one of the most challenging skills i've had to learn as an adult is the art of figuring out whether i'm proportionally annoyed with someone or just tired and overstimulated and looking for reasons to be pissed off
What doesn't kill you flares up and tries again
ohhhh i despise how frequently i need to make posts like this but the work i do isn’t enough. i am about to spend so much money on bills, groceries, and hrt. i don’t expect anyone to be able to cover the $300+ that i’m about to be forced to drop. but if i cld get a little help with making it hurt less that would mean the world. i’m sorry for doing this again. thank you.
💸app: trophybutch
Oh, and by the way, that Supreme Court ruling is where that Harry Potter money goes.
“We’ll figure it out together” is a love language.
good morning i feel like seven dollars
money is such an underrated accessibility option.
like people want to think any disabled person who is after money is morally suspect some way, because they're not asking for "treatments" or "accommodations" like a lot of our issues can be fixed way more easily with money. can't drive? paying for a taxi is often one of the more accessible alternatives. can't cook? you can pay more to have prepared food delivered to you. food restrictions? that food straight up costs more money. can't clean? you can pay for someone to do that. house inaccessible? having (lots) of money can help with that, you get the gist.
having money won't make us abled. it also won't stop our symptoms from being distressing, painful, or debilitating. but there's a huge gap in experience between the average poor disabled person and someone who's actually wealthy. you can buy your way out of some of the difficult situations most disabled people are left to rot in. wanting money, needing money, asking for money is pretty natural when it's such a useful tool. why get so weird about disabled people wanting money like i'm pretty sure everyone wants money anyway
blogging from the depths of autistic burnout • he/him • adult
300 posts