So apparently the holiday club I'll be working at gets a lot of autistic kids. They say they have a quiet space for the kids to go to as well as providing stim toys and ear defenders.

seen from Türkiye

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Nicaragua
seen from Russia
seen from Israel

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
So apparently the holiday club I'll be working at gets a lot of autistic kids. They say they have a quiet space for the kids to go to as well as providing stim toys and ear defenders.
Character aesthetics, Batman characters (part 1/?): Dick Grayson/Nightwing
So I have a new special interest. It's a vr horror comedy game called Hello Puppets. Unfortunately apart from a couple of let's plays it seems it has no fandom.
(Also if you want to check it out I'd recommend a wolf in vr's playthrough. Just be warned there are jumpscares)
Yesterday I was reading 9 books (as in I'd pick up a book, read a page, put it down, pick up the next book), writing four separate stories, watching YouTube and looking at my tumblr dash all at the same time. And it got me thinking. Is this level of multitasking an autism thing or am I just weird?
The thing with the whole "despite their disability" thing is it implies we (disabled people) just ignore our disability and just do something like any abled nt. When in reality one of four things can happen when we're expected to do something. 1) it's just not possible so we don’t do it (it may become possible in the future in which case we may do it then) 2) it's technically possible but the loss (energy, physical wellbeing etc) isn't worth the gain so we don’t do it 3) it's possible but only if we make adjustments/aproach it differently to an abled nt 4) it's possible and our disability has no impact on whether we could do the thing in the first place We never do anything despite our disability. We do it with our disability taken into consideration. If we could do things despite our disability we wouldn't be disabled.
So I've not even been at the family Christmas gathering for 5 minutes and I've already had to escape to the next room.
So for the next three weeks we'll be doing clay modelling. Which was fine for half a day. Then the second half I spent in sensory overload trying not to touch anything because if I did it would be like
So yeah this should be fun. Not!