If you force me to use up my spoons, I’m going to have to get out my knives instead.
Tag: autism
because i’ve ordered one and gotten it today, cheap tangle link!! $2.99 USD, aka cheap for australians! free shipping!
tangle – it’s an ebay link. link takes you to an ebay.com link with the tangle, hopefully free shipping to MOST locations.
you can specify colours, if you don’t they send you a random colour.
That listing is now out of stock (I got the last couple) but this one is the same price, free shipping!
So apparently my subconscious self decided I was lacking in ‘pink’ in my diet when I went shopping earlier.
I also bought cooked prawns, sweet potato, and radishes, but at least they were on the shopping list.
Actually super excited for the cordial, because I like pink grapefruit in juices and things, and Bickfords do gorgeous cordials.
Hey, @aplpaca , my shirt arrived today! Wore it to the gym, and it was comfortable. 🙂
Today’s weather
On the one hand I feel like a human today because it’s 27C not 44C. I already did a few household things like folding laundry, doing dishes and sorting out the raw meat for the dog’s food for the next few days.
On the other I feel twitchy, dissociative, raw on a sensory level, and keep flapping and shaking my hands because I feel like I could float away if I don’t work out where my body is.
So, there you go. That’s my reality today.
Autism Speaks Accepts Support From Neo-Nazi Group
(Link is via Do Not Link)
Autism Speaks is accepting support from Soldiers of Odin, a white supremacist vigilante group, and happily featuring their group portrait on their website asking for $ to fund their shitty autistic-abusing organisation. As A$ are flat-out eugenicists and the organisation’s leadership is in bed with Trump, I for one am very unfucking surprised that they’re chill with their money-making events being full of actual Nazis. So much for their new ‘progressive’ mission statement. Do not trust or support A$.
Here’s another article explaining this shit in detail.
Of course they would.
I made a shirt design for that one post since some people asked for it.
You can buy it in different shirt styles and colors on my Redbubble (also on mugs, pillows, and some other stuff if anyone’s interested)
http://www.redbubble.com/people/aplpaca/works/25065826-autistics-rock
Thank you, @aplpaca! I reblogged the original text post with a covetous desire for a shirt with the slogan on, and next thing I knew, they’d replied with a gorgeous design and a redbubble link! I’ve ordered mine – a fitted womens tee in dark purple. (That was my second choice. Redbubble’s racerback tanks don’t cater for girls with chests like mine, apparently!) But I’m still totally wearing the tee to the gym, even if it’s hotter!
Autistics Rock
Hmmmmmmmmmmmm :3c
Hey! Look! Some of our community’s awesome autistic activists helped shut down bullshit about autism with host Dylan Marron!
Nice work, everyone involved! It’s a good show of what can happen when we speak up and say, “Hey, this is super one-sided and doesn’t represent us fairly or adequately!” So I’d also like to say good job to everyone who reacted to the earlier vid that Dylan Marron created about autism, and influenced this video, which is a follow-up with four autistic people who share their experiences.
Coming out again and again (and again) but always for the first time
Today I faced up to the email that’s been sitting in my inbox for over a week, from one of my oldest and dearest friends, my first ever internet friend, my found family brother. I’d mentioned in a previous email that I was in autistic burnout, and in reply, in the nicest possible way, he asked, ‘so, this autism thing, what’s that all about? whenever if ever you’re ready to talk about it, ilu whatever, you know that’.
And I come out to people all the time, about my autism, about my queerness, about the abuse when I was a kid, whatever. But this was hard, because I wanted to write it right, and sequencing my thoughts is really difficult for me when I’m trying to lay out something as complex as my neurotype and its effect on my life.
He’s asking because he wants to understand, and that’s wonderful, but at the same time, terrifying because unlike some random whose opinion doesn’t matter, his opinion does.
As with my queerness, it’s never a case of you come out once, and that’s it. Every day you come out again to someone you’ve just met, to a friend, to a health worker, to a family member. And every time, you’re coming out for the first time. It never gets easy. It gets familiar, but never easy, because each time you do, it’s a risk.
Will this person be receptive? Will they reject what I’m saying? Will they try to cure me with suggestions of diet, yoga or meditation? Will they tell me I’m not as disabled as a ‘real’ autistic person they know? Will they ask me if I’ve found god? Will they ask if I’ve tried sex with men? Will they ask about my functioning label, my meltdowns, my stimming or my verbal fluency, or what those things were like when I was a child? Will they think it’s all a bid for attention?
While some questions are specific to my neurotype or my sexuality or the abuse, there’s a striking similarity to many of them, particularly when they come from near strangers. It’s curiosity, yes, but there’s a need to categorise, to feel out my edges and lines and push me into a box they recognise. It’s a hard thing to be on the receiving end of, but it’s also very human. As a person being questioned, you’re torn between being polite and enstating hard boundaries. As a person questioning, you’re often just trying to understand. That doesn’t mean questioning is benign. It can be intrusive, toxic and hostile. It can involve damning snap judgements that can leave the victim reeling for days, ‘helpful’ suggestions that can crush fragile self esteem. People don’t always have the best intentions, and even those who do, often don’t understand that their ‘help’ is unwelcome or harmful.
The point I’m trying to make is that coming out is HARD. Whether you’re talking to people (as I do) about neurodiversity or sexuality or abuse, or talking about race, religion, political activism, gender… whatever you’re taking the big step to talk about with another human, either in brickspace or on the internet or the phone, it’s one of the hardest things you’ll do over and over for the rest of your life. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it. That doesn’t mean you’ll get it right every time, or that it’ll be received well, or that you won’t regret opening your mouth sometimes. That’s how life is. But the fact that you take that step with someone… that’s huge. And you should be proud of yourself for that.
(Reblogs are fine. Go for it.)