shanemadyke:

shanemadyke:

Hey there guys, it’s me, Bren once again. I’ve been trying to get out of my abusive situation for literally four years now. I’ve finally got a very good chance of getting out here. I have a place to live lined up and a way to get there, but I don’t have enough money to do this on my own right now. I really can’t miss this shot so if you’ve got the ability to help me get out of here I’d really appreciate this.

Hey so big news and updates on this front. I did it, I’m moving, I’ve got a place to stay. I’ve got a plane ticket and I’ve got a new job all waiting for me there. However, this move is going to be a really big financial drain on me and I’m definitely going to need as much as I can get until I actually start that new job.

pustluk:

so it turns out i’m going back on private insurance in october because pennsylvania medicaid isn’t going to cover any of my transition-related expenses—including hormones. a side effect of this is that (for at least a year) i’m going to have to terminate with my psychiatrist and therapist, an autism specialist with whom i’ve made the only significant progress in my six-year, eight-practitioner mental health campaign.

needless to say, neither of us is thrilled about this, but certain things need to take priority and there’s little we can do to prevent it. at first, she suggested i go back to my old clinic—even if it’s just to touch base every couple weeks—until i walked us through the following:

at best, this clinic will stick me with another intern who i don’t trust and who isn’t equipped to help me. at this point in my life, i am not a client who benefits greatly from talk therapy. my official diagnoses are far outside the anxiety and unipolar depression comfort zone of most practitioners. at best, especially to an intern, this makes me a liability.

imagine i walk in during a real low (to “touch base”). my lows are scary, both to me and to the people who witness them. the only thing a new, inexperienced therapist is going to see is the alphabet soup on my client profile—”oh shit, he got fucked as a kid and doesn’t eat”—and immediately gun for a 302. this has happened to me before, once with a therapist i actually trusted, who attempted to commit me knowing i was about to go on a trip that would ultimately save my life and radically change it for the better.

if i go to inpatient, i lose my job. because i am autistic and inpatient teams don’t know or care to know about autism, i am also unable to gain enough ‘privileges’ to talk to my partner. i am completely isolated from my support network, constantly overstimulated and exhausted, and, when i finally get out, without a livelihood.

i asked my psychiatrist at this point whether any of this seemed unreasonable or paranoid. “no,” she said, “unfortunately it really doesn’t.” we’re now going to try and negotiate a single-case contract with my hypothetical insurance provider, because neither of us is the slightest bit optimistic about any of my other options when it comes to continuity of care.

this is what multidiagnosis is like. this is what it’s like navigating healthcare with autism, with complex PTSD, with complex mood disorders, and god help you with a tentative cluster B diagnosis. success stories without major setbacks are the exception, not the rule, and the exceptions most often occur at the confluence of social privilege and alignment of a client’s problems with the practice du jour of the mental healthcare and pharmaceutical industries.

the idea of a widespread “anti-recovery” movement is tone deaf at best, almost always drenched in privilege, and uncritically marginalizing at worst.

snowqueenvictor:

not-mitchell:

blue-author:

soradiesinkh3:

autumnyte:

collapsed:

my hero

I was worried that the cleaner might have lost her job over this, but apparently the company that employs her stood up for her and said she was just doing her job. 

Now I can comfortably lol. 

god bless you lady cause these white ppl out of hand

If modern art is supposed to challenge the viewer by posing the question, “What is art, really?”, it needs to be prepared for viewers to answer that question.

Art: what is art, really?
Cleaning Lady: not this

It is not the first time artwork has been accidentally thrown away by a cleaner.

In
2001, a Damien Hirst installation at London’s Eyestorm Gallery
consisting of a collection of beer bottles, coffee cups and overflowing
ashtrays was cleared away.

Later, in 2004, a bag of paper and
cardboard by German artist Gustav Metzger was also thrown out while on a
display at Tate Britain.

Oh my god

a tale of trees and espionage

silverdragon-98:

hominini-tribe:

emberglows:

okay story time:

my professor (lovely man, married to our TA, 5’2", about as intimidating as a muffin) is a dendrologist by trade, so he studies trees. it was about three hours into our social sciences course, last lecture before exams, everyone was frazzled and exhausted, so he told us about his most exciting/in-depth research to date to cheer us up.

(the few of us who actually showed up were like “ok sir im sure its fascinating” but in our minds we were totally like its trees what. is. exciting. about trees. You might be wondering the same thing – the acorns? the leaves? the roots? BUT NO. IMMA FUCKIN TELL YA.)

ANYWAY we settle in, he had a few pictures loaded up from his field work (we were chuckling at this point…. ‘hehehe field work’ i giggled to my frend. its trees.) and began to tell his tale. it’s long, imma warn you, but……. god. just read it.

theres an species of tree called the cucumber tree (Magnolia acuminata, if ya wanna get all Latin-y). its super endangered, in our region there’s only ~280 that are registered by the government, yadda yadda yadda. my prof thought that was tragic (i know) but also strange, because when he was writing his thesis about local trees years ago, he kept coming across cucumber trees in really random places. we’re talking like backyards, independently-owned nurseries, etc. WHICH IS IMPOSSIBLE because, according to tree law (i know) it is very strictly protected by the government, and thus super “illegal to possess, transport, collect, buy or sell any part of a living or dead member of a listed species if it originates from wild sources.” essentially, the govt takes control over growing the trees and anyone who independently raises them is breaking the law (i know)

so he’d ask people “do you have a permit for these trees?” and they were like “uh no, it’s just a tree someone sold me, i think it looks nice, are you gonna arrest me?” so he’d be like “nah nah nah just tell me who sold it to you”

eventually, months/years later, someone did, and turns out it was like this underground sort-of illegal tree dealing club (i know). so my prof went, got a bit of funding from the government, who were getting pissed at independent cucumber tree numbers, and THIS IS WHERE IT GETS INTO THE GOOD SHIT I STG.

he infiltrates the tree trafficking organization. he buys a cucumber tree from an independent nursery, raises it for months, ensures he gets noticed by the traffickers, and then INFILTRATES it and convinces its leader to LET HIM JOIN. he has to pay like a steep entrance fee, which he does (and it blows my mind that the government of my country paid money to illegal tree dealers), but then he is given full access to records and maps because they think he’s one of them, not a SECRET AGENT.

now this part blows my mind because the tree lords don’t even have to try very hard to find cucumber trees because government agents MARK THE TREES AND DISTINCTLY TAG THEM SAYING THIS IS ENDANGERED DO NOT TOUCH. so, ya know…………. it’s a bit obvious. my prof hangs out with the members so much that he figures out their “hit spots”. these are where the trees are relatively secluded and unguarded. (he writes all this shit and numbers down for his research.)

BUT THATS NOT ENOUGH BECAUSE THE GOVT SAYS HES WASTING THEIR FUNDING IF HE DOESNT HAVE PROOF and they are willing to take LEGAL ACTION for misuse of funding (my prof doesn’t have the money nore time nor power to take them to court, which would also blow his cover). so my prof literally STAKES OUT a copse of cucumber trees at a recognized wildlife reserve for. DAYS. he camps there, and watches the trees, is about to give up, he’s going off an unreliable rumor from the traffickers that a harvester would be going there within the next week. finally, this guy comes and takes the cucumber tree seeds from the CLEARLY MARKED trees by the government, and my prof takes pictures (we are shown these pictures, most of us are speechless at this point). dozens of candid shots of a man my grandpa’s age with a grocery store bag, garden shears, and a ladder, clipping away the illegal seeds and then going on his merry fucking way.

so my prof has the proof, he’s been undercover for months now at this point, he writes up his report, gives it to the government who is like…….. “oh shit”, helps them draft up a new LESS COMPLETELY FUCKING OBVIOUS way of marking endangered trees (so that way non-tree-lovers wouldn’t damage them further, etc.), and then never returns to the tree traffickers. he’d given them a fake name, address, everything….. he disappears.

…there was a full minute of stunned silence from us students at this point, during which he grew more and more nervous (again, he’s a muffin) and all of us students are just like……. “whoa.” we asked him what happened to the remaining illegal cucumber trees & if he turned the tree dealers in to the government, and that is when he smiles a little bit and shows us the last few pictures. because here’s the kicker… he never turned the smugglers in. he burned all the data he collected, defied the government pressuring him to turn them in, and the only reason he’s not incarcerated is because his work is so prominent in certain circles now & universities love him, that there would be an uproar if he got arrested. he’s like a fucking anti-hero and then he tells us (i’ll never forget, it’s the most inspirational green-thumb thing in the world) “it may be ‘illegal’, but those who risk their liberty to ~save the world~ should never be reprimanded, no matter what those in power say.”

we are all stunned. some of us are considering dendrology as a field we’d now be interested in pursuing. he clicks his slide one final time, before we leave our last lecture and, since he had an asthma attack (lil muffin) he didn’t attend our exam, so i never see him again…………

and there, on the slides, the last picture? THERE HE IS. in his own backyard. with his equally lovely TA wife. both grinning innocently, standing underneath a……. FUCKING. FULL GROWN. ILLEGAL. CUCUMBER TREE.

always reblog

I love this story from start to finish. It’s so great.

It makes me remember when my Botany teacher told us the government had to install fences 10 meters tall around a species of bush. You’ll be wondering what makes this type of bush so special, well it’s in danger of extinction, isn’t supposed to be able to live outside the ecuator and it’s suuuper old, like one of the first plants to appear. With the appearance of younger and more beautiful plants (gymnosperms and angiosperms) they slowly dissapeared from the world except in the ecuator and this small valley in my country where they’ve been since the Mesozoic (around 200 million years ago).

Now this would explain why it’s so protected no? Surely another tree mafia would want to illegally trafic with it. Well, if you thought so you’d be wrong. Because it’s so similar to another bush (waaayy younger and less special despite how similar they look, the ugly twin), so ugly, and the valley where they grow so dificult to access that nobody wants to expend the effort. Except crazy botanists that know enought to differenciate it from its ugly cousin and to recognize how speeecial it is; and then they’d proceed to maim the plant so they could put it in their herbarium, like a f**ing hunting trophy. It got so out of hand that botanist from all over the world were coming to take pieces to put in their herbarium, there were so many that the plants were dying, cause they had taken too much. So the government was forced to put 10 meters tall fences and inspecting people coming out of the natural park (where by law it was already forbidden to cut plants, let’s not talk about the handsome cousin) to make sure they were not taking pieces of the plant.

Tl:dr Sooo, yeah, my Botany teacher basically told me that there are plant poachers and that this poachers are actually botanists, as if a zoologist is a wildlife poacher. I love the irony

otterish:

This sweet pea needs a new home! If anyone in the northwest Arkansas area want a floppy cat who is the most tolerant cat I’ve ever known (I’m sure she’d be amazing around all kids) just message me! We are only allowed to have 2 cats, but around Christmas on a cold night we heard her meowing at our door. We let her in, and she immediately ran to our cat’s food dish and stuffed her face! The poor thing was shivering and so skinny, but after a few vet visits she’s back to great health! She is not microchipped but she has had her first round of shots and will need a booster in about a year from now. She’s FIV negative so no need to worry about that. She’s obviously free to a good home, but she won’t come with any toys. She does love playing with chewed straws so she’s adorably quirky. XD If you can’t adopt her, please boost this! I don’t want to get kicked out of my apartment!