you are not currently doing [depression treatment] for your ptsd that the treatment DOES NOT WORK ON you clearly are only interested in wallowing in your feelings and not recovery.

Like this literally makes it harder for us to get treatment, because every time you try the doctor just comes back with treatment for standard depression/anxiety issues. Because same thing right? You just need some pills and to work on those distorted thoughs about experiencing abuse. No need to look into other treatment.

historicallyace:

a-place-to-be-panace:

christopherokamoto:

lesbianherstorian:

activists at barnard college providing “labels”, photographed by susan rennie and published in off our backs: a women’s newsjournal vol. 3 no. 6, february 1973

Wow, David Jay really time traveled back to 1973 to start inventing asexuality. 😮

This makes my heart so happy

Just for the purposes of authentication…

Here’s a link to where you can view the image in-context (you must have a jstor account, which is free if you’re okay with only reading 6 papers a month, if you do not already have institutional access). It turns out that this image, along with another, was intended to be published in the previous issue of off our backs, but was not received in time.

Here’s the article that that image was supposed to accompany (apologies for the fact that this is another jstor link). It turns out this was from an event called “Lesbian/Feminist Dialogue” that those young women (from the Lesbian Activists at Barnard) were supporting. Now, before we get the hue and cry about “they weren’t really talking about asexuality in the sense that you mean it!!!!11! they were just spitballing label ideas,” here’s what the author of the article, Frances Chapman, had to say about it:

“I attended the workshop on asexuality lead by Barbara Getz. According to Barbara, asexuality is an orientation that regards a partner as nonessential to sex, and sex as nonessential to a satisfying relationship.”

Obviously not quite the definition we used today, but decently close to it. 

Homemade Flamin’ Hot Cheeto Popcorn

Another installment in the “What All Can I Do With This Big Canister of Good Popcorn?” Files, which I couldn’t resist trying tonight.

It’s been long enough since I’ve eaten any of the Flamin’ Hot Cheetos that I’m really not sure how close the seasoning flavors turned out. But, this is pretty good! A nice chili-cheese blend, at any rate.

Next time, I will probably add more of the hot Indian chili powder subbed for the cayenne here. (Which is a type of cayenne, but usually made from a little milder varieties.) This batch had some heat, but not as much as I was expecting. Nowhere near Flamin’ Hot. And the recipe is aiming for a bit lower heat level than the original 😅 Not sure how much more heat it would have with what usually gets sold as cayenne.

(Subbing all/mostly mild Kashmiri chili powder for the paprika might be enough to kick the heat up to my taste. Besides making it redder than the paprika we’ve got. For my own reference later, more than anything else.)

Homemade Flamin’ Hot Cheeto Popcorn

gingerautie:

butterflyinthewell:

sharkpositivity:

If you look up symptoms of ASD specific to girls one of them is frequently “masculine behavior/dress” or whatever and people love to blame that on autism being an “extreme male brain” but it’s really very easily explained when you consider what femininity is: a set of implicit social rules forced on women. Like, of course autistic girls and women aren’t going to be as successful at performing femininity “correctly.” It doesn’t have to do with the fictitious male brain. It has to do with femininity being inaccessible to people who have difficulty navigating complex and arbitrary social conventions. 

I think femininity is up to the individual.

A woman feels girly with long hair, makeup, high heels and pink dresses? Cool lady!

A woman feels girly with a shaved head, no makeup, piercings, tattoos, a spike-studded leather jacket, a red bustier, jeans and Doc Martens? Awesome lady!

I used two “opposite” examples on purpose. I’m sure anyone can imagine any number of combinations. There is really no right or wrong way to be girly.

Hell, you can have a dick and be a beautiful girl.

Be your own version of feminine and who cares if it aligns with the “social” idea of it. We look and feel our best when we’re true to ourselves. Y’all are gorgeous!

Like 80% of the “not acting properly feminine” stuff is attributable to sensory issues IMO.

Female clothing/hair/make up is genuinely less comfortable and more high maintenance than male stuff.

We Can’t Keep Treating Anxiety From Complex Trauma the Same Way We Treat Generalized Anxiety

girlsmoonsandstars:

rapeculturerealities:

I’ve been living with the effects of complex trauma for a long time, but for many years, I didn’t know what it was. Off and on throughout my life, I’ve struggled with what I thought was anxiety and depression. Or rather, In addition to being traumatized, I was anxious and depressed.

Regardless of the difference, no condition should ever be minimized. If you are feeling anxious or depressed, it’s important and urgent to find the right support for you. No one gets a prize for “worst” depression, anxiety, trauma or any other combination of terrible things to deal with, and no one should suffer alone. With that in mind, there is a difference between what someone who has Complex PTSD feels and what someone with generalized anxiety or mild to moderate depression feels.

For someone dealing with complex trauma, the anxiety they feel does not come from some mysterious unknown source or obsessing about what could happen. For many, the anxiety they feel is not rational. General anxiety can often be calmed with grounding techniques and reminders of what is real and true. Mindfulness techniques can help. Even when they feel disconnected, anxious people can often acknowledge they are loved and supported by others.

For those who have experienced trauma, anxiety comes from an automatic physiological response to what has actually, already happened. The brain and body have already lived through “worst case scenario” situations, know what it feels like and are hell-bent on never going back there again. The fight/flight/ freeze response goes into overdrive. It’s like living with a fire alarm that goes off at random intervals 24 hours a day. It is extremely difficult for the rational brain to be convinced “that won’t happen,” because it already knows that it has happened, and it was horrific.

Those living with generalized anxiety often live in fear of the future. Those with complex trauma fear the future because of the past.

The remedy for both anxiety and trauma is to pull one’s awareness back into the present. For a traumatized person who has experienced abuse, there are a variety of factors that make this difficult. First and foremost, a traumatized person must be living in a situation which is 100 percent safe before they can even begin to process the tsunami of anger, grief and despair that has been locked inside of them, causing their hypervigilance and other anxious symptoms. That usually means no one who abused them or enabled abuse in the past can be allowed to take up space in their life. It also means eliminating any other people who mirror the same abusive or enabling patterns.

Unfortunately for many, creating a 100 percent abuser-free environment is not possible, even for those who set up good boundaries and are wary of the signs. That means that being present in the moment for a complex trauma survivor is not fail-proof, especially in a stressful event. They can be triggered into an emotional flashback by anything in their present environment.

It is possible (and likely) that someone suffering from the effects of complex trauma is also feeling anxious and depressed, but there is a difference to the root cause. Many effective strategies that treat anxiety and depression don’t work for trauma survivors. Meditation and mindfulness techniques that make one more aware of their environment sometimes can produce an opposite effect on a trauma survivor.  Trauma survivors often don’t need more awareness. They need to feel safe and secure in spite of what their awareness is telling them.

At the first sign of anxiety or depression, traumatized people will spiral into toxic shame. Depending on the wounding messages they received from their abusers, they will not only feel the effects of anxiety and depression, but also a deep shame for being “defective” or “not good enough.” Many survivors were emotionally and/or physically abandoned, and have a deep rooted knowledge of the fact that they were insufficiently loved. They live with a constant reminder that their brains and bodies were deprived of a basic human right. Even present-day situations where they are receiving love from a safe person can trigger the awareness and subsequent grief of knowing how unloved they were by comparison.

Anxiety and depression are considered commonplace, but I suspect many of those who consider themselves anxious or depressed are actually experiencing the fallout of trauma. Most therapists are not well trained to handle trauma, especially the complex kind that stems from prolonged exposure to abuse. Unless they are specially certified, they might have had a few hours in graduate school on Cluster B personality disorders, and even fewer hours on helping their survivors. Many survivors of complex trauma are often misdiagnosed as having borderline personality disorder (BPD) or bipolar disorder. Anyone who has sought treatment for generalized anxiety or depression owes themselves a deeper look at whether trauma plays a role.

first of all how dare you

We Can’t Keep Treating Anxiety From Complex Trauma the Same Way We Treat Generalized Anxiety