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#disability – @lookatthewords on Tumblr
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The Friendly Black Hottie.

@lookatthewords / lookatthewords.tumblr.com

Hey. I’m Colette. The ripe old age of 20-something. I write stuff and things. WritingWithColor is my diverse writing advice blog. I'm all about PoC, particularly Black + Woman of Color Issues, Writing, Diverse Beauty, Art, Self-Love, and funny ish.
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mooniicorn

“If autism isn’t caused by environmental factors and is natural why didn’t we ever see it in the past?”

We did, except it wasn’t called autism it was called “Little Jonathan is a r*tarded halfwit who bangs his head on things and can’t speak so we’re taking him into the middle of the cold dark forest and leaving him there to die.”

Or “little Jonathan doesn’t talk but does a good job herding the sheep, contributes to the community in his own way, and is, all around, a decent guy.” That happened a lot, too, especially before the 19th century.

Or, backing up FURTHER

and lots of people think this very likely,

“Oh little Sionnat has obviously been taken by the fairies and they’ve left us a Changeling Child who knows too much, and asks strange questions, and uses words she shouldn’t know, and watches everything with her big dark eyes, clearly a Fairy Child and not a Human Like Us.”

The Myth of the Changeling child, a human baby apparently replaced at a young age by a toddler who “suddenly” acts “strange and fey” is an almost textbook depiction of autistic children.

To this day, “autism warrior mommies” talk about autism “stealing” their “sweet normal child” and have this idea of “getting their real baby back” which (in the face of modern science)  indicates how the human psyche actually does deal with finding out their kid acts unlike what they expected.

Given this evidence, and how common we now know autism actually is, the Changeling myth is almost definitely the result of people’s confusion at the development of autistic children.

Weirdly enough, that legend is now comforting to me.

I think it’s worth noting that many like me, who are diagnosed with ASD now, would probably have been seen as just a bit odd in centuries past. I’m only a little bit autistic; I can pass for neurotypical for short periods if I work really hard at it. I have a lack of talent in social situations, and I’m prone to sensory overload or you might notice me stimming.

But here’s the thing: life is louder, brighter and more intense and confusing than it has ever been. I live on the edge of London and I rarely go into the centre of town because it’s too overwhelming. If I went back in time and lived on a farm somewhere, would anyone even notice there was anything odd about me? No police sirens, no crowded streets that go on for miles and miles, no flickery electric lights. Working on a farm has a clear routine. I’d be a badass at spinning cloth or churning butter because I find endless repetition soothing rather than boring.

I’m not trying to romanticise the past because I know it was hard, dirty work with a constant risk of premature death. I don’t actually want to be a 16th century farmer! What I’m saying is that disability exists in the context of the environment. Our environment isn’t making people autistic in the sense of some chemical causing brain damage. But we have created a modern environment which is hostile to autistic people in many ways, which effectively makes us more disabled. When you make people more disabled, you start to see more people struggling, failing at school because they’re overwhelmed, freaking out at the sound of electric hand dryers and so on. And suddenly it looks like there’s millions more autistic people than existed before.

“…disability exists in the context of the environment.”

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coldalbion

Reblog for disability commentary.

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oockitty

That last paragraph is absolutely important.

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hazeldomain

“How come nobody ever heard of ‘dyslexia’ until widespread literacy became a thing?”

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cool disability psa!

hi everyone!  so while the term “handicapped” is really outdated/problematic & we don’t use it to discuss pwd anymore, i still hear good, woke people use it to refer to parking spots/toilets/etc.  like “the handicapped stall” or whatever.  and i really think they do that bc they don’t know of a better term.  so i’m gonna give you one!  “accessible!!!!”

any time you’d say “handicapped,” say “accessible”

“oh, he has fibromyalgia, so he has an accessible parking permit” “due to her spinal cord injury, she has an accessible dorm room” etc etc

this is cool for two main reasons! 1 - you’re not using super outdated language  and 2 - it puts the focus on the accessibility of the environment, not the personal impairment, which if you’ve done any reading on the social model of disability, you’ll know is a really good thing.

so spread the word, practice better disability politics, and spare me the inward cringe every time i have to hear the word “handicapped”

Oh this is good! I need to start doing this. 

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it takes $0 to use the word “debilitating” instead of “crippling” to describe your mental illness

cripple is a slur specifically aimed at physically disabled people, which is why it’s Not Okay to use if you aren’t physically disabled (esp bc it was often aimed at a physically disabled person who can’t walk or can only barely walk) just in case anyone didn’t know

And guess what guys? If you’re able bodied, you don’t get an opinion on this! Able bodied folk should just listen to our physically disabled pals.

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decodering
kleinsaur:
decodering:
Karwai Pun, GOV.UK:
The dos and don’ts of designing for accessibility are general guidelines, best design practices for making services accessible in government. Currently, there are six different posters in the series that cater to users from these areas: low vision, D/deaf and hard of hearing, dyslexia, motor disabilities, users on the autistic spectrum and users of screen readers.
[…] Another aim of the posters is that they’re meant to be general guidance as opposed to being overly prescriptive. Using bright contrast was advised for some (such as those with low vision) although some users on the autistic spectrum would prefer differently. Where advice seems contradictory, it’s always worth testing your designs with users to find the right balance, making compromises that best suit the users’ needs.
[github]
I’ve been wanting something like this to reference! Boosting for the others that like to dabble in code/design.
This is some of the most lucidly written accessibility advice I’ve seen. Making accessible web pages should be the default, not an add-on. It’s really not that hard to do, especially when you think about it from the start – and it benefits everyone.
(Obligatory note that there are exceptions to some of these guidelines, e.g., “bunching” some interactions together is an important way to cue which interactions are related to each other, but that’s why these are guidelines, not absolute rules.)
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Another myth that is firmly upheld is that disabled people are dependent and non-disabled people are independent. No one is actually independent. This is a myth perpetuated by disablism and driven by capitalism - we are all actually interdependent. Chances are, disabled or not, you don’t grow all of your food. Chances are, you didn’t build the car, bike, wheelchair, subway, shoes, or bus that transports you. Chances are you didn’t construct your home. Chances are you didn’t sew your clothing (or make the fabric and thread used to sew it). The difference between the needs that many disabled people have and the needs of people who are not labelled as disabled is that non-disabled people have had their dependencies normalized. The world has been built to accommodate certain needs and call the people who need those things independent, while other needs are considered exceptional. Each of us relies on others every day. We all rely on one another for support, resources, and to meet our needs. We are all interdependent. This interdependence is not weakness; rather, it is a part of our humanity.

AJ Withers, “Disability Politics and Theory” (via vulturechow)

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Reminder to Abled people

The “perks” disabled people receive are not perks to the disabled. They only seem like perks if you have full bodily function. They aren’t benefits at all, they are the minimum required effort to help disabled people and they barely cut it. 

Special seating is to fit a wheel chair, our butts and legs are in the same amount of space as you. We’re also cramped and uncomfortable and in pain, don’t be telling us how you have it worse. Most of those seats aren’t even in good spots in the theater. 

Special parking is so we can even access the store. The walk from the middle of the lot for you is the same as the walk/wheel from the front of the lot for us. Many of us can barely make it inside from the handicapped parking.

Boarding planes first is because it takes extra time to do everything, including get in and out of chairs. They do not want US to block YOU. This is for YOUR benefit. 

This also applies to the special lines at roller coasters- They do not want US to block YOU, the majority, from having a good time. Odds are a disabled person can only ride a few rides before having to go home (as well as many rides bar people with health conditions), few to no disabled people are using this line. It is a SAFETY precaution as well, because a disabled person cannot handle the strain of waiting in line in the heat as long as an abled person can. In fact, most abled people barely tolerate it. Why would you expect a disabled person to not pass out and need emergency services and halt the line if abled people do it, too?

Using the Elevator is not a privilege. How the hell are we supposed to get wheel chairs, damaged body parts, and our generous helping of pain up the stairs? If you think this is a benefit, pinch yourself immediately because you are dreaming. And yes, elevators often make disabled people with sensitive constitutions (most of us) feel ill. It’s not even pleasant. 

Being Granted extra time on tests is because many of our brains freeze up when placed in a stressful situation. It also often takes longer for us to remember or process a question or answer. If you have testing anxiety, you are eligible too! Do not think it is limited to disabled people and it is a benefit. It’s so we don’t fail every test. It’s so we can KEEP UP with you. 

“Getting” to take their dogs everywhere, is the most misconceived of them all. The dog is specially trained to preform a task so we do not DIE suddenly in public. Sure, the dogs are loyal friends, but I am not exaggerating when I say it is to prevent DEATH. Please understand the dog is for personal safety. Like a rescue inhaler or an alarm. Do not complain that you cannot have a dog in public and do not bother our dogs. You are downplaying our illness. It is both rude and cruel. Are you at risk of dying suddenly that could be easily preventable with an assistant? No? Then leave us and our service animals alone because it is none of your business. 

Please think about WHY disabled people need this rather than decry the whole system that barely supports us. I am sure you mean well, but if you think that these things are “perks” or “benefits”, then you are part of the problem. 

A large population of disabled people don’t even get access to all of these things because of the extremely harmful “faker for benefits” mindset that has been widely adapted. It is killing us. Literally. Please be considerate of the needs of all human beings, not just those like you. 

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this is amazing! i am low-vision and could use this when i am travelling

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iatrogenic

i was expecting this to be EXTREMELY expensive but actually it’s FREE? can’t wait for the android version, but it does work really well on my ipad (when i remember to turn the sound up). a thing that differentiates SMOOTH MEDICINE BOTTLE A from SMOOTH MEDICINE BOTTLE B, etc!!!

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you know what… this might be handy for wheelchair users too, if youre going to be in a cold environment for a long time (id personally figure out how to shorten the flippy fin bit but thats cause of how my wheelchair sits)

PERFECT FOR BEING A MERMAID I WANNA BE ONE TOO

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hollowedskin

FIRST thing i thought was “i need to share this for my followers who use wheelchairs” BEST.

hauntedtesty PLEASE MAKE ME THIS I’LL PAY YOU also my sister wants one too IM SERIOUS THO

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jhameia
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rubato

oh god this would take forever but yes!!!

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sixpenceee

Qian Hongyan was just four when she lost both her legs. A speeding trucker left her for dead as she crossed the main road in her village of Zhuangshang in southern China. 

For nearly two years Qian was immobile as she didn’t even have enough of her body left to sit up in a wheelchair. Doctors said her only hope of being able to move by herself again would be extensive surgery to allow her to be fitted with prosthetic limbs.Her parents couldn’t afford this treatment. 

Qian’s granddad Yuan came up with a simple but effective treatment to get her moving again. He took a basketball the village boys had discarded and cut a hole just big enough for tiny Qian to fit into, padded the inside with stiff floor mats from his car, then propped her up inside. All of a sudden Qian was able to stabilize herself and was able to by move herself by rolling the ball in any direction she wanted. She supported herself using wooden handles. 

From that day on Qian would not be stopped by any obstacle. She went back to school, started to play with her friends again, and started to get back the life of any girl her age. She began professional swimming training in 2007 and defied the odds of her double amputation to become one of the first members of the Yunnan Youth Swimming Club.

She won three gold medals in last year’s Yunnan Para Games and took a gold and two silver medals at the National Swimming Championship for the Disabled (Under 18) in 2009 before continuing impressively at this year’s Para Games.

I should have added this in the original post but after attention in the Chinese press, Qian traveled to Beijing to receive free artificial limbs at the China Rehabilitation Research Center, a center that has been providing help to the disabled in China for over 20 years. At 18 years old she is ready for her full adult prosthetics. 

This is so important.

this is so precious

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cayennepeper

chrome extensions for disabilities masterpost

I have seen a lot of posts on here talking about individual extensions for chrome to help people, but I haven’t seen a place where they’re compiled together. So here you are! font/text

  • no caps - Makes everything lower case
  • Open Dyslexic: changes the font to Open Dyslexic and makes it larger. Personal favourite.
  • Dyslexie: changes the font to dyslexie and allows change to font size and colour (blue). Can be turned off. (Doesn’t seem to work on facebook)
  • Font Changer: Allows you to change the font on specific website or on everything using a Google Font. I believe you can also upload your own, if there’s a specific font you need.
  • BeeLine Reader: Uses a gradient so your eye follows along one line to the next

overlays/colour change

  • Color Overlay - Irlen Filter for Chromebook: Puts a coloured overlay over the screen. can choose colour and opacity. 
  • Sunglasses: Tints the screen grey to reduce contrast
  • Desaturate: Removes all colour and makes everything a greyscale
  • High Contrast: Change contrast or invert colour scheme
  • Deluminate: Similar to High Contrast, but tries to keep photos in tact
  • G.lux: Makes the colour of the display change depending on the time of day (also cuts down on blue light so it’s easier to fall asleep)

reduce visual distraction

  • Readability: Can change things such as margins, colours, etc… as well as reduce visual business
  • Ad Block Plus: blocks ads. What more needs to be said?
  • FlashControl: Stops flash animations running by themselves
  • Hide GIFS: Allows you to keep GIFS from displaying
  • Text Mode: Loads pages in black/white, covers images, with text only.

audio

  • SpeakIt!: Reads small section of highlighted text aloud
  • Chrome Speak: Reads small section of highlighted text aloud
  • Announcify: Reads full web pages. Warning: may stop in the middle of text or not read for the full thing.
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reblogged

Diverse Recs from #WeNeedDiverseBooks.

This amazing campaign for Diversity in YA/MG is starting tomorrow, but for the past few days twitter has been exploding with people talking about it. If you haven’t been checking it out, here’s the hashtag that they are using: #WeNeedDiverseBooks 

And here is a list of the book recommendations I found in the tag:

POC YA

  1. Guardian of the Dead (Karen Healy)
  2. The Whole Story of a Half Girl (Veera Hiranandani)
  3. Agency series (Y.S Lee)
  4. Vanished (Sheela Chari)
  5. Mira in the Present Tense (Sita Brahmachari)
  6. The Art of Wishing duology (Lindsay Ribar) 
  7. Mexican WhiteBoy (Matt de la Pena)
  8. Kendra (Coe Booth)
  9. Esperanza Rising (Pam Muñoz Ryan)
  10. A Long Walk to Water (Linda Sue Park)
  11. The Kite Fighters (Linda Sue Park)
  12. A Single Shard (Linda Sue Park)
  13. Pointe (Brandy Colbert)
  14. Flying the Dragon (Natalie Dias Lorenzi)
  15. Capture the Flag series (Kate Messner)
  16. Akata Witch (Nnedi Okorafor)
  17. Logan family books (Mildred D. Taylor)
  18. Saving Maddie (Varian Johnson)
  19. Millicent Min, Girl Genius (Lisa Yee)
  20. Fly On the Wall (e.lockhart)
  21. One Crazy Summer (Rita Williams-Garcia)
  22. Huntress (Malinda Lo) Also LGBTQAI
  23. The Curse Workers series (Holly Black)
  24. How I Became a Ghost (Tim Tingle)
  25. Fire (Kristin Cashore)
  26. Teenie (Christopher Grant)
  27. A Song for Bijou (Josh Farrar)
  28. The Color of my Words (Lynn Joseph)
  29. Flowers in the Sky (Lynn Joseph)
  30. Cat Girl’s Day Off (Kimberly Pauley)
  31. Killer of Enemies (Joseph Bruchac)
  32. Fake ID (Lamar Giles)
  33. Tankborn (Karen Sandler)
  34. Starry River of the Sky (Grace Lin)
  35. Written in the Stars (Aisha Saeed) 2015
  36. The Summer Prince (Alaya Dawn Johnson)

LGTBQAI YA

  1. The Shattering (Karen Healy)
  2. Rapture Practice (Aaron Hartzler)
  3. A Love Story Starring My Dead Best Friend (Emily Horner)
  4. Killing Miss Kitty and Other Sins (Marion Dane)
  5. If You Could be Mine (Sara Farizan)
  6. Everything Leads to You (Nina Lacour) MAY 2014
  7. Love in the Time of Global Warming (Francesca Lia Block)
  8. Ask The Passengers (A.S King)
  9. Fat Angie (E.E. Charlton-Trujillo
  10. 37 Things I Love (Kekla Magoon)
  11. Adaptation (Malinda lo)
  12. Ash (Malinda Lo)
  13. Empress of the World (Sara Ryan)
  14. Falling from the Sky (Nikki Godwin)
  15. The Summer I Wasn’t Me (Jessica Verdi)
  16. Beautiful Music for Ugly Children (Kirstin Cronn-Mills)
  17. Golden Boy (Abigail Tarttelin) INTERSEX
  18. Far From You (Tess Sharpe)
  19. Coda duology (Emma Trevayne)
  20. Ultraviolet (R.J Anderson) ASEXUALITY
  21. Hushed (Kelley York)

MG

  1. Great Greene Heist (Varian Johnson) 2014
  2. Caminar (Skila Brown)
  3. Becoming Naomi Leon (Pam Muñoz Ryan)
  4. Breadcrumbs (Anne Ursu)
  5. The Real Boy (Anne Ursu)
  6. Make Way for Dyamonde Daniel (Nikki Grimes)
  7. Clubhouse Mysteries (Sharon Draper)
  8. Drita, My Homegirl (Jenny Lombard)
  9. Parched (Melanie Crowder)

MENTAL HEALTH/DISABILITY

  1. Marcelo in the Real World (Francisco X. Stork)
  2. Rules (Cynthia Lord)
  3. OCD Love Story (Corey Ann Haydu)
  4. Wild Awake (Hilary T. Smith)
  5. I Don’t Want to Be Crazy (Samantha Schutz)
  6. It’s Kind of a Funny Story (Ned Vizzini)
  7. Out of My Mind (Sharon Draper)

GRAPHIC NOVELS (recs from @Herreracus)

  1. I Was The Cat
  2. The Eternal Smile (Gene Luen Yang)
  3. American Born Chinese (Gene Luen Yang)
  4. Yokaiden (Nina Matsumoto)
  5. A Bride’s Story (Kaoru Mori)
  6. A Boy and a Girl (Jamie S. Rich and Natalie Nourigat)
  7. Wandering Son (Takako Shimura) TRANS
  8. Skim (Tamaki cousins) POC LGBT
  9. Satchel Paige: Striking Out Jim Crow (James Sturm)
  10. Fist, Stick, Knife, Gun (Geoffrey Canada)
  11. The Elsewhere Chronicles (Nykko and Bannister)
  12. Megagogo (Wook Jin Clark)
  13. Down. Set. Fight (Chris Sims)
  14. The Color of Earth (Kim Dong Hwa)
  15. Wet Moon (Ross Campbell) POC, LGBT, DISABILITY.
  16. Aya (Marguerite Abouet)

OTHER AUTHORS MENTIONED

  • Octavia Butler
  • Khaled Hosseini
  • Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Useful Links/Lists

P.D: 1) If I missed something please let me know. 2) I only copied the titles of the books that were being mentioned in the tag (added a few), but I haven’t read/checked these, so if you know one of these is offensive or a bad representation please let me know so I can add a note to it or take it down.

For more info follow the official tumblr for We Need Diverse Books: weneeddiversebooks.tumblr.com

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Anonymous asked:

Why is giving a disabled character powers a no-no?

As a disabled writer, I wanted to write a story in which the disabled character doesn’t have an ability that negates his disability.  I wanted to reflect the reality of my own experience as a disabled woman in a way that I don’t often get to see in media, because most portrayals of disabled characters are by able-bodied people and seen through their perspective.  This is why tropes like the disability superpower, or any of the other noxious tropes I write about exist in the first place.  We don’t control the narrative.  I’ve written before about how painful it is not to have anyone who looks like you in the media you consume and how affirming it is to have someone who is like you with whom to identify in fiction.  This essay isn’t about that, but instead about the way these portrayals of people with disabilities teach people without disabilities to view us.

Why the disability superpower matters. It talks about fanfiction, but it’s a nice read nonetheless. 

Depending on the day of the week, I see these stories in one of three ways: Either the creator is thinking “I really want to include disability in my storyline, but I don’t think disabled people are interesting on their own. I better come up with something to make them more interesting to the storyline.” Or “You know what’s Special? Disability! Let’s do a disability special, and make that person have special powers!”.
(The third way is “Damn it, I’m irritated as all get out. Why am I even watching this?” Which is why I’ve never seen past the the radar-rain scene in Daredevil.)
I get frustrated with these stories not because there’s something deeply wrong with Disability Superpowers, but because there’s very little to counter-balance them in pop culture. It feels like, outside of the news (where people with disabilities are either tragedies or Very Special Lessons), television, books, and movies go for Super Powered, Special Lessons, or Not At All.

If you have any articles on the matter that could illustrate the issue further, link me. 

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