@invadernav , since you asked, this is how i turned it off. this is for Mobile only. i cant find it on my desktop so im currently running on the assumption my desktop version hasnt updated yet.
Reblogging to save a goddamn life
My app finally updated and I immediately turned this off.
The Enchanted Tarot old and New 🤗✨🌙✨#tarot #tarotlover #tarotdecks #tarotcollection #tarotcards #tarotdaily #tarotreading #tarotreadersofinstagram #theenchantedtarot
i love when jude says girls can’t be scientists and eva says “i extracted the dna from a banana once” and you can just tell from the look on his face that he had no idea bananas even had dna.
This is a social story, what many autistics in the 80s were “trained” to think to appear neurotypical at all costs
Some background information you need to know:
Social stories are still used today but back in the 80s it was like social stories on steroids. They were drilled into our heads, act “normal” at all costs. I know my parents were particularly keen on this. I went from special Education classes where they knew I was autistic and visually impaired, when we moved my parents took advantage of that to mainstream me and not pass my health information along to the new school. Social stories became all that more important. Must. Act. Normal. At. All. Costs.
Being autistic was treated like it was something to be ashamed of and that is a thought pattern that is hard to break to this day.
Growing up in the 80s and 90s with autism was very much the “quiet hands movement”, (https://juststimming.wordpress.com/2011/10/05/quiet-hands/ good article!) which is to say we were silenced and punished if we stimmed. (For allistic people The term “stimming” is short for self-stimulatory behavior and is sometimes also called “stereotypic” behavior. In a person with autism, stimming usually refers to specific movements that include hand- flapping, rocking, spinning, pen clicking, desk tapping, beatboxing or repetition of words and phrases amongst others.“)
Stimming can mean we are happy or stressed or angry or any other array of emotions. Stimming is not a universal trait and no too autistic people stim the same.
It was also the land of Applied Behaviour Analysis (refered to as ABA for the duration of this post) where any stimming or “undesired behaviours” were squashed out of you as quickly as possible and replaced with “desired behaviours”.
Every night before bed, we would go through the story of how to behave like a neurotypical person. Social stories began before I could read, at first they were pictures. Pictures of faces and facial expressions I couldn’t see or understand.
Location: lunchroom table, 4 of your friends or at least people who are semi-nice to you and a new girl. You know you should follow the steps to make the new kid not think you’re “weird”.
Get your lunch, resist slapping your hands down the rows of cubbies.
Sit down
Don’t rock
Don’t hum or tap your fingers
Get out your lunch
Don’t rock
Look at the new girl, in the eyes even though it feels bad
Smile
Don’t rock
Don’t pull your sandwich apart, normal people take bites
Don’t rock
Join in the conversation, even though they are all talking at once and bouncing between different subjects and when you finally think of something to say, it was 3 subjects ago and you feel dumb
Don’t squint because the overhead lights feel like you are standing too close to the sun.
Don’t rock
Also, don’t cover your ears because the lights buzz and the clock is loud (normal people don’t hear it) and everyone is talking at once and it’s loud and people’s lunch wrappers are crinkling.
Don’t wrinkle your nose at all the smells of everyone’s lunches mixed together with the smell of pinesol cleaner
Don’t rock
Don’t talk in big words you just learned, that isn’t normal, they don’t like that
Don’t touch your clothes, quiet hands, sit on them. Don’t touch the table or walls or other people.
Don’t look relieved that lunch is over.
Go to the library instead of outside. It’s safe there because there is no one but the librarian and she is nice and doesn’t talk or make me talk.
So that is a social story, that is what runs through my head at every interaction with another person. The situation changes but it runs through my head. Still.
It’s exhausting, continuous stream of orders. But I’ve been trained like a dog that was whacked with a newspaper when it did something bad that acting “normal” is paramount to anything else.
And it is virtually impossible to crack, let alone break.
All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost; The old that is strong does not wither, Deep roots are not reached by the frost.
From the ashes a fire shall be woken, A light from the shadows shall spring; Renewed shall be blade that was broken, The crownless again shall be king.
Things are okay? Tiring, but okay. We just came home from New Zealand, after two and a half weeks overseas, and just this morning my brother and his family moved out of this house and got on the road for their cross-state relocation. So for the first time in about six weeks, our house is free of kids. It’s brilliant. An absolute tip, but brilliant. It’s so quiet. So much cleaning to do, but I have the time and the space to do it now. I plan on attacking each room in turn and having lots of uninterrupted baths.
Aside from that, my computer and phone both just died in quick succession, so I have new devices to set up to my desired specs, all while I catch up on months of overdue tv and movie watching and knit something for myself for once.
I’m exhausted, broke, and have about seven hundred things to do before I can breathe (somewhat) easily, but I know I can do it, given enough time. So my attitude and mood is okay I guess? But I’m not starting on the bulk of it until later. Not today. I have a migraine. So, knitting and Once Upon A Time is is.
How are you?
(I hope you don’t mind me posting publicly, I’ve just been so quiet lately, and this summarises things neatly for anyone else following.)