A pair of poached pears! Yum all up! #yumallup #yumalicious #yumm #yum #yummy #yummyfood #yumpost #yumgasm ##yumagram #foodie #foodies #gourm
These still are were poached pears
Misplaced Lens Cap
I'd rather be in outer space đž
EXPECTATIONS
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
macklin celebrini has autism
Three Goblin Art

titsay
cherry valley forever
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
almost home
NASA
đ©” avery cochrane đ©”
untitled
d e v o n
hello vonnie
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

oozey mess

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@popesalmon
A pair of poached pears! Yum all up! #yumallup #yumalicious #yumm #yum #yummy #yummyfood #yumpost #yumgasm ##yumagram #foodie #foodies #gourm
These still are were poached pears
i'm sleepy
Amanita Fox
Comfy Bed
Watercolor and Ink on Hosho Paper
2019, 9"x 12"
Lotus
Very cartoony and expressive today
The Chess Musical! (Not affiliated with CHESS (the musical))
How would anarchism handle long term economic blockade in a world dominated by wealthy capitalist countries? This is something iâve never seen talked about in discussions about recapitalization.
Trots donât interact
anarchism is a process, not a result
rojava isnât currently being âan anarchismâ, rojava is a place with people who live there who are attempting to implement anarchist-inspired ideas
anarchist territories have so far in history been short-lived, have been successfully destroyed, and nobody currently knows how to avoid that or weâd have more anarchist territory
if they restrained themselves to blockades that would actually be nicer, what they really do is quickly roll in tanks
probably even though itâs a big lift the most realistic scenario is simultaneous world-wide revolution
Something thatâs been bugging me for a while is how pretty much all of the prominent queer and/or non-binary people I come across on IG, no matter how radically they eschew other norms, are within a certain range of socially approved body types; and if their feeds are any indication then the people they socialize with (or at least the people they choose to be seen socializing with) also fall into that range.
I just canât help but wonder how much physique plays a role in who gets prioritized and lauded in queer spaces. And naturally I wonder how many of them would include me in their circles đ€·ââïž
if âqueerâ defines the space then you get queerness but also body normativity, if you try to find spaces with interesting bodies then youâll get mostly interesting cis straight bodies and it stops being sensitive at all about gender and sexuality, and just generally you canât filter an awful culture enough to turn it into a good one, if you add more filters it gets slightly better but also mostly just melts away
TomĂĄs Borralho - Ping 999 for Tenor Saxophone (2010) [Score-Video]
If you look up symptoms of ASD specific to girls one of them is frequently âmasculine behavior/dressâ or whatever and people love to blame that on autism being an âextreme male brainâ but itâs really very easily explained when you consider what femininity is: a set of implicit social rules forced on women. Like, of course autistic girls and women arenât going to be as successful at performing femininity âcorrectly.â It doesnât have to do with the fictitious male brain. It has to do with femininity being inaccessible to people who have difficulty navigating complex and arbitrary social conventions.Â
thereâs also the fact that so much of performative femininity amounts to sensory hell.Â
I mean, just wearing a bra can be agonizing when youâre hypersensitive to the way it feels on your skin, and then thereâs makeup, high heels, uncomfortable clothes, hair styling, perfume, etc etc. all this shit can be really uncomfortable just for allistics, but when you have sensory issues it can be downright unbearable.
I think it should be mentioned that this affects trans people too in that when I came out to my mom she said âyouâre not trans, itâs just your autismâ
That autistic / ADHD feel when you want to doâŠÂ something.
I call this âactivity cravingsâ because itâs like when you want a certain food but you arenât sure which food. But for activities.
Do I want to go for a walk? Play a game? If so, what kind of game? DO I want to make things? Read? Watch tv? A movie?
then when that executive dysfunction comes into play and since you could do literally anything in the world, you end up trapped and unable to choose anything to do at all, and do nothing instead but live in that restlessness
One of the best additions to this post yet. This is one of those nuances of choice paralysis that people fail to understand - sometimes it is because we lack the executive function to choose, sometimes we want to do all the things and canât choose.
i mostly just like want to do things that don't exist in this world/culture, and trying to modify and narrow them down to things that really exist just makes me infuriated about all the bullshit barriers
To whomever said that Autism is beautiful...
From me, a supported living worker:
There are *so* many different degrees of Autism Spectrum Disorder. That said, I personally know higher functioning people with Autism, and theyâre able to navigate life very well⊠far better than I, in fact. Lol⊠but I also work with some very low functioning clients. And that is not a beautiful situation for anyone⊠especially for them. Sometimes itâs so severe that they will never, ever be able to truly be a functioning member of society. That whole âhyperfocusâ thing is a myth. If weâre being 100% honest⊠there are people wonât ever be good at anything because their functionality is so low that theyâre hardly moving. Thatâs the sad truth that no one wants to admit. And you can think that sounds mean, and Iâm sorry if it does⊠but Iâm not uncompassionate. Iâm trained to work with varying degrees of Autism, and to understand and help communicate with and for them as best as I can. And sometimes, to care for someone with a disability, you have to understand when itâs too severe for them to really obtain any skills, and you have to be compassionate enough to not try to push them beyond what theyâre ready for or capable of doing. The people are human beings who deserve love and respect⊠but donât you dare generalize and glorify the Hell that some of them live in. Donât ignore either side⊠not the fantastic people who live perfectly happy lives, and just happen to have ASDâŠ. and not the ones who are very frustrated and depressed by their difficulty communicating, and performing the things that they want to do. There are amazing people with Autism, and they are indeed beautiful lives. Just donât assume that everyone with Autism is a certain way, because as I said⊠it is a very broad spectrum. Their happiness and quality of life are not tied to their functionality, nor should be your respect for them as humans. So never assume itâs all good⊠or that itâs all bad. Just acknowledge them and love them. But if youâre just one of those dicks who wants to pretend that itâs all roses and that low-functioning autism doesnât exist, well⊠I hope you get anal probed by a train.
I agree with the respect them as people part, though. I agree with the compassion. The rest, though? Hello ableism city! Your outside observation may not equal their internal experience. Their life may be hell because their needs are not being met in a way that best helps them and they may not attain skills because the way they learn is not the way they get taughtâŠif they even get taught at all. Do they get a chance to try to learn, or are they written off as incapable on sight? You also donât get to decide how autistic people view their own autism. Functioning labels do a lot of harm. Listen to how you talk about the people when you use those labels. If you canât see it then you donât understand the problem youâre perpetuating by using them.
This is just explicitly valuing people in terms of their âskillsâ AKA contributions to fucking capitalism. No mention at all of these peopleâs lives, of their experiences, their aesthetics, their ways of being. Itâs just, didnât you know that autism sometimes makes people not do profitable things, arenât you educated now as to the horror.Â
The worst part is that this person not only is supposed to be the caregiver for autistic people they canât understand or respect, theyâre actually for no reason other than to maintain their own profit and sense of superiority forcefully excluding people who could do a better job than them. Since as an autistic person Iâve been denied participation in their society Iâm also denied many avenues to get to help these autistic people theyâre disrespecting and torturing like this. This person with no respect is whoâs âqualifiedâ to be in contact with autistic people even though they openly insult them.
Xenia Rubinos - "Mexican Chef"
Genderfuck - Jurni Rayne
why âspanking is harmfulâ studies will, ultimately, never matter to parents who want to hit their kids:
@fandomsandfeminism wrote a great post recently about the fact that we have, essentially, a scientific consensus on the fact that all forms of hitting children, including those euphemistically referred to as âspankingâ, are psychologically harmful. theyâve also done an amazing job responding to a lot of parents self-admitted abusers who think âI hit my child and Iâm okay with thatâ and/or âI was hit as a child and I donât think thereâs anything wrong with meâ are more meaningful than 60 years of peer-reviewed research.
unfortunately, Iâm here to tell you why all of that makes very little difference.
in 2014, a couple of researchers from UCLA and MIT named Alan Fiske and Tage Rai published a book called Virtuous Violence, the result of a major study of the motivations for interpersonal violence. Rai wrote a shorter piece about it in Quartz, which is a pretty light but still illuminating (hah, I did not see that pun coming but Iâm gonna leave it) read.
the upshot of Fiske and Raiâs work is that most violence is fundamentally misunderstood because we think it is inherently outside the norms of a supposedly moral society. we presume that when someone commits a mass shooting or beats their spouse they are somehow intrinsically broken, either incapable of telling right from wrong or too lacking in self-control to prevent themselves from doing the wrong thing.
but what Fiske and Rai found was that, in fact, the opposite is true: most violence is morally motivated. people who commit violent acts arenât lacking moral compasses - they believe those violent acts are not only morally acceptable, but morally obligatory. usually, these feelings emerge in the context of a relationship which is culturally defined as hierarchical. in other words, parents who commit violence against their children do so because they believe it is necessary that they do so in order to establish or affirm the dominance which they feel they are owed by both tradition and moral right.
when abusive parents say that they are âhitting children for their own goodâ, they are not speaking in terms of any rational predictions for the childâs future, but rather from a place of believing that the child must learn to be submissive in order to be a âgoodâ child, to fulfill their place in the relationship.
this kind of violence is not the result of calm, intellectually reasoned deliberation about the childâs well-being. for that reason and that reason alone it will never be ended by scientific evidence.
history tells us more than we need to verify this. the slave trade and the institution of racial slavery, and their attendant forms of âcorrectiveâ physical violence, for instance, did not end because someone demonstrated they were physically or psychologically harmful to slaves - that was never a question in peopleâs minds to begin with. for generations, slavery was upheld as right and good not because it was viewed as harmless, but because it was viewed as morally necessary that one category of people should be âkept in their placeâ below another by any means necessary, because they were lower beings by natural order and godâs law. this violence ended because western society became gradually less convinced of the whole moral framework at play, not because we needed scientists to come along and demonstrate that chain gangs and whippings were psychologically detrimental. this is only one example from a world history filled with many, many forms of violence, both interpersonal and structural, which ultimately were founded on the idea that moral hierarchies must be maintained through someoneâs idea of judiciously meted-out suffering.
and this, ultimately, is why we cannot end violence against children by pointing out that it is harmful - because the question of whether or not it is harmful does not enter into parentsâ decisions about whether or not to commit violence in the first place. what they care about is not the hypothetical harm done to the child, but the reinforcement of the authority-ranked nature of the relationship itself. the reason these people so often sound like their primary concern is maintaining their ârightâ to hit their children is because it is. they believe that anyone telling them they canât hit their children is attempting to undermine the moral structure of that individual relationship and, in a broader sense, the natural order of adult-child relations in society.
and thatâs why the movement has to be greater than one against hitting kids. it has to be a movement against treating them as inferior, in general. it has to be a movement that says, children are people, that says childrenâs rights are human rights, that says the near-absolute authority of parents, coupled with the general social supremacy of adults and the marginalization of youth, have to all be torn down at once as an ideology of injustice and violence. anything less is ultimately pointless.
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JbGCQr8N3ps)
By Su Negrin 1976