do you want to be a part of the chronic illness video project I am doing? Check out the tab on my blog about it.
đȘŒ
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Janaina Medeiros
Not today Justin
Claire Keane

Love Begins
No title available
NASA
hello vonnie
No title available

No title available

tannertan36

Origami Around
Noah Kahan

@theartofmadeline
Cosmic Funnies
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

JVL
Peter Solarz

oozey mess

seen from United States
seen from Portugal

seen from Pakistan
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from India
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
@myillnessisinvisible
do you want to be a part of the chronic illness video project I am doing? Check out the tab on my blog about it.
interested in being a part of a video that will help chronic illness movement? Check out the post/tab about it on my blog.
hi there! i'm a disabled chronically and mentally ill college student, and i run an etsy shop as my primary means of income. i was hoping you'd be able to signal boost my new chronic illness/spoonie piece (post 119874730364 on my blog) or my fundraising post (post 117835214569 ). i understand if you can't, but i'd really appreciate the support!
posting :) sorry itâs late
Youâre not unreliable - your health is.
shout out to all my chronically ill people who get shit for being late, for cancelling, because their health prevents them, and feel like jerks because of it. Itâs not your fault. (via sickfacemcgee)
The thing about having a chronic illness is that when I say Iâm having a bad day and canât do anything, people want to know why, they want to know the symptoms, and sometimes it isnât anything, sometimes I just donât feel good, sometimes itâs a lifetime of symptoms leaving leftovers behind like crumbs in a toaster, and nothing is wrong exactly, but I still donât feel good and have to spend the day in bed and try to figure out where my spoons went.
Why are all queer events on at like 10 at night? Some of us queers canât stay out that late? Canât we have a gay afternoon tea? Lesbian lunch? Bisexual breakfast?
#this is a super important point though too stop having queer events be only late and at bars#youâre excluding underage queer ppl and sober queer ppl and itâs really shitty
Kill the idea that LGBT+ stuff is inherently rated R and therefore must only occur in the dead of night.Â
I have this weird relationship with my chronic illness where I spend 75% of my time trying to pretend it doesnât exist and the other 25% trying to explain that it DOES exist to a bunch of people who donât believe me.
OMG YOU PUT IT IN WORDS
IM GOING TO MAKE A SHIRT WITH THIS POST ON IT MARK MY WORDS
More facts
âŠ.maybe thatâs why I listen to Skyrim and Mass Effect when Iâm writing.
http://www.rpgamers.net/radio/
Just going to leave that there for anyone who needs it
this is true. whenever i study, write, or other university things, i always listened to game music, film musics and classical. (and maybe a playlist of adventure time and starwars). it makes me super focused!
More advice from a gamer and psych major. Make two playlists! One with the softer, more flowing music, like what you hear while traveling in a game. Name it âField music.â This kind of music is supposed to just keep the flow as you travel in the game and it keeps pressure even.
Now take all the high-intensity battle music and make a playlist called âBoss Fight.â This music is supposed to make you feel just a bit desperate, but also empowered and badass. This is good for VERY CLOSE DEADLINES and âHOLY SHIT THREE PARAGRAPHS TO GO I GOT THIS.â It helps you get reenergized and gets you pumped to push through the last bit.
This is how I study and write papers.
For those of us who like lyrics, pick something NOT in the language you are writing in. When youâre writing in English and listening to English music it lowers your ability to write as well as you could because your brain is also interpreting the music.
natesnerdylife
I wear glasses. Â Can I manage without glasses? Â Well, yes, probably. Â I could squint a lot, constantly move up close to anything I want to see, take the bus or a taxi if I want to go anywhere. Â I could just accept that Iâll never be able to see eagles flying in the sky or whales jumping out of the ocean. Â But why? Â Why try so hard to manage life when I could just put on a pair of glasses? Â No one would ever suggest a near-sighted person should just work harder. Â No one would say âMaybe thatâs just your normalâ to someone that needs glasses. Â They would say âLetâs go to the eye doctor and get you a prescription so youâre able to see again.â You shouldnât have to try so hard.
My doctor (paraphrased), when I expressed doubts about going back on an anti-depressant. (via
webreakthenwebuild
(via squidilydink)
This is such a good analogy because nobody thinks about it like this. Â If you wear glasses, you literally need constant use of a medical aid to experience the world like most people do. Â If it were anything besides glasses, that would be considered a disability. Â But needing glasses is an extremely common, visible, and accepted form of disability to the point that we donât even consider it one, we just accept that some people need glasses and thatâs perfectly normal and thereâs nothing wrong with needing to rely on them.
That is how all disabilities and illnesses should be seen, and how we should look at treatment for them.  You have a problem, and you need help dealing with it, and thereâs nothing wrong with either of those things.  Thatâs perfectly normal and thatâs okay.
(via ninjarobotclone)
Reblogging myself bc ^^that^^ was such a beautiful addition. Â ~JJ
(via teachthemhowtothink)
Yes. This.
(via livhathaway)
it is ok to mourn the life your disability didnât allow you to have. it is ok grieve for the experiences you will never get. it doesnât make you a bad anti-ableist. i promise
Thanks, I need to hear this. Now if only I can make myself believe it.
best fucking sign on the metro today:
Who needs this seat? Youâd be surprised.
Not all disabilities are visible. Thatâs why itâs important to keep priority seating clear at all times. For more information on accessibility throughout the Metro system, visit www.wmata.com/accessibility
This is SO GOOD. This is a HUGE reason I donât feel comfortable on transit.
Ableism is not just slurs or even mostly slurs
warning for anyone with a panic disorder or aversion to loud or startling noises
people may not warn you of this but if you ever get an MRI, there are a lot of very loud and sudden sounds that accompany it.
you can listen to a quieter version of them here so you can know in advance what it will be like
please spread this around, nobody told me about it ahead of time and it was not a good experience.
how to love yourself:
buy the expensive body wash your mom would never let you have
use a coloring book
watch ten episodes of a show youâve never seen
go through your phone. delete the people you havenât spoken to in years.
pick the petals off of a flowerÂ
tell your best friend you love him/her
put a picture of baby you on your mirrorÂ
youâre gonna be okay
i love you
recovery-and-happiness:
Body acceptance is often more complex than just âloving your body.â Itâs become really easy for healthy people (especially âbody positiveâ feminists) to say âLove your body!â and leave it at that, but as anyone with a chronic illness will tell you, it can be downright difficult to love a body that makes you sick or actively causes you pain. Loving your body is a great goal, and while itâs great to see more women striving for it, such rhetoric often leaves peopleâand womenâwith disabilities, chronic illnesses and pain out because our bodies are already portrayed as not ânormalâ or beautiful enough to be worth loving, or even accepting! Loving your body on days when it confines you to bed seems counter-intuitive, and for some folks with chronic pain, itâs just not going to happen. By contrast, body acceptance can be a process of meeting your body where it is, and striving to be okay with a chronically ill bodyâeven on bad days.
Anna Hamilton, âSix Things Iâve Learned From Dealing with Chronic Painâ (via healmycrocodileskin)