Bedtime, 6 Apr 2018

I have successfully been sociable in brick-space today. For several hours. And helped to make dinner! Goat! It was nommy! Stewed with onions and garlic and ginger and tumeric and nutmeg and carrots and coriander and malbec and water. Very. Nommy. There were also brussel sprouts roasted with garlic and lemon, and green beans sauteed with more garlic, and zucchini, and mozzerella sticks and beet chips and brownies. Granted, the beet chips were for other people ‘cause beets and my sensory profile for food clash, and also the green beans, but. Lots of noms and a couple other people over visiting and I showed off the hexagonal block blanket and talked fic (and got some feedback on the plausibility of a plot point for something), and other conversation, and just. *bounces a bit* Then my brain abruptly went “Done Now”, and I retreated upstairs.

And now it is bed time and Imma fall over.

(Also today: hauled a rock half the size of my head out of the ground, and put two more bricks in the border for my garden.)

in which Sirius Black failed to Argue with a Hat, Part 4

deadcatwithaflamethrower:

Part 1  Part 2  Part 3

Lily’s parents are terrifying. It
isn’t that they’re ugly—they’re quite pleasant on the eyes, even though they
seem to be getting on a bit in years—or that they’re nasty, like Severus’s mother
was attempting to be.

(Sirius deals with worse on a daily
basis. Eileen Snape has stiff competition before she is even remotely
terrifying.)

Lily’s parents are perfectly
polite, smiling, welcoming, and nice.
They’re bloody kind. Nobody is that kind.
It’s not fucking normal!

“It’s like the nursery story of the
two wizarding kids who find the old Muggle Grandmother’s house out in the
woods, and she lures them inside with smiles and candy before eating them,” Regulus
whispers when both Mr. and Mrs. Evans are out of the kitchen. They insisted on
feeding them before going off to do…whatever they’re off to do for the day.

Sirius was leery of the food before
Regulus reminded him of that story. Now he’s afraid to eat it at all.

“What are you talking about?” Lily
asks before biting into a sandwich. If she doesn’t need to run to the loo just
afterwards, Sirius will consider trying to eat his. “That isn’t how the story
goes.”

“There are two versions,” Severus
drawls, though Sirius notices that he’s all but guarding his food like a
firstie being taunted by seventh-years. “And yes, both of them are designed to
be as bigoted as possible against the other.”

“I’m so glad I had normal parents,”
Remus mutters.

“What’s the other version, then?”
Regulus asks.

“Two kids are abandoned in the
woods when their wicked stepmother convinces their father to leave them there,”
Lily begins to recite.

“And you think our version is bad?”
Sirius interrupts.

“Shut it, you!” Lily puts her
sandwich down. “They come across a house made of gingerbread, and since they’re
starving, begin to eat it. Then a kindly old grandmother type invites them
inside for shelter and real food, but it turns out she’s an evil witch who locks
them up in cages and starts fattening them up to eat them. But the girl tricks
the witch into leaning over to check the oven and shoves her in headfirst so
she and her brother can escape. Oh, and the father kicked the wicked stepmother
to the kerb in the meantime, so when they find their way home they all live
happily ever after.”

Sirius stares at her. “Which
version came first?” is the only thing he can think to ask.

“That’s what I wished to know,”
Severus says. “Nobody seems to know the answer. Not even Hogwarts’ library is
useful when it comes to the evolution of nursery tales. By the way, if you
think The Tale of the Three Brothers hasn’t
changed since it was written, you would be very wrong.”

“What’s The Tale of the Three Brothers?” Lily asks. Then it’s all of them
trying to explain a classic Wizarding nursery tale to someone who made it
through three years of Hogwarts schooling and still hasn’t heard the bloody story. Sirius gets distracted enough
that he eats the sandwich, but there is no telltale graininess or off taste
about it. It’s just oddly sliced and salted turkey with uniformly shaped cheese
on bread with some kind of spicy mustard. It’s not bad, really. At least it’s
simpler and quicker to eat than a family dinner or supper.

Regulus reminds him of reality by
wanting to know what the rest of the booby-traps are. “Come on. You warned us
about electricity. Why not the rest of them?”

Remus puts his head in his hands
again. “The electricity isn’t a booby trap, guys.”

“It’s…well.” Lily gets up and
toggles an odd switch on the wall. “It powers the lights. And it keeps
everything cool in the fridge.”

“Wait, that isn’t a cold box?”
Regulus bounces out of his seat and yanks open the cold box door to stick his
head in. Sirius is disturbingly reminded of the evil witch being shoved into
the oven. “There’s a light in here!” his muffled voice exclaims.

“How did you think non-magical
people kept their food from spoiling? Or how we cooked it?” Lily asks them in
exasperation. “Cave fires and ritual chanting?”

Sirius grimaces. “You don’t want me
to answer that question, because the answer is more insulting than that
nonsense.”

Lily throws up her arms in
frustration and growls out something that might be wandless hexes. “Severus!”

Severus smirks at them, an
expression Sirius can see now is a lot
nicer than Mrs. Eileen bloody Snape. He stands up, snagging a loaf of bread
wrapped in a noisy clear bag with colorful labeling. He gets out a uniform
slice and places it in a silver square on the counter. “Shove this lever down.
No, it’s not a bloody booby trap,
Black!”

“I’m not touching that unless you
call me by my fucking name,” Sirius says in a flat voice, but he’s staring at
the silver square…thing.

“Sirius. Push the lever down or I
will hex you into thinking that your feet are your hands and your arse is your
ears.”

Sirius shrugs. “Okay.” He pushes
down on the black lever, which has some surprising resistance. The box eats the
bread. “The fuck?”

“Guys! Please stop swearing, my
parents are still in the house,” Lily
begs them.

Remus sighs and gets up. “I’m
putting the kettle on for tea. Introducing these two geniuses to Muggle Life is
going to take the rest of the afternoon.”

“Oi! We’re not that slow!” Regulus
protests, finally abandoning his exploration of the fridge to move on to the
switches. One is for the light over the sink, one is for the light over the
table, and one is for a light over the steps outside. Sirius would be annoyed
by the flickering lights, but he’s busy trying to figure out what the silver box
is doing to the bread, and also does it give the bread back, or just eat it?

Remus turns on a range that has odd
round coils that turn red when they get hot, and that heats the kettle.
“Electricity. Magic,” he says in a bone-dry voice when Sirius stares at him.

Then the silver box flings the
bread back out. Sirius jumps into Severus’s arms in a complete panic. “FUCK WHAT
THE FUCK!”

“Boys?” Mr. Evans peers into the
kitchen, his glasses lowered onto his nose. He’s doing such a great job of
Professor McGonagall’s Disapproving Stare that Sirius forgets to let go of
Severus, who is trying to pry him off with both hands. “Is anything the
matter?”

“Sorry, Dad!” Lily suddenly looks like
an innocent angel. No bloody wonder she never gets in trouble at school. “You
remember how I said Sirius and Regulus had never been Muggle anywhere before?
We’re introducing them to normal things, and some of it is a bit startling.”

Mr. Evans glances at the toaster,
the kettle on the glowing red coil, Sirius’s clinging, and Regulus’s hand still
resting on the switches. Then he smiles. “All right. Just try not to be so
vocal on the swearing, you lot. Your mother would roast all our ears.” Then he
vanishes again, leaving Sirius baffled.

No yelling. No screaming about
Proper Manners. No threats.

What kind of fucked-up place is
this, anyway?

Please get off of me!” Severus yells.

Sirius finally remembers that he
isn’t supposed to cling to other people even when there are metal boxes that
spit out bread. “Uh. Sorry—wait, toast? That box makes toast? And you didn’t
have to put it on a toasting stick? I want a toaster. I want three toasters.”

“Why would you ever need three
toasters?” Remus asks, retrieving the kettle when it begins to whistle. Lily is
getting mugs out of the cabinet instead of a tea service. Sirius approves of
the mugs, too. Not delicate enough to break on accident by setting them down
wrong, but hefty enough to break someone else’s skull if he needed to defend
himself.

“Because then I would have more toast,” Sirius replies. “Who
wouldn’t want more toast?”

“I want lights. Electric lights.”
Regulus is staring up at the ceiling. “No more candle smoke or torches reeking
if the charms give it up. Oh, and the cold box with the light in it.”

“We’ve probably created monsters,”
Remus says in a dry voice as he hands tea to Severus.

“They’re Blacks. They’re already
monsters,” Severus replies.

megabeeprime:

thecholma:

grison-in-labs:

solacekames:

systlin:

gotinterest:

bigmammallama5:

beepost-generator:

peteseeger:

curlicuecal:

telesilla:

lavvyan:

lankyguy:

sarkos:

lyricwritesprose:

prince-atom:

miyajimosachi:

kiwianaroha:

smitethepatriarchy:

iron-sunrise:

brett-caton:

alaija:

thefloatingstone:

sapper-in-the-wire:

people today with access to more raw information than any other period: the earth is flat

german artilleryman in 1916, who barely washes his own ass: I need to account for the curvature and rotation of the earth when plotting my firing plans

Eratosthenes, an Egyptian, in 3750 BC when fucking mammoths hadn’t even gone extinct yet: Oh hey I can use these two obelisks to calculate the earth’s entire circumference based on
the length of their shadows

and the Earth’s curvature. Neat.

Erastothenes was born in 276 BCE.

The last mammoth died on in island off the northeast coast of Siberia in ~1650BCE.

And as I’ve pointed out previously, the Coriolis effect was known even earlier than that, although it may not have become important to gunnery.

I find it utterly bizarre that humans saw these megafauna.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/02/science/woolly-mammoth-extinct-genetics.html


In fact, the Wrangel mammoth’s genome carried so many detrimental
mutations that the population had suffered a “genomic meltdown,”
according to Rebekah Rogers and Montgomery Slatkin of the University of
California, Berkeley.

Analyzing the Swedish team’s mammoth data at the
gene level, they found that many genes had accumulated mutations that
would have halted synthesis of proteins before they were complete,
making the proteins useless
, they report Thursday in PLOS Genetics.

That
“genomic meltdown”

is one of the reasons feminism is so potentially lethal, because they keep pushing for asexual reproduction, or trying to combine ovaries, when the most likely outcome is a population running about – unable to reproduce sexually since the whole “male genocide” bit – with incredibly damaged chromosomes.

Sex exists for a reason, and no, “because it’s fun” is not the answer,
sorry. It works better than reproduction otherwise. Which is why every
complex species uses it.

Intelligence requires a lot of things to be working correctly, and if you have an all female species that is over the tipping point of idiocy, then there won’t be enough people to maintain the technology to continue to reproduce. And humans will go the way of the
Wrangel

beasties.

Fortunately, feminists are horribly lazy bastards, so i doubt they’ll continue to get their way, but it does made for a decent plot for a dystopian fiction…

What …the fuck?

That went off the rails so suddenly like I thought I was just gonna learn something cool about mammoths and then WHOA.

I scrolled past this thinking “the earth is round, yes, something, something, mammoths…’ 

But the second time it came past I saw 

That “genomic meltdown” is one of the reasons feminism is so potentially lethal

And I think I got whiplash from that pivot. I also laughed so hard that I couldn’t breathe. 

I’m????

Point and laugh at the MRA, kids. 

How … does he think … mammoths reproduced …

Never mind, not sure I want to know.

reblog to support Mammoth Feminism,

ignore for G E N O M I C M E L T D O W N

I here af for my Feminist Mammoth ladies, bring the species back!

DOWN WITH GENOMIC MELTDOWN

I… what exactly is combining ovaries supposed to achieve? 400 lazy feminist babies at the same time?

Shhhh…you weren’t supposed to tell anyone.

FEMINISM KILLED THE MAMMOTHS

I feel like we’re getting away from the main point here, which is that the world is flat

the world is only flat because it was trampled by feminist mammoths

reblog if you support your army of genetically-melted feminist mammoths that trampled the earth flat

Don’t anybody tell this guy about that species of lizard where there are only females it might break him

My head hurts after reading that. 

I’m sending this post to @wehuntedthemammoth

Why would you hurt me like this?

That “genomic meltdown” is one of the reasons feminism is so potentially lethal, because they keep pushing for asexual reproduction, or trying to combine ovaries, when the most likely outcome is a population running about – unable to reproduce sexually since the whole “male genocide” bit – with incredibly damaged chromosomes.

I teach genetics, I don’t deserve to have to explain why this is so wrong and yet. Oh my god. 

  • Mueller’s Ratchet–which is what this chucklefuck is talking about, the reason that purely asexual lineages don’t last well in evolutionary time–does not apply to feminism. The hypothetical scenario of merging two eggs to create a baby? Yeah, uh, that’s fucking sex in this context, whether or not it involves a male. 
  • There are zero feminists pushing for parthenogenesis for humans, mostly because the whole thing is basically impossible for mammals as a result of mammalian investment in genomic imprinting. Among other things. It’s the sort of thing that only works okay in species that don’t control their embryonic development anywhere near as closely as your basic placental mammal does, because it relies on a certain amount of flexibility about sex determination and placental mammals are kind of weird about that.
  • Even if there were, Mueller’s Ratchet only applies if you never ever sexually reproduce and reshuffle alleles, like the parthenogenetic whiptail lizards mentioned upthread. If we have the technology to induce parthenogenesis in a human woman, we have the technology to reshuffle some alleles now and again. Mueller’s Ratchet kind of presupposes that going in and manually editing a genome isn’t a fucking option, shitwad! 
  • Furthermore, Mueller’s Ratchet is specifically a population genetics phenomenon that refers to the accumulation of deleterious mutations within an asexually/clonally reproducing lineage. It has dick fuck all to do with chromosomes.
  • Mueller’s Ratchet exists in order to explain why asexually reproducing lineages haven’t overrun the world, because frankly in the short term these lineages usually do way better than their conspecific, obligate sexually reproducing partners do. Furthermore, it’s really fucking common to see species that reproduce sexually at some times and asexually at other times, depending on context and who’s available, and that’s in and of itself a complex fucking phenotype you species-centric cortically starved ignorant dillweed
  • all of this is completely fucking irrelevant to the mammoth example that @brett-caton there chose to bring up, by the way, because mammoths don’t fucking reproduce asexually either 
    • as you would know if you’d bothered to read the paper, you self-satisfied jellyfish fellator
    • or even the pop science article you cited yourself 
    • which clearly and cogently explains that the fucking mammoths died of being inbred as all shit, much like yourself
  • the laziness inherent in jumbling all this pig-ignorant, overconfident and understudied bullshit together and claiming it’s a solidly built house rather than a crumbling, confused pile of enraged starfish is the final straw
    • you can’t even be arsed to read an article that you dug up and cited yourself, you shithugger
    • how are feminists supposed to be the lazy ones? 
    • you obviate your own thesis with your own intellectual failure, you pathetic snailsucking weed in the garden of knowledge

To hell with mammoths or Flat Earters, I’m here for the PURE OWNAGE of fools trying to start somethin’.

I love when people with relevant degrees roll up into threads and drop science like Rock Lee dropping his leg weights.

I weigh

officialjameelajamil:

Today is my 32nd birthday.

This is the best birthday I’ve ever had because I’ve woken up to thousands of women sending me pictures and messages about the things they love about their lives, and the things they have done that they are most proud of. This has been going on for days now.

I was scrolling through “explore” on Instagram (always a certified mine field for one’s self esteem) and came across this disastrously damaging picture.

image

I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. A group shot of grown women with their respective weights posted across each of their bodies, and the post asking what we think of their weights and then asking its followers, “What do you weigh?”

WHO CARES? What kind of crazed toxic nonsense is this? What is this post trying to achieve other than to induce anxiety into young women about something so entirely irrelevant? What are we teaching women about our value? Can it be measured using a metric system? Why do so many posts like this exist on social media? How is anyone supposed to get through the fucking day happy with themselves when we are given such unreasonable and shallow goals to achieve, falling short of which, no matter who we are, what we do, how many lives we save, how many children we raise, how many people’s lives we touch, we are not worth anything.

I snapped. I am just done. I’m so done with seeing this and letting it pass me by. It’s so dangerous and disgusting. It’s so belittling and abusive. We are subliminally bullied all day by the magazines, the side bar of shame, social media, and by each other. The onslaught is so aggressive that we are going to have to retaliate with 10 times the strength to undo all of the damage to the global psyche of women. So I posted this:

image

A small ode to the brilliant life that I am so lucky to live, that I built by myself from scratch, to the friends I am so lucky to have and to my self worth. This is how I measure myself. What I did, how I made people feel and how much I have enjoyed myself. It has taken me 10 years to get to the realisation that I am worth more than the digits on a measuring tape. And more importantly, the push back against body shaming shouldn’t just be about how much we love our flaws, it should be about something that isn’t really about the body at all. Self acceptance is important. But we deserve more than acceptance. Let’s step as far away from the conversation about our bodies as possible and make acclaim, integrity, achievement, contribution to society and kindness: Values worth shouting about again.

I posted it on twitter, and within an hour women started sending me their own ones. There were too many to keep track of. It happened so fast. The pictures were amazing. None of them were posed and filtered, nobody was contoured to within an inch of their life, or sucking anything in. It was women living their lives, writing down all of the things they were grateful for and proud of. All of the degrees they have, the babies they made, the cancer they beat or are fighting, their families they love, the disabilities they live with or help with, the relationships they have built, the companies they started. Just women waking up and remembering that they are valuable, and they do important, difficult, incredible things. Things that are more than just achieving the perfect lip liner, losing baby weight quickly or being able to EAT PIZZA WHILST AT A LINGERIE PHOTOSHOOT!!! (WOWWEE!)

Here are some of my favourites:

image
image
image
image
image
image
image

Women of every size and shape and age and background sent me their declarations of self love and clapped back at the shame they have been drenched in their whole lives. We are attacked by this beast our WHOLE DAMN LIVES. Bemused parents are writing to me that social media has their 8 year olds talking about diets and what they dislike about their tiny growing bodies. We are facing an epidemic of self hatred. Instagram while sometimes an amazing way for us to share, is in many ways, hurtling us at light speed towards the demise of what the suffragettes were building.

We lack focus because we are concentrating on the wrong things. Most of the women I know wake up much earlier than men to get ready, and spend much of their time and money on complete nonsense like manicures and pedicures, hair treatments, and waxing. Women bleach their bumholes. THEY BLEACH THEIR BUMHOLES. This is how far we have gone with our pursuit of perfection, that we are no longer satisfied with the natural colour of an area almost nobody in the world will ever see. We have to be thin, but with big breasts and bottoms, gravity free, spotless, hairless, ageless, light skinned but always with a year round sun kissed glow; we must be fun and eat pizza and drink beer but also completely cellulite free and we must all have tiny noses and enormous eyes and lips but with skinny faces, but our skinny faces must never look gaunt and old.

And after all this, and after all the work we do, that we do as much of as men, ON SUBSTANTIALLY fewer calories than we probably need, we get judged more and paid less anyway.

NO. I’m sorry but at some point something has to give. We have to object. We have to do it together. Rather than just complaining about it, lets fill the void of sense with some perspective and some regard for the lives we are so lucky to live. An education is a luxury and a beautiful thing, not afforded to millions of women in the world. Bringing children into the world and raising them to be happy and healthy and kind is a great achievement, that literally builds the world. Surviving illness and war and trials of mental health makes a warrior out of you. Fighting for the rights of those who have no voice is heroic and important. Reading and writing and filling yourself with knowledge makes you so much more fun to spend the day with. Travelling and being independent and supporting yourself is the sign of a woman in control of her life.

We spend our lives in pursuit of the approval of others when we don’t yet even really approve of ourselves. My opinion of me is now (and only very recently) the one that matters.

I remember being 15, miserable and so relentlessly disappointed in myself, thinking it didn’t matter that I had a full academic scholarship and that I had a job and good grades, a Grade 8 in piano and I was a good kid, because my hip bones didn’t jut out, I had a round face and my thighs were forever touching. I was taught nothing else mattered. And that my fat covered up my achievements. I am so, so aware of the damage the media does to a vulnerable mind, it ruined the first 20 years of my life.

I found this really sad old drawing I did of myself when I 16, with what I felt I had to look like in order to be accepted by girls at school, and society in general.

image

I can’t sit by and read the messages of self hatred that teenage girls send me, about how they hate themselves for not looking like Victoria’s Secret models. I can’t watch what happened to me, happen to them.

I hereby call out every newspaper run by a man that shames women about their appearance.

I hereby call out journalists who write passive-aggressive shaming articles about weight gain and congratulatory ones about women who lose weight.

I hereby MASSIVELY call out celebrities who don’t document what it takes for them to look the way they do. If you have had surgery, say something. If you have a strict diet and workout regime, say something. It is UNFEMINIST to push an image that was created in the fantasy lab of the patriarchy, essentially that of a sex doll, to other women, and pretend that it comes naturally to you, and that junk food and lying down in expensive hotel suites is what keeps you beautiful. You have a platform and have to use it responsibly.

I hereby call out the fashion industry for STILL after 10 years of being called out, perpetuating the idea that expensive clothing only looks good on stick thin, barely pubescent girls. (None of whom can afford your bloody clothes)

I hereby call out the women who troll other women online about their appearances.

I hereby call out the trolls that live in our own heads and eradicate all of our achievements and shower us in self-doubt and loathing.

In this uprising of female power we must realise we are being set absurd extra goals, thick and fast. The further we come as a gender, the more ridiculous the ideals we have to fulfil become. We are being distracted and exhausted and our eyes are being taken off the ball. Every minute you spend thinking about how thin or gorgeous you aren’t, is a minute you aren’t spending on growing your business or your life.

I’m not saying it’s not important to watch out for your health. I’m not saying your BMI isn’t something to pay attention to. I do think it’s important to try to be active and put good food into your engine. But I also think the shame and feeling of failure is what drives us to the unhealthy eating habits we acquire to “comfort” us when we feel inferior and depressed. It’s a catch 22.

And by all means take pride in your appearance. Enjoy your looks, and your clothes and your sex appeal, but don’t make it your number one concern and selling point. It can be in your top ten, but it should never, ever define you. It isn’t important. We aren’t supposed to all look the same. And nothing good ever comes of self hatred. It will never further you. It will always hold you back.

Please think of the things in your life that you are proud of, that fulfil you, that make you happy and write them down somewhere, and look at that list every time you feel that you are failing, or that your jeans are tight, or you have a chubby arm in a group photo of a night out, or when you watch a video of a Hadid eating pasta.

Please remember you have every right to be here, and your life is important and it is precious, and on your death bed you aren’t going to be thinking about your love handles.

I love women and we deserve so much more than this. We can do better. We have to.

We can win the revolution against shame.

Writing question here! How do you really get to know your characters? I’ve been having problems getting into some of my characters’ heads for my novel and I can’t find any useful advice.

thebibliosphere:

writinghag:

thebibliosphere:

I personally like to take my characters out for coffee. 

Drag them out of whatever world you have them in, and drop them into a different setting, a cafe in Paris, a busy NYC Starbucks—the coffee kiosk at Wallmart at 2am. What do they order? Is it a shot of espresso with biscotti on the side, the chocolate cake? Hot tea? Or is it three cans of energy drink, a pretzel with extra cheese sauce and a side of anti-acids?

How do they eat it, do they savor it, do they take neat little bites, do they let it melt on their tongue, or do they tear it apart and talk with their mouthful, gesturing wildly as they do. 

Do they people watch? Do they listen in to other conversations, or do they keep their headphones in keep their head down. Are they reading, sketching, or just phasing out? If they are listening to music, what are they listening to? What does that music taste tell them about you? Does another character phone them? Do they pick up and engage the call, or do they let it ring out and mull things over.

Are they dealing with issues with other characters? How do they feel about them right now, what’s on their mind? Do they have illnesses or an injury, a condition that affects their day to day life? How does that affect them being able to sit there and enjoy the moment—does it affect them at all until they move to stand up and feel the twinge run through them.

If removing them from their immediate world is too jarring, do it in world. A tavern, space cantina, market food stall watching street performers. Where are they headed to next.

Write them doing something mundane, come at them from another angle devoid of plot, just purely character thoughts and sensory exploration to how they interact with their world. Overall just try to get a feel for what kind of person they’d be, not a character driven by plot, but the person who needs to get groceries and do laundry before the end of the night or they’ll have no clean socks for tomorrow.

Play with them, mess around. There’s utterly no harm in messing with the world you’ve created for funsies if it’ll help you get unstuck. 

I hope that helps some ❤

fucking genius. I love you

Oh ha, you must have been really far back to find this old post! But the advice still stands. Coffee dates with your characters are a really great way to get to know them. Same with having them wash dishes or fold the laundry. It’s playing with the little things that can sometimes help the most, when you get stuck trying to make the whole. So let yourself play. It’s your world, you get to enjoy it too.

On Cures

cornerof5thandvermouth:

chronicallywild:

celebgil:

avilociraptor:

I want to be able to want a cure without the disability community thinking that I have internalized ableism.

I want the disability community to realize that there are some things worth curing, and some things that should not be cured.

If you are healthy and disabled you do not need your disability cured.

You can’t actually cure a disability anyway. You cure illnesses. Not every disability is an illness.

If you are disabled and not healthy it should be okay for you to want a cure.

If you are disabled and not healthy it’s also okay to not want a cure, as long as you leave space for the people who do want one.

The disability movement needs room for people who need or want cures.

Don’t infantilize people who are ill and disabled by assuming we just have a major case of internalized ableistm. Society infantilizes us all enough as is, we don’t need more of it from the community.

I am disabled and chronically ill. I want me some cure for my illnesses. If I’m still disabled after, that’s fine.

My problem isn’t being disabled. My problem is being chronically ill.

Absolutely, I wouldn’t mind having to use my cane, being restricted or having treatments even, but if I could not feel like hell every moment of every day. If I could maybe not have to retreat into darkness and silence when my brain decides it’s time for the ‘migraine agony rave’. If I could not be at 7 on the pain scale on a good day, that would be amazing.

I accept my disability, but I would love for someone to say “You know what, we found a cure for chronic migraines, and actually we can fix your discs surgically after all! Oh and all the other weird painful things that are wrong with you? We worked out what they are and here’s a treatment.”

It’s not internalised ableism to want to not be in pain anymore.

IT’S NOT INTERNALIZED ABLEISM TO WANT TO NOT BE IN PAIN ANYMORE.

I’m here for this. There are many ways in which I still struggle with internalized ableism. I try to be inclusive and never discriminate, but of course I make mistakes. I admit them and I do my best to learn.

But my wanting to be healthy isn’t ableism against myself. I just want to be able to not be in a state of constant pain and exhaustion. That’s about suffering, not discrimination.

i would love for there to be a cure for some of my mental shit, i would like to not feel like absolute shit 24/7, i feel you

is filling out tax forms for fanfic characters, to make sure you didn’t accidentally write them living beyond their means, too obsessive?

lynati:

edenfalling:

thatgirlnevershutsup:

liesmyth:

liesmyth:

I mean last week I browsed google scholar trying to find details about the composition of ancient Byzantine shampoo and ended up google translating an article written in Hungarian, so. You’re probably fine, nonnie. We’re all quirky here.

Friends, please reblog and tell me what is the most obsessive detail you’ve researched at length for fic writing purposes!

It’s a tossup between research on transatlantic travel in the latter part of the 19th century, and research on orcas in Sea World.

Probably sluice gate construction and installation methods, for field drainage in Tudor England… and/or the life stages of various bloodborne parasites and their attendant bacteria plus the comparative structures of avian and mamalian lungs, so I could design a superficially plausible xenobiological plague vector.

There’s no such thing as too obsessive. There’s only what adds to your world and its story, what distracts you from actually writing it, and the middle slice of the venn diagram where those two things intersect.

I bought a book specifically to look up information about Henry V of England’s coronation in order to construct a plausible narrative of it for a fic. (That it’s proven useful for several other aspects of his life, and provides me with more books to locate for pertinant information of the early 15th century and that king in particular is just bonus.)