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@theodorablestims
Take my lungs, take them and run Take my tongue, go have some fun And take the ears, take them and disappear Take my joints, take them for points Take my teeth, tear through my cheeks And take the nose go and dispose Oh would you go dispose, just go dispose
Stim Toy Etiquette: A Guide
This is targeted at non-stimmers who see us using our toys and wish to try them out. A few weeks ago, my very extended family were visiting, so I bought out my stim kit to show a few things to one relative I trusted. The unexpected, horrifying result (given that my relative moved from the quiet room to the busy all-the-people room) was fifteen people grabbing things out of my basket, which resulted in worn, soiled, ruined toys and a lot of work in cleaning, mending and sorting. I’ve got toys that are soiled beyond cleaning and other toys that were once pristine and now have worn-off paint and small tears.
For many of us, stim toys are disability aids. Someone else handling my toys is like someone else trying on my wrist splints. They’re personal items that become an extension of my own body and should be treated as such by others. If you’re careful handling someone else’s glasses, you should be just as careful handling someone’s stim toys, no matter how inexpensive you think any item is.
Some stimmers don’t want other people touching our toys, and this needs to be understood and accepted without challenge or criticism. If a stimmer does not consent to your handling their toy, you do not touch or handle their toy. Keep in mind, though, that many of us struggle to voice this: neurotypical society seldom allows us to draw this boundary without harassment. I’m writing this post, so you, our non-stimming friends, understand what not to do if we cannot communicate our boundaries ourselves.
If you see a toy used by someone else and want to try it out, please keep these things in mind:
Always first ask permission before handling someone else’s toys.
If you’re planning to do more than lightly handling the toy and then returning it, ask the owner again if they mind you stimming with it/using it for a longer period of time. I can better tolerate people giving my toys a short investigative handling, but I have many toys that I don’t want you stimming with for ten minutes straight, given the wear intensive stimming places on many toys.
If it’s a toy that the stimmer was using when you asked to handle it, don’t hold onto it for a long period of time. They were using that toy in that circumstance for a reason; other toys in their kit–if they even have a stim kit–may not replace that toy. If I was using my Tangle to survive anxiety, not having it leaves me without a coping mechanism, so look at it quickly and return it.
Don’t ask to handle a toy in a classroom space if everybody else is quiet and working. Forcing the owner to have to respond to your question might get them in trouble with the teacher or other students. As someone with the autistic need to Follow The Rules, I’d be incredibly anxious if someone asked me about a toy while we’re supposed to be quiet.
Consider the environment before you ask. Are there people who’d bully or harass the owner if they overheard? Are there teachers or co-workers who’d be less-than-sympathetic to an explanation about stimming? If you think your request to examine a toy puts the owner at risk, don’t ask. Leave it for a time when you’ll both be safe.
Watch the owner’s body language for anxiety, tension or discomfort. In public or familial spaces, the owner might feel pressured to say yes to your handling of their toys, or they might feel that you’ve handled that toy for too long or are handling it too roughly. We have no script for “can you please stop using my toy now” to which NT folks won’t take offense, so do us the kindness of checking to ensure that our body language still affirms our consent. I tend to frown, flap my hands, rock from foot to foot or (especially) gather up my other items when someone’s held on for a toy too long, but body language will differ from person to person. If there’s a change in a person’s body language that isn’t enthusiasm, I’d take that as an indication that the owner is no longer comfortable and return the toy.
Permission to handle one toy doesn’t mean permission to handle all of them any more than permission to try on my coat means you can also try on my shirt. If you want to touch more than one, if the owner has multiple items in their kit, specifically ask if you can do so.
Never touch the owner to handle a toy on their person. Always let them remove the toy and hand it to you themselves.
Never ask to handle chewables (usually items made from silicone or other soft plastics, often jewellery or a handheld teether). I don’t want your hands on something that goes in my mouth! This is especially important for folks who go stealth with their chewing but still wear chewellery in public, since explaining why I don’t want you touching my feather pendant can put me in danger of other folks knowing.
Wash your hands before handling anything, or at least make sure your hands have been washed shortly before handling. This is good hygiene and common courtesy, but it’s exceptionally important for toys that cannot be washed like slimes, putties and doughs. It’s also important for toys that are difficult to wash or wipe over, like squishies or puffer toys. Don’t leave me picking crumbs out of the TheraPutty I can’t afford to replace, please.
If you sweat frequently, wear heavy hand lotion or have oily skin, consider that you may leave behind a noticeable residue on the toys you handle, even after you’ve washed your hands. If so, only handle toys that can be easily wiped over or rinsed–things made from ABS plastic or metal, like Tangles, spinners and chain fidgets. Some toy owners may be quite averse to sticky or greasy textures, and we will notice this residue. I’ve had many toys become unusable to me because of this.
If you’re wearing scented hand lotion, don’t handle someone else’s toys. You may impart a scent that stimmers with sensory sensitivities will find difficult to remove. This is especially important for items that can’t be washed, like slimes and putties.
Handle toys gently and carefully, with a minimum of forceful squishing, twisting, pressing and stretching–even if I did just this a moment ago. Stress balls and squishies can tear. Paint can be worn off Tangles, squishies and puffer toys under even moderate handling. Tangles can break if twisted hard enough. Flocking can be worn off. Few toys will last forever under a stimmer’s use, but you shouldn’t hasten that wear. For owners attached to their toys, wear in the paint or flocking can be incredibly distressing when made by someone else.
Don’t make comments along the lines of “why would anyone use this?” or “I can’t see anyone liking this toy” for toys you dislike or don’t connect with. There’s a wide variety of stim toys because people have unique sensory and accessibility needs, and just because a toy doesn’t work for you doesn’t mean it won’t work for others. If you must express your dislike, be respectful and just say that you don’t like it.
If a stimmer has multiple toys in a box or a case (a stim kit), there’s a reasonable chance (especially for we autistic stimmers) that they are placed in a specific order or arrangement. Please try your best to respect this. Everything in its spot is how I know toys haven’t gone missing; I’m desperately anxious when my order is messed up, and I won’t be comfortable until everything is back in its place.
If you treat someone else’s stim toy like a valuable, precious thing, you’re not like to go too far wrong. Speaking personally, I don’t think you can be too cautious: I’d much rather have someone ask too many times about handling my toys than the situation I described above.
I’ll also say this: most stimmers are thrilled to talk about stim toys, if folks show any kind of compassionate interest. We’ll tell you where you can buy the toys you like or where you can find out more about them. We do want to interact with you about our stims. I’m just asking for your consideration so that we can, stress-free, let you into our world.
self indulgent thing i made of all the stim toys i think peridot would like!
best autistic gem ever!!!!
December Stimapalooza
Stimtastic is doing a giveaway a day in December!
Just reblog this post once with answers to the entry questions below and you’re automatically entered in all of the daily random drawings.
Each daily winner will receive a surprise package of stim toys/jewelry based on their submission.
How does it work?
Reblog this post (once only per person) with answers to the questions below.
Each day we’ll randomly draw one winner from all of the existing reblogs. You can enter at any point during the month, right up until the Dec. 31st drawing is completed.
Each winner will receive a surprise package of stim toys and/or stim jewelry based on the information they shared in their entry.
If you win, you have to be okay with your package being a surprise (based on your stated likes/dislikes) and you have to provide a mailing name/address to receive your package.
Once you win, you will be ineligible to win for the remainder of December.
Open to everyone who stims, worldwide!
The Entry Questions
To enter, reblog this post and answer the following questions to help us customize your surprise pack if you win:
What are your favorite/most frequent stims or favorite stimmy items?
What are some things you really like? Favorite colors, textures, scents, animals, special interests or … ?
Do you have sensory sensitivities, allergies or strong dislikes? (i.e. no pink, can’t wear rings, latex allergy, metal allergy, no slime textures, nothing with strong smells, etc.)
That’s it! Answer, reblog, and then keep an eye on the Stimtastic Tumblr in December for the daily winner announcement!
The details:
One entry per person please.
Open to entrants worldwide.
Stimtastic pays shipping costs.
One winner will be chosen per day from Dec 1 through Dec. 31 2017.
Winners will be ineligible to win for the remainder of December.
Entries are open until the final drawing is made on December 31, 2017.
Winners will be chosen randomly from all eligible entries.
Winners will be announced and tagged on the Stimtastic Tumblr and contacted via private message or ask.
Winners who do not have a publicly open Tumblr contact method will be responsible for contacting Stimtastic on Tumblr within 72 hours.
Surprise packs may be one expensive item, a collection of small items or something in between. Each package will be different.
While we will do our best to tailor stim toy packs to your entry, we cannot promise to fill specific requests.
Winners must be willing provide a mailing name/address to receive their package.
Entry Answers:
1. My favorite and most frequent stims are chewing and rubbing/twisting/spinning with my fingers
My favorite stim toys are chews, spinner rings/necklaces, putty/slime and stuffies
2. Some things I really like are essential oils, chewelry, soft plushies, sequin pillows/toys, pastel colours and black♡
3. My sensory sensitivities/nopes include flashing colours/lights, strong synthetic scents, loose glitter
ANOTHER Autistic tag yourself? On my blog?? It’s more likely than you think.
Featuring various stim toys of mine
Neat shadows
happy halloween! here is a ghost duet
This is a Hexichew from the company Chewigem. Mine is in colour GLOW as it is the glow in the dark option. I received this hand held chew and fidget as a gift from my boyfriend and it has quickly become my favorite stim toy. It has 6 arms, 3 end in loops and 3 end in balls. The arms also have single sided, alternating textures. Arms with loops have long raised lines running their length, while the arms with balls have small raised dashes running up the arm.
The Hexichew is quite large and is just wider than the width of my hand. I have seen it attached to lanyards, but I personally find it too weighty to wear around my neck (I also find it too heavy to have looped around a finger while driving, which I tend to do with smaller hand held chews).
I mostly use it at home or when watching movies/tv shows with friends as it isn't very discreet and I tend to get very into it. I love the crunch that the loops make when chewing even lightly with molars, tugging on the loops with teeth or hands, spinning it on my finger, molar chewing on the one ball end I've broken in a bit, sucking on the ball end while running my bottom teeth along the raised dashes and making them make a snap-like sound and I absolutely love turning it into a dragonfly when I'm feeling protective of it. I don't think I will wear it out anytime soon but would love to collect different colours!
reminder to fellow stimmers- wash, wash, Wash your stim toys!! this goes doubly so for chewy stim toys like chewelry or handheld chewers, which i use primarily. with flu season coming just around the corner and especially if you have a weak immune system/get seasonal allergies like i do, we need to steer clear of germs that are hiding in things we use everyday! my best advice is to boil a pot of water, throw in some soap, take apart the stim toys that can be taken apart and submergered, and dunk all those suckers in a warm bath of soapy water for a good scrub down! felt and fabric toys can be cleaned dry or, if they’re machine washable safe, be given a gentle turn in the washing machine. whatever your method, just make sure those stim toys get clean. stay safe and keep stimming!
I take my chewelry and hand held chews into the shower with me. When I'm at work I wash them whenever I go to the washroom or if I've "contaminated" them. When I was working in an office, if I couldn't get to the washroom to wash it off I usee wet naps/wipes and made sure to have a piece of papertowel to rest it on so that it wasn't touching my workstation.
I am going to start off by saying that I love this product. I ordered the Chew Stixx from amazon about a year ago for about $10 USD ($5 purchase $5 shipping). I ordered the non scented/flavored kind because I was very new to chews and wasn’t sure if I’d like it, but if I were to get it again I’d try a flavored one. Chew Stixx features: Fidget Handheld chew Tactile stim One of the things I love about the chew stixx is that it offers a lot of tactile stimulation. There are four “legs” on this toy, with one plain like a regular chew, one has raised bumps, one with rings around, and the last one with raised blocks. This is a great toy for those who have dermatillomania or trichotillomania because of the different textures. I like to pick the blocky side by digging it (gently) in-between my fingernail and finger. Anyway, this fidget is just really fun to play around with and explore the different textures. Another awesome thing about the chew stixx is that it is also made for chewing! It is a very tough chewy so I would only recommend chewing for really tough/aggressive chewers. I get jaw pain so I don’t gnaw on it very often. However, I am very much a nibbler so I do find myself nibbling on the blocks and the rings. This chew is also easy to reach your back teeth. The chew stixx is slightly smaller than the hexichew. It is not intended for chewelry, but I think sensory university might sell a harness to attach it to so you don’t lose it. Anyway, I love this product and it has held up great for a year of use!
Arctic Fox Ball 🦊❄ (Or a snowball? 🤔)
📷: Once and Future Laura
Stimming and Driving
driving while neurodivergent is hard.
If u have sensory issues it might make driving harder (or impossible). I’ve been driving for a few years now and there’s some stuff that’s helped me
Choosing what time I drive when I can
if i have any kind of choice, I’m going to drive at night bc there’s less stimulus and fewer cars on the road
and bc sunlight Hurts
you can use lights to pinpoint things instead of looking for the whole object, just get used to what shapes/colors different kinds of lights are (for example headlights vs. street lamps)
Sunglasses/ear defenders
sunglasses are a super easy way to cut down on the intensity of things like brake lights and just things in general (especially if you’re driving during the day)
cars can get really loud, and sometimes motorcycles or people blasting their music or sirens will go by and it’s not a good time
So in my state it is illegal to wear headphones over both ears (and ear defenders highly resemble headphones)
however, it is legal to wear foam earplugs, so go figure
check your state law
(full disclosure: I never looked up the law before this post, so I’ve been wearing ear defenders while driving and haven’t been pulled over, which might be because I’m white)
put in your earplugs/sunglasses before you start driving, bc doing it while you’re driving is dangerous
Stim toys
absolutely nothing is stopping you from keeping stim toys in your cup holder (unless ur driving people who it’s not safe to stim around)
If you’re a new/uncomfortable driver, don’t use them except when your car is stopped
If you’ve been driving for a while, stim away!! But always keep one hand on the wheel, and you should always be able to grab the wheel well with both hands in case of an emergency
some nice stim toys for this are: tangles, chain fidgets, spinner rings, fidget cubes, (I haven’t had good luck with spinners but *shrug*)
chewelry is honestly the best thing I’ve found bc it leaves both your hands free, but your mileage may vary [get it mileage ]
Body stims
stim freely!!!
seriously, if you’re driving alone, no one can stop you and people probably won’t notice
also vocal stims - the only thing is, you have to be able to steer the car straight and not get so distracted by the !!! feeling that you aren’t paying attention to the road
(if you need ideas [LINK HERE] [LINK HERE])
Music
ik music is super helpful for a lot of people, and most cars come with a radio built in!!!
make sure it’s quiet enough you can hear sirens
If you’re going to listen through headphones, look up the laws in your state
but have a good time!!!
Temperature
a lot of us have trouble regulating temperature, but most cars come with heating/cooling systems
figure out what settings you like and just kinda play with it
(don’t get distracted by it while you’re driving tho)
sometimes the fans are really loud, so if you have trouble with that, maybe consider some ear plugs
Seatbelts
ik they’re uncomfy for some people
you can actually get covers for them [LINK HERE]
but please please wear ur seatbelt
Seat texture
idk if other people have trouble with the way their seat feels, but I sure do
you can bring something to sit on, or buy a seat cover like this [LINK]
Wheel texture
if your wheel is Bad Feeling you can buy wheel covers!!!
I found them at the dollar tree the other day, but you can buy them online too!!! [LINK]
(I actually love stimming with the stitching on my steering wheel ngl)
When it’s not safe to be behind the wheel
when you’re dissociative enough you can’t react fast enough to avoid a crash
if you think you’re going to have trouble reacting to stimulus like a red light or a stop sign
If you’re having a shutdown/meltdown/anxiety attack/panic attack
if you think that something loud and unexpected (a siren, motorcycle, or loud car) could make you meltdown/shutdown/etc.
cool car stuff you might not have thought of
don’t forget you can just pull over. Like feeling overwhelmed? Pull into a parking lot and relax
on a related note: you can keep a lot of stuff in your car, and if you get overwhelmed while you’re out you can just sit in your car and practice some self-care
I personally keep clothes and some stim toys, and I’ll go curl up in the back seat if I’m having a Rough Time (make sure passersby don’t call the police tho)
your car is probably really stimmy and u don’t even realize it [LINK]
@autism-asks i know y’all had an anon who asked about it at some point? idk if it’s okay to tag you or not tho
feel free to add on!!!
Don’t talk to me or my 21 chewables ever again
⭐ The Stimming Gems ⭐
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