liztrade:

stoneandbloodandwater:

iincantatem:

Dumbledore, notorious for giving second chances Dumbledore, let Sirius rot in Azkaban for twelve years. 

He must have known Sirius well due to his time in the Order, he must have known what James meant to Sirius. Dumbledore was a member of the freaking Wizengamot yet he didn’t fight the Ministry’s horrifying trial-optional policy. 

This is a man who took back Death Eater!Snape at his word, shielded him from prison, and employed him at a school for children. 

But he didn’t have a use for Sirius, so he didn’t care about him.

I got 99 problems with Dumbledore and his treatment of Sirius Black accounts for like 64 of them.  

To be honest, Albus Dumbledore is one of the most disturbing, terrifying characters I’ve ever found in a book, because he thought he was a good guy and so did everyone else and the books don’t really challenge it either (given that Harry forgives him for everything he did), but when you look between the lines he was profoundly, profoundly immoral and unethical.

A couple of months ago, I was talking about HP characters with a friend, and he said that Dumbledore was one of his least favorite characters of all time.

Naturally, this took me back a bit since he’s one of the heroes of the series, misguided as he was at times. Still, I was curious and asked my friend why he hated him. His answer still strikes a chord with me.

“There is never, ever a reason to leave a child in an abusive home. Never.”

A reminder that Dumbledore didn’t just choose to leave Harry in an abusive environment and send Harry back again and again to an abusive home, he deliberately placed Harry in a home knowing he’d likely be abused there in the first place. He didn’t just aid and abet an abusive dynamic, he created it, to ‘forge’ his hero by isolating him. This is what he does throughout the books, too, by making it as hard as possible for Harry to remain in contact with the people who actually care about him. And if you think James and Lily Potter would have been a-okay with their child being delibrately and persistently abused like this, then you’re dead wrong.

forestlover:

keyholeslumber:

modestinferno:

circumlocute:

Books that people read romantically but shouldn’t because they’re missing the point:

  1. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
  2. Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare
  3. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

That’s your opinion.

there’s nothing romantic about a pedophile rapist, the senseless murder-suicide of teenagers because families can’t get their shit together or the hypocrisy of the roaring 20s

FINALLY SOMEONE SAYS IT

I’d like to add Wuthering Heights, because that is incredibly fucked up if you read it through a romantic lens.

Violence, Abusers, and Protest

rook-seidhr:

deadcatwithaflamethrower:

fabulousworkinprogress:

My grandfather was a generally peaceful man. He was a gardener, an EMT, a town selectman, and an all around fantastic person. He would give a friend – or a stranger – the shirt off his back if someone needed it. He also taught me some of the most important lessons I ever learned about violence, and why it needs to exist.


When I was five, my grandfather and grandmother discovered that my rear end and lower back were covered in purple striped bruises and wheals. They asked me why, and I told them that Tom, who was at that time my stepfather, had punished me. I don’t remember what he was punishing me for, but I remember the looks on their faces. 

When my mother and stepfather arrived, my grandmother took my mother into the other room. Then my grandfather took my stepfather into the hallway. He was out of my eye line, but I saw through the crack in the door on the hinge side. He slammed my stepfather against the wall so hard that the sheet rock buckled, and told him in low terms that if he ever touched me again they would never find his body. 

I absolutely believed that he would kill my stepfather, and I also believed that someone in the world thought my safety was worth killing for. 

In the next few years, he gave me a few important tips and pointers for dealing with abusers and bullies. He taught me that if someone is bringing violence to you, give it back to them as harshly as you can so they know that the only response they get is pain. He taught me that guns are used as scare tactics, and if you aren’t willing to accept responsibility for mortally wounding someone, you should never own one. He told me that if I ever had a gun aimed at me, I should accept the possibility of being shot and rush the person, or run away in a zig-zag so they couldn’t pick me off. He taught me how to break someone’s knee, how to hold a knife, and how to tell if someone is holding a gun with intent to kill. He was absolutely right, and he was one of the most peaceful people I’ve ever met. He was never, to my knowledge, violent with anyone who didn’t threaten him or his family. Even those who had, he gave chances to, like my first stepfather. 

When I was fourteen, a friend of mine was stalked by a mutual acquaintance. I was by far younger than anyone else in the social crowd; he was in his mid twenties, and the object of his “affection” was as well. Years before we had a term for “Nice Guy” bullshit, he did it all. He showed up at her house, he noted her comings and goings, he observed who she spent time with, and claimed that her niceness toward him was a sign that they were actually in a relationship.

This came to a head at a LARP event at the old NERO Ware site. He had been following her around, and felt that I was responsible for increased pressure from our mutual friends to leave her alone. He confronted me, her, and a handful of other friends in a private room and demanded that we stop saying nasty things about him. Two of our mutual friends countered and demanded that he leave the woman he was stalking alone. 

Stalker-man threw a punch. Now, he said in the aftermath that he was aiming for the man who had confronted him, but he was looking at me when he did it. He had identified me as the agent of his problems and the person who had “turned everyone against him.” His eyes were on mine when the punch landed. He hit me hard enough to knock me clean off my feet and I slammed my head into a steel bedpost on the way down.

When I shook off the stunned confusion, I saw that two of our friends had tackled him. I learned that one had immediately grabbed him, and the other had rabbit-punched him in the face. I had a black eye around one eyebrow and inner socket, and he was bleeding from his lip. 

At that time in my life, unbeknownst to anyone in the room, I was struggling with the fact that I had been molested repeatedly by someone who my mother had recently broken up with. He was gone, but I felt conflicted and worthless and in pain. I was still struggling, but I knew in that moment that I had a friend in the world who rabbit-punched a man for hitting me, and I felt a little more whole.

Later that year, I was bullied by a girl in my school. She took special joy in tormenting me during class, in attacking me in the hallways, in spreading lies and asserting things about me that were made up. She began following me to my locker, and while I watched the clock tick down, she would wait for me to open it and try to slam my hand in it. She succeeded a few times. I attempted to talk to counselors and teachers. No one did anything. Talking to them made it worse, since they turned and talked to her and she called me a “tattle” for doing it. I followed the system, and it didn’t work. 

I remembered my friend socking someone in the face when he hit me. I recalled what my grandfather had taught me, and decided that the next time she tried, I would make sure it was the last. I slammed the door into her face, then shut her head in the base of my locker, warping the aluminum so badly that my locker no longer worked. She never bothered me again. 

Violence is always a potential answer to a problem. I believe it should be a last answer – everything my grandfather taught me before his death last year had focused on that. He hadn’t built a bully or taught me to seek out violence; he taught me how to respond to it.

I’ve heard a lot of people talk recently about how, after the recent Nazi-punching incident, we are in more danger because they will escalate. That we will now see more violence and be under more threat because of it. I reject that. We are already under threat. We are already being attacked. We are being stripped of our rights, we are seeing our loved ones and our family reduced to “barely human” or equated with monsters because they are different. 

To say that we are at more risk now than we were before a Nazi got punched in the face is to claim that abusers only hurt you if you fight back. Nazis didn’t need a reason to want to hurt people whom they have already called inhuman, base, monsters, thugs, retards, worthless, damaging to the gene pool, and worthy only of being removed from the world. They were already on board. The only difference that comes from fighting back is the intimate knowledge that we will not put up with their shit.

And I’m just fine with that.

Hallelujuah, so may it be.

#violence is the last resort of the gentle #it is not the answer#but sometimes it’s the question and the answer is yes (x)

traumadic:

This may seem like a wild concept but you’re allowed to be angry about what happened to you and you’re under no obligation to forgive anyone

Say it loud, say it as many times as you need to to believe it, for the rest of your life if that’s what you need to do. Forgiveness is not necessary for you to live a good life. You don’t owe it to anybody – especially not someone who hurt you.

jabberwockypie:

triple-witching:

jabberwockypie:

Okay, new rule.

No more doubting myself.

No more doubt.  Nope.  Not doing it.

I KNOW that the abuse was That Bad.  I know this. I have told people I trust who are SENSIBLE about it and gotten a lot of horrified and unimpressed looks when I reflexively try to justify it with “But it didn’t happen that often” or “But I did X first”.

Even two fucking years after I got out of that house.

“She only grabbed my hair and slammed my head against the floor because-”

No.  Not doing it.  NO.  (Also, I was THREE.  And five.  And seven. And twelve.  And it was ongoing. What the hell. WHO DOES THAT?)

“I said I couldn’t breathe and she said if I couldn’t breathe I wouldn’t be talking, and I mean it’s not like I DIED, so -”

No.

No more.

“I was having a temper tantrum, so she-”

No.

I was having a MELTDOWN, because I was a neurodivergent child who was being abused from at least age 2 onward, and I was in an intolerable situation.

I know that the abuse really was That Bad. Period.

No more doubt.

i got out a while back – still do this, trying to stop. my friends are still horrified every time i dredge a New Bad up from the memory hole.

it was that bad. let’s have 2018 be the year we stop prevaricating on behalf of people that hurt us.

“every time I dredge a New Bad up from the memory hole” is a very good and visceral description of what it feels like.

I very much agree! Let’s have 2018 be the year we stop prevaricating on behalf of people that hurt us.

The Memory Hole is a good analogy, but I know sometimes I’ve just casually mentioned something and stopped because the reactions of the people I’m talking to tells me this is Not Normal Childhood. I’m thirty six, and the last major time this happened was three years ago. I casually mentioned how the dynamic between myself and my mother operated when I was a preteen onward till I left home, and the person I was talking to was someone I’d been close friends with since I was thirteen, and she looked shocked. I’d told her all kinds of details of the shit my dad did to me decades ago, so it wasn’t like I was springing on her the fact that I’d been abused. She looked furious and very clearly told me that what went on between me and my mother was flat out abusive and wrong. And that wasn’t some discovered memory, or something I knew was bad that I was disclosing for the first time – that was something I’d never talked about because I never thought there was anything to talk about. My baseline, yet again, was established as way, way wrong – and with the parent no one had ever labelled the abusive one. So I’m dealing with the exhaustion, anger and bitterness I thought I’d left behind in my teenage years, in my thirties, for the OTHER parent. And while I’m yet again living with her.

So my mother just casually dropped that she’s letting my uncle stay with us again for a week in March even though last time I told her he made me feel actively unsafe and in fear of my life. Continuing her pattern of… forever, in me unequivocably laying out why I feel unsafe, followed by her minimising it, trivialising it, and ultimately, forgetting it. She conveniently forgets anything she doesn’t want to think about.

This is abuse, just as much as the sexual abuse I endured when I was a kid. This is abuse, just as much as the jealousy and emotional isolation enforced by my first serious partner.

This is abuse, this is abuse, this is abuse, and I have no way of getting away from it.

ruffboijuliaburnsides:

taibhsearachd:

naamahdarling:

i-ran-over-the-easter-bunny:

bjornwilde:

Or you should lose weight and we’ll run tests again.

I get that doctors can be assholes sometimes, but y’all making fun of people from a stance where you know jack shit about medicine compared to them

Like did a doctor say this to your face? Say that you were faking? Or were you assuming because you misinterpreted something you don’t understand?

If a doctor asks “are you SURE about xyz” it’s not because they think you’re faking, it’s because many times a patient will hold back information without realizing it and, as you ask the question again, they may remember something that they didn’t the first time.

Like idk about the specific events around the OP, and in no way am I saying that there aren’t manipulative and abusive doctors out there, but people tend to misunderstand things that they don’t know very well.

Yeah, patients do frequently get told that it’s psychological, psychosomatic, due to stress*, etc. Like, that is a really common experience people with chronic illness have, or people with “weird” illnesses like chronic fatigue, Lyme, EDS, etc.

And alas, people with weird mystery illnesses or chronic illnesses *do* often know more about their illnesses than the average GP. GPs are trained to identify and diagnose horses. They aren’t prepared for unicorns, and some think they don’t even exist.

It’s not even manipulation or abuse, it’s just being lazy, or not having the right training and not wanting to GET the right training. An ignorant doctor can do just as much damage as a malicious one.

* “Due to stress” is VALID, stress can make you very very sick, but when a doctor wants to just leave it there instead of treating it, well, that’s shitty.

I put this in tags before, but fuck it. Never mind being accused of faking it, I have had a doctor straight-up tell me, about my cardiac and neurological symptoms that have made it impossible for me to work or leave the house alone, “Huh. That’s weird. Unfortunately, we can’t do anything about that…”

No tests were run. No blood tests, no drug tests, no scans, not even a tilt-table test or the knock-off “sit down for a few minutes and then stand up while we take your blood pressure and heartrate” version of a tilt-table test that would have very quickly indicated that something is very wrong. They didn’t even suggest a referral to a specialist, the bare minimum you could do if you don’t know what the fuck you’re looking at. I’ve been suffering from a chronic, disabling condition since I was seventeen, and only now, twelve years later, have I begun to find someone who will listen and acknowledge that yeah, that’s actually a thing you’re dealing with and a problem.

Yeah, some doctors are good at their jobs. Some doctors give a shit. Some of them literally don’t listen to anything you say, and wave you off like your life-ruining symptoms are nothing, and just want you out of their office as soon as possible. All the medical training in the world doesn’t help when the person with that training fails at empathy, at listening to the people in front of them and hearing what they’re saying and acknowledging that this is a fucking human who is suffering and fixing that is literally their entire job.

“You’re probably not actually sick” or “that’s weird but I can’t fix it” is never an acceptable response, and fuck you for suggesting that chronically ill people don’t understand they’re being dismissed when almost all of us have dealt with it for literal years before we even begin to understand what’s wrong with us.

#look my stepmom is a doctor #i have a very dear friend who is in med school and I’m sure she’ll be great #but oh my god I hate doctors at large #and I have developed this hatred over years of being ignored and abused #‘maybe you misunderstood what they were saying…’ #BITE ME

I am lucky enough that my chronic illnesses are really easy to diagnose and understand for GPs: psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. Also depression, but thankfully when you go in saying “I have depression, I have tried these prescriptions, please try me on this other prescription” most GPs will kind of go “eh, okay.”  I have visible signs of psoriasis, and arthritis is pretty easy to get doctors to pay attention to, even when you’re only 25 years old.

On the other hand, we have my wife, @taibhsearachd, who explained her position above.  She’s had some SERIOUS BULLSHIT going on since she was 17 years old, I have been personally privy to it, and I have accompanied her to 99% of her doctor’s appointments, and despite BOTH our best efforts at getting doctors to listen – seriously, ME FROM THE OUTSIDE explaining shit that I could VISIBLY OBSERVE – we still got shit like, and I reiterate that this is literally what we were told, “Huh, that’s weird, too bad we can’t do anything about it”.  Without ANYTHING BEING TESTED AT ALL.

And like, even for shit that should be easier to deal with, like “i’ve been diagnosed with clinical depression and my antidepressants don’t work anymore and I need a new one”, I’ve LITERALLY WITNESSED a goddamn doctor dismiss her request for a prescription with the statement “You’re too pretty to be depressed”

Some doctors are good.  But unfortunately MANY OF THEM are fucking shit at their jobs.  They, like the girl in the cubicle behind me plans on doing, became doctors for the money or prestige, or just don’t give a shit about things they’re not interested in, or WHAT THE FUCK EVER, and they are BAD AT THEIR JOBS and they ACTIVELY AVOID HELPING PEOPLE WHO DESPERATELY NEED THEIR HELP.

And that is a goddamn FACT.

Your daily reminder that dismissal of women’s reported symptoms in health situations straight up kills them.

Also, your regular reminder that if a marginalised person who has experienced discrimination says, “You’re hurting me”, your response should never be, “No, I’m not.” It should be, “Oh shit, I should listen to your words and not do that again.” Otherwise, you’re deliberately making the choice to perpetuate the harm against a vulnerable person, and that makes you an abuser. If your response is, “maybe you imagined it/misinterpreted the situation/exaggerated it”, you’re gaslighting them, and are an abuser. If you use the vulnerable person’s physical health/mental health/disability/race/class/religion/gender/sexuality as an excuse for how they’re treated differently, then you’re an abuser and a bigot and possibly a eugenicist. And if you use your status to do this to people on a regular basis because you think that status makes you better than them, then you’re a classist tool abusing those without the status to fight back.

@i-ran-over-the-easter-bunny should read what I just wrote and read what they wrote again and have a good hard think about why they’re so eager to jump in and defend people in a position of power over vulnerable sick people. Why they’re so willing to dismiss the testimony of victims of systemic violence and abuse (neglect IS violence), and accept that medical professionals THEY DON’T EVEN KNOW are morally and professionally pure and never inclined to ignore, dismiss or gaslight the people in their care because it’s easier than actually doing their damn job. People with complex and/or undiagnosed health conditions often have to become experts in their own health because doctors often don’t have enough specialised knowledge to treat them without making the choice to educate themselves further, which many are just not bothered to do. It’s just so much easier to write ‘anxiety’ or ‘obesity’ or ‘drug seeking’ on a file and forget about them.

For an example, the average dignosic window between symptoms reported and diagnosis for Ehlers Danlos Syndrome is ten years. It took my partner thirty years and probably over twenty health professionals to get a diagnosis, and only then because we did our homework and asked for referrals for a specialist who could diagnose that specific condition. Even now, with a diagnosis, we are running into doctor after doctor who are convinced it’s another specialist’s problem, including a cardiologist who acknowledged, only when pushed for clarification, that she had an electrical problem with her heart, potentially serious, but that he ‘wasn’t going to do anything about it’. In those words. Tell me who’s faking it, who knows jack shit, who misunderstood something about a cardiologist who can’t be bothered to treat a potentially serious heart condition, when it’s LITERALLY HIS JOB.