★ neopets wearables try-on
☆ free online music maker
★ fishville simulator
☆ digital pop its
★ papa's games on coolmathgames
☆ background noises for focus
★ old web design museum
☆ online game pony town
★ poptropica
☆ classic animal jam
★ flash transformers games
☆ flash monster high games
★ flash mlp games
☆ flash bratz games
★ flash barbie games
☆ a lot of free online games
★ kid pix studio game
☆ more free online games
★ neopets resources
☆ kirby games
★ online retro games
☆ kirby anime
★ death note
☆ casual desktop game on steam
★ ftp steam games
☆ solitaire
★ puzzle games
☆ color memory game
★ where to watch cartoons (vpn recommended)
☆ more cartoons
★ indie games website
☆ kandi website tutorials and patterns
★ kandi video tutorials
Anyone else notice how Lilo is clearly autistic and weird and has many (sometimes violent) fits and doesn't understand a lot of social cues in the animated movie and the whole point was that Nani was the only one who understood her and she wouldn't fare well in the world without her as support and now with the autism registry and all that shit the live action movie just so happens to have Nani just giving her up to the fucking government so that she can go to college and live her own life under the guise of "doing what's best for everyone"? It's almost like they're trying to get us ready for something.
friendly reminder that late diagnosed does not innately mean low support needs. plenty of us just didn’t get adequate medical care as children due to a myriad of reasons (eg. abuse/neglect, poverty, parental neglect, school system failure, lack of mental health resources, medical neglect due to misogyny or ableism, etc.) but again—late diagnosed does not innately or intrinsically equate to low support needs. many of us were seen, and hell—some of us were even identified by professionals as being “potentially autistic”, or “showing autistic traits” and yet either never diagnosed or our parents never told us.
Boosting: Help Farah, a fifteen-year-old autistic girl with chronic kidney failure.
Vetted: , this campaign is now verified by gazavetters! You will find it as #451 on their spreadsheet.
latest post 2026 ; second latest post 2026
Donate with Paypal link or Chuffed lInk
There hasn't been a single donation for two days on Farah's fundraiser. I also haven't received anything via Paypal recently. I sent the first batch of money to Farah's mother Wesal ( @shahdgazza ) yesterday, so it is perturbing to see that 0,00 in my banking app.
Donation rewards
Reminder that you can get a free commission by @/fablebagel if you donate $10 or more!
Rewards being offered for those who have proof of donation (such as a screenshot of receipt, probably with personal information blacked out) to the well-known vetting lists and a few other. I have collected an up-to-date list here. There is also links to other lists: for such as flowerpawarts's spreadsheet, you should make sure they accept the vetting list or are not just funding for a specific family
💬 2 🔁 37 ❤️ 14 · Archival link: Donation incentives for the big two lists and mentions of others · @/gazavetters vetted list
Vetted list
Go to paypal.me/forfarah and type in the amount. Since it’s PayPal, it's easy and secure. Don’t have a PayPal account? No worries.
Note: if you would prefer to pay via paypal, you can do so here.
I have to remind myself: things aren't out of control, I'm just overstimulated. When I'm overstimulated I feel out of control, I need to breathe and this will pass.
Despite increases to provincial funding in recent years, the percentage of children with autism registered with the Ontario Autism Program a
One of the first things Deny Soto was told after her son was diagnosed with autism was "get on the list."
The Toronto mom didn't really know what she was signing up for in 2022, but she listened. Now, four years later, her nine-year-old son Nico Tsirigotis is still on that list waiting for government funding for core autism services. Those services can include occupational therapy or applied behaviour analysis.
"It's just sad, because that was a critical part of his development," said Soto.
"We lost any support that we could have gotten during that time. So we've navigated it on our own, we found alternatives … but I won't know what we've missed."
Nico is one of more than 67,500 children with autism across the province waiting to access funding for core clinical services through the Ontario Autism Program, according to government records obtained through a freedom of information (FOI) request.