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Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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Keni

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@aesthetic-stims
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Early morning colours on my wall
This incredibly pure and important
MY FRAGILE HEART
If I ever not reblog this assume I’m dead
Dusk & beam✨
Details in Copenhagen !!
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The Boy Squad ⇩
Fake Movie Posters
Autistic people don't all want boring jobs
Lately, I’ve been seeing a lot of variations on a story that goes “Autistic people love detail, and it makes them naturally well suited for repetitive jobs that most people find intolerably boring.”
This is usually said with great fanfare, and described as a step away from stigma and towards celebration.
But — autistic people don’t all have a convenient love of tedious tasks. Some of us find them as boring as everyone else does.
This model of “autistic strengths” celebrates us doing jobs everyone else hates. It has no room for us to pursue jobs that others want. We’re supposed to stay in a special place for special people, doing the boring tasks the ideology says we love — and making no trouble for the normal people who do the interesting jobs.
This isn’t ok, and it isn’t acceptance. Some of us like things that others don’t, but none of us should be forced into a box. Autistic people have the full range of interests, talents, and skills that anyone else does. We shouldn’t be tracked into jobs based on stereotypes. We have the right to decide for ourselves what to pursue.
hyehaha
Justin Gaffrey, http://justinmadebyhand.com
a quick thing for Autism Acceptance Day/Month!!
how to support autistic people this month:
don’t support Autism Speaks – it’s an awful “charity” that harms autistic people more than it helps them
do support organisations run by and for autistic people, such as the Autistic Self-Advocacy Network ( @autisticadvocacy ) and the Autism Women’s Network ( @autisticwomen )
don’t “light it up blue” for “autism awareness” – these things are heavily associated with Autism Speaks, and with the dangerous misconceptions it spreads about autism
do use the hashtag #RedInstead to fight back against #LightItUpBlue
do promote and celebrate autism acceptance (not just awareness!)
and, most importantly:
do listen to what actual autistic people have to say – we know better than our family members, “autism experts”, or any non-autistic person!!
↖This blog will be screamer free on April Fool’s Day.