fallingforkonoha:

dateanonbinarysuggestion:

jdtheamazing:

National Coming Out Day is coming up (October 11) and I just want to remind everyone:

1) Please do not out anyone (even if you “think you are doing them a favor.” Trust me when I say you aren’t) and make sure you don’t accidentally do so.

2) It is okay to be in the closet. Please do not feel pressure to/obligated to come out because there so happens to be a Coming Out Day. (Do it for you if it’s what you want).

3) don’t “come out” as LGBT+ as a joke. Don’t “come out” as kinky/a furry/whatever, either.

4) Don’t force/coerce your friends and/or loved ones to come out, and do not get mad at them if they choose to stay closeted.

5) don’t come out as an ally

6) It’s okay to come out even if you don’t know for sure what you identify as yet, or if you’ve decided you don’t want a label.

7) It’s okay to come out again if your identity has changed. Coming out as gay is different to coming out as bi, for example, and coming out as trans is different to coming out as butch lesbian, and coming out as one of the flavours of queer is different to coming out as a label people have a more concrete understanding of. You are you, and who you are grows and changes over time. Doing it again doesn’t mean you were wrong or lying the previous time/s.

8) What you come out as is up to you. I use queer these days, but I have used lesbian in the past, because it’s shorthand and easier than saying ‘biromantic gender-nonconforming demisexual woman in a committed relationship with another woman’. I don’t have to lay out that though I’m probably on the bi or pan spectrum, I don’t identify as either of those because men are ‘unsafe’ for various reasons for me, and if I was dating rather than in a long-term relationship, if I was looking for a partner, I would be looking at pretty much any gender but male. I don’t have to explain that attraction for me is a fluctuating thing, and my sex drive is, too. I don’t have to explain that I don’t identify as transgender, but I feel that most of the construct of what people think of as ‘female’ doesn’t work for me either. I just say queer. And for those who don’t or won’t understand queer, I say lesbian, and that makes most people happy because I’ve put myself in a box they can understand, even if it’s not strictly true. If calling yourself a label like ‘gay’ when you come out makes it easier or safer for you, then use it. It’s a tool, not a shackle.

wrapdepollo:

as an autistic person, there is a huge difference between me acknowledging i’m not able to do something because of my disability, and other people assuming i’m not and trying to speak for me 

the former is me accepting my limitations, the later is people limiting me

we autistic people can speak for ourselves, maybe not in the way allistic people would expect, but we can. all of us can. you just have to learn our way of doing so instead of forcing us to learn your ways and treat us as burdens if we can’t

theaubisticagenda:

kay-is-for-kookie:

robothugscomic:

New Comic!

Apparently now that I’m not in school anymore I’m all about giant long-form comics. 

Identity is a really important topic to me, and the trope of ‘finding yourself’ is almost as problematic and insulting to me as the trope of ‘coming out’. 

I want to destroy the idea that some identities are less valid than others, the condescension that comes with ‘they’re just figuring themselves out’, and the insulting dismissal of identity exploration and performance in youth as being somehow not ‘real’, or as ‘attention seeking’. Fuck all of that. 

And beyond the fact that  ’inconsistent’ identities are really challenging socially, they ALSO carry these real, actual life and liberty risks; we’re expected to use the same name, orientations, values, languages, and identities across all aspects of our lives, we are expected to have normative identities that can be quantified and qualified and trust me, TRUST ME  when a person is perceived as having inconsistent or unusual identities they are being flagged in all sorts of systems for extra scrutiny and action. I know this from experience. 

So, yeah, this ‘one true identity’, this ‘finding yourself’, this ‘who is the real you’ stuff is bullshit. We are so, so much more interesting than that, and we deserve better.

This is very important to me as someone whose identity has changed a lot over the years – and I don’t just mean gender or sexuality, I mean everything. I am a totally different person than I used to be, and the world can’t really handle that. I’m not interested in my “profession” the way I used to be, and want to do something else. My hobbies has changed, dress sense, opinions on things like piercings, smoking, alcohol. Everything changes. Get over it.

This is amazing.

andromedalogic:

thefantasticspastic1995:

I always wonder who came up with the whole “person-first” thing with disability, because it feels like it would have been a non-disabled person. I hate the implication that my disability has to be removed from me, and separated from my identity, to make me okay.

Actually, it was people with intellectual and developmental disabilities who started it. Here is the history as given by The Arc:

On January 8, 1974, the People First movement began in Salem, Oregon, with the purpose of organizing a convention where people with developmental disabilities could speak for themselves and share ideas, friendship and information. In the course of planning the convention, the small group of planners decided they needed a name for themselves. A number of suggestions had been made when someone said, “I’m tired of being called retarded – we are people first.” 

many self-advocacy groups of people with ID/DD are still built around a “people first” ideology, and that language is a conscious effort among them to resist dehumanization. of course, non-disabled people are given to using person-first language in dehumanizing ways — what else is new. they can pretty much figure out how to make ANY language dehumanizing.

but it’s important in cross-disability efforts to remember that person-first language is the product of people who were fed up with not being treated like people. and it’s still very important to many self-advocates with ID/DD.

of course, the Blind, Deaf and Autistic communities (for three) are staunchly opposed to person-first language because of the way nondisabled people have used it against us. (i don’t mean to say that everyone in these communities agrees, only that it’s the official position of the NFB, ASAN, the NAD, etc.)

so we all need to remember that different people prefer different language because non-disabled society has chosen a variety of ways to linguistically scorn us. either person first or ‘identity-first’ language can be used in a bad way. and either can be used in a good way. it really depends.

jabberwockypie:

youneedacat:

ufod:

heres an idea: instead of trying to “fix” autism try to fix the way allistic people react to austic people because saying you want to cure autism and trying to find a way to make sure autistic children arent born is just like saying that you want to cure gay people and thats :///////

They actually did that.

As in, there were studies.

They found that when they tried to improve the social skills of the autistic kids, nothing much happened.

When they improved the social skills of the nonautistic kids (by telling them how to properly interact with autistic people without freaking us out and overloading us), then the autistic kids’ social skills suddenly improved.

Why?  Because we were reacting to being treated with respect for the first time ever, by other kids.  Because other kids were making room for our sensory sensitivities and our social differences.  Because they were making an accessible environment for us, and in an accessible environment, suddenly we thrived socially.

And that says everything about where the social skills problems actually lie.

How about making things that autistic people need more accessible and not cost WAY more money than most people can afford? If people are nonverbal much of the time but, say, have a much easier time typing, how about we just ACCOMMODATE THAT with electronic thingies that talk or whatever works best for that person?

My brother is 15 and autistic.  He also has some cognitive impairments.  Sam is … I don’t know a good way to say “more autistic than me” (which sounds awful) without resorting to a Functioning label, unfortunately, and I don’t want to do that.  (I’m afraid I avoid looking up autism stuff like the plague because it makes me want to set the cure and anti-vaxxer types on fire and I don’t need that added stress.)  *considers*  Sam consistently has more difficulties than I do, though we’re both on the Autism Spectrum.  How’s that?  (Seriously, if you can help with terminology, I’d appreciate it. iamshadow21, do you have anything for me that doesn’t sound terrible?)

You know what would be really great for Sam?  A service dog.  Even though we’ve been working on the “Sam, you have to look both ways before you cross the street.  Stop look and listen!” thing for years, Sam just can’t get it down.   That’s a serious safety hazard!  And I think it’d help him feel less isolated, too.  AND it’d help his anxiety and stress levels in loud, crowded public places when he starts to feel overwhelmed.  But there’s no way we can pay thousands of dollars for that.  AND a lot of service dog programs are focused around little kids with nothing for teens or adults.

Most of the autism programs – at least in our area – stop around age 10.  MAYBE a couple go to age 12.  But … apparently autistic kids aren’t going to grow up to be autistic teens and autistic young adults?  There is quite literally NOTHING for a kid Sam’s age.  There isn’t in most places.  And I’m not talking about a cure thing, but being able to socialize with other people his age who GET IT.

Sam knows he’s different.  He’s a pretty happy kid, but he does know that.  He’s lumped into a general special ed class for his first and last hour at school and mainstreamed for the rest with an aide and I HATE IT.  I hate it SO MUCH.  Half the time they just dick around and show the kids movies.  That is not educational in any way whatsoever – it’s not like they talk about the content in any way.  They don’t even seem to have anyone trained properly in Special Ed – based on my observations at any rate.

You know what Sam needs to learn that ISN’T stupid movies?  Real life skills like practice with money and how much money is worth.  (We work on that at home with his allowance for chores, but we can’t do it completely alone.)  Telling time – though he’s actually not bad at that and I try to work with him, but I’m not a trained teacher and I can’t quite figure out which part is tripping him up.  IN THEORY his actual teachers should be able to help with that.

I threw a hardcore temper tantrum – tears streaming down my cheeks and repeating sentences over and over and rocking A LOT, and screaming over my mom using the telephone – when I found out that in high school they were putting him in the “Vocational Training” class.   That’s a polite way of saying “They have the Special Education kids empty the trash and the recycling bins and sometimes work in the cafeteria serving school lunch so they don’t have to pay somebody to do it.”  And if Sam is doing that, he should damn well be getting paid.  I went to that high school (before I dropped out).  I saw the way the other assholes at high school treated those kids!

The ONLY reason that I’m putting up with it at all is that my mom has been sick/injured enough to require a lot more of my attention and doesn’t have the energy to deal with it and *I* can only handle so much – especially since I’m Sam’s sister and not his legal guardian.  And Sam likes it, but he’s being taken advantage of horribly and it infuriates me.  I want to rip their faces off with my teeth.

Goddamned fucking circle people.*

*Again to quote House:  See, skinny, socially-privileged white people get to draw this neat little circle. And everyone inside the circle is “normal”. Anyone outside the circle needs to be beaten, broken and reset so that they can be brought into the circle. Failing that, they should be institutionalized. Or worse – Pitied

If he can tell you, I’d ask him how he categorises his autistic experience and respect that, but basically, disability is not a dirty word. If particular aspects of his autism are disabling, if they affect his life in ways that need accommodation or support, then disability or difficulty are the right words to use. You are both autistic, but your patterns of dis/ability will be different from each other, as they would with any two autistic people, especially if either of you has other diagnoses to factor in. Sam may struggle with things you can manage, and vice versa. Many autistic people object to functioning labels because they imply a line, with ‘severe’ at one end and ‘neurotypical’ at the other and all the bullshit assumptions that go along with that flawed viewpoint, when really, neurodiversity is like a colour wheel scattered with buckshot. Everyone’s skills and difficulties form a different constellation.

autisticlynx:

functioning labels suck

I can talk. I can cook. I can read and write.

I often cannot comprehend things. I am often confused about nothing at all. I am frequently tired and not sure what in doing and not quite in control of my movements.

I can speak with people but I communicate weirdly. I cannot drive. I have very little focus unless I hit a point where I’m hyper focused. I do not think I could handle a job due to the anxiety and people and schedule.

loud noises terrify me. I am too often dissociated.

I might be labeled high functioning, but it doesn’t feel like I function typically enough to count as that. but I wouldn’t be labeled low functioning because I can “do stuff”.

high functioning does not fit me. low functioning does not fit me.

I don’t like functioning labels at all.

cultural problem

devilsmoon:

madeofpatterns:

I think a lot of the autistic and autism communities have this idea that… there’s a type of person called aspie. And those people aren’t ~real autistics~, they just are really good at academic geekery and bad at knowing that people are real.

But there’s this notion that *that* kind of autistic person isn’t really disabled, especially if they can pass.

And there’s a real cognitive subtype that actually *is* associated with receptive language problems, being good at academics and other abstracty things, and being able to pass if you push yourself in certain ways.  But those people are disabled too. 

And I think – those of us who have been pushed to see ourselves as that subtype when we’re not, when we’d never in a million years be capable of that, often end up being somewhat repulsed by people who *do* have that particular cognitive configuration.

And it’s not ok. Because the ableism we face isn’t their fault, and they’re no more free of it than we are. And we need to not be part of the problem.

The aspie hate things people say are not accurate descriptions of *anyone’s* cognitive type. 

This is true and valid and I agree we need to stop eating our own.

Though I want to say something about the aspie subtype. As someone who benefited from that label (and no long IDs as an aspie), I’ve always felt that non-autistics and neurotypicals tend to value one subtype over the other. They usually are the once that sort of enforce this schism. Aspies are portrayed as goofy, cute, white boys who just want to fit in. People see they stereotype of them being good with math and computers as marketable. They seek out IT type aspies. Whilst everyone else gets passed over. The problem is many of them that are articulate, passing and have enough social reading, they end up buying this well constructed lie that they are far more valuable than non-speaking, chronically ill or non passing autists. So they end up throwing us under the bus.

This is not a new phenomena. Nevertheless it’s still fugging awful. My problem is not aspies but the NTs and the allistics that enforce and build  this massive schism up. They want us in-fight, they want the aspies to talk over us over issues, they want  the resentment. This hierarchy is artificial and awful and we need to destroy it.

So yes, they are disabled, but they also benefit a great many privileges too they need to realize themselves that we’re all drowning.

I have no problem personally with the term ‘Aspie’ or people who identify as such, but I stopped using it to identify myself because I realised that it came with baggage. Functioning label baggage. ‘Asperger’, for people who even know the term, tends to be equated with ‘high achiever’. It tends to imply that the person will go far if they find the right career, will succeed in academia if they find the right specialty. It implies a level of competence that I consistently failed to be able to live up to.

Now, my diagnosis was for Asperger Syndrome plus a handful of other things, and don’t get me wrong, I don’t think any diagnostician would diagnose me differently. I am highly verbal, highly literate, and as a child I learnt to pass to a degree and I live with that privilege/curse every day. But I failed out of my last year of high school and four further education attempts because the social stresses and expectations pushed my anxiety through the roof and into burnout so severe I was housebound. I had a handful of minimum wage jobs, one I know I was fired from because of my (then un-dxed) autism, and two that I probably stopped getting shifts from because of my short-term memory issues and my failure to grasp things at times that seemed easy or common sense to those around me.

‘Aspie’, with its connotations of competence behind a quirky, eccentric shell, made those around me – family, social workers, employment case managers – think that I just wasn’t trying hard enough. And that was crushing.

I realised when I started reading about other autistic people, that I always seemed to find more in common with ‘autistic’ rather than ‘Aspie’ autobiographers. Even if our actual life experiences were very different, ‘autistic’ authors seemed to write more about problems I faced, and seemed to more often have a world view closer to my own.

‘Aspie’ began to seem very limited, while ‘autistic’ encompassed the whole of my identity and disability. It had the flexibility I needed to cover my experience.

Add to that, I have a running tally for how many people I once loved and respected who have made the ‘arse burgers’ joke to my face when I disclosed. The first time was a very old and dear friend at my birthday dinner, a handful of months after my diagnosis. At the time, only a few people close to me knew. Every time someone makes that joke it catches me unguarded, and every time it hurts. I will never understand why people think that making that joke when someone is in such an incredibly vulnerable place is acceptable. Every time, it’s as if they think they’re the first person to think of it, and that they’re hilarious. At least the word ‘autistic’ gives me one less vulnerable place than if I use the word ‘Asperger’.