Blogs I follow:

    orisnitsa:

    No one:

    Tumblr users at 00:00 on March 15th:

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    namira:

    Guy whose prophetic dreams have repeatedly proven true but he has imposter syndrome so he thinks it’s just a coincidence

    gyudons:

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    michelle yeoh becomes the first asian and only the second woman of colour to win best actress at the oscars

    pika-memes:

    emotions aren’t masculine or feminine. they’re human. normalize them.

    shadow-banned-the-hedgehog:

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    missinyouiskillingme:

    I hope they ask about me & I hope you tell them you fucked up.

    thehopefulquotes:

    “Be happy for no reason, like a child. If you are happy for a reason, you’re in trouble, because that reason can be taken from you.”

    Deepak Chopra

    perfectquote:

    “I’m not everything I want to be, but I’m more than I was, and I’m still learning.”

    Charlotte Eriksson, Everything Changed When I Forgave Myself

    just-shower-thoughts:

    If being gay were truly a choice, there would definitely be more lesbians…

    justafeelinglove:

    You can’t just sit there and put everybody’s lives ahead of yours and think that counts as love.

    Tips for Reading with ADHD

    iamthecutestofborg:

    adhd-asd:

    (or without ADHD, if they help regardless)

    Physical print:

    • cover the page with a piece of paper and reveal lines/paragraphs as you read them
    • use a highlighter to emphasize important/interesting parts
    • take notes as you go to be physically engaged with the material

    Digital media:

    • copy and paste the text into a doc/word processor
      • change the font size/style/colour to something more legible
      • make your own paragraphs and spacing
    • copy and paste one paragraph at a time to isolate them from the distraction of the rest of the text
    • install a browser extension like BeeLine Reader or Mercury Reader
    • zoom in on the page and scroll slowly so you’re revealing lines as you read them
    • physically cover the screen and reveal lines as you read them
    • if you do better with physical media, print it out or find a physical copy

    Both:

    • read out loud
    • pace, move around, or use a fidget while reading

    • set a timer for 5 minutes and read in small chunks with breaks in between
    • divide the material into sections and read one section at a time with breaks in between

    • have another person, audio book, or text-to-speech program read it aloud as you follow along

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    (via es-beeohohem)

    momowho34:

    In this house we love cryptid’s that aren’t bastardizations or appropriations of figures from indigenous religions ❤️

    (via devilgoat)

    cookinguptales:

    roachpatrol:

    princess-neville:

    The way that we learn about Helen Keller in school is an absolute outrage. We read “The Miracle Worker”- the miracle worker referring to her teacher; she’s not even the title character in her own story. The narrative about disabled people that we are comfortable with follows this format- “overcoming” disability. Disabled people as children.

    Helen Keller as an adult, though? She was a radical socialist, a fierce disability advocate, and a suffragette. There’s no reason she should not be considered a feminist icon, btw, and the fact that she isn’t is pure ableism- while other white feminists of that time were blatent racists, she was speaking out against Woodrew Wilson because of his vehement racism. She supported woman’s suffrage and birth control. She was an anti-war speaker. She was an initial donor to the NAACP. She spoke out about the causes of blindness- often disease caused by poverty and poor working conditions. She was so brave and outspoken that the FBI had a file on her because of all the trouble she caused.

    Yet when we talk about her, it’s either the boring, inspiration porn story of her as a child and her heroic teacher, or as the punchline of ableist, misogynistic jokes. It’s not just offensive, it’s downright disgusting.

    the reason the story stops once hellen keller learns to talk is no one wanted to listen to what she had to say

    how’s that for a fucking punchline

    Another part of the story that is often conveniently omitted is that Anne Sullivan, the “miracle worker” in question, was also a visually impaired woman (and abolitionist) who faced her own struggles finding accessible education. That was why she was able to teach Helen Keller and connect her with resources that would allow her to flourish in academia. When Helen Keller was railing against poverty-induced diseases that caused blindness, she was talking about things like trachoma which was what had caused her friend’s vision loss.

    The fact that Sullivan is often portrayed as able-bodied in retellings of their story is indicative of the narrative that is most comfortable for an ableist society: that accessibility and equality are gifts bestowed upon the disabled by able-bodied heroes. Disabled children are never taught that they have the power to lift each other up, and that’s a crying shame.

    (via believe-youare-lovely)

    x-animamin:

    “Good relationships don’t just happen. They take time, patience, and two people who truly want to be together”

    (via gaythewholeway)

    dankmemeuniversity:

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    (via believe-youare-lovely)