So there’s a BuzzFeed article called “How People Treat Mental Illness Vs. How they Treat Physical Illness.” The authors of the article/post/whatever mean well, but I don’t think it would be going out on a limb to say they probably don’t have a lot of experience with chronic illnesses, invisible physical illnesses, or any long-term physical illness.

Like, part of the link text is “have you tried herbal tea,” and that is the exact same type of shit people say to people with diabetes and (probably) to folks with things like fibromyalgia.

Lots of physical illnesses get really similar types of bullshit thrown at them as is thrown at mental illnesses. Assumptions that the illness is some how the person’s own fault. Assumptions that they’re just using their condition as an excuse. Assumptions and accusations that they’re making it up/that it isn’t real.

And a lot of times, and I mean A. LOT. OF. TIMES. mental illnesses like anxiety and depressive disorders are co-morbid with physical illnesses, especially chronic ones. It can partly be the changes that the chronic illness causes, and it can be partly because of having to deal with everything the physical illness brings, and sometimes it can be any number of other factors, because seriously, it is a WONDER that anyone ends up anywhere near textbook “normal” because there are so many ways that the human body can have trouble functioning.

Articles like this are probably meant to make Joe and Jane Average (who are assumed to be not mentally ill and probably not physically ill) think about how they interact with others.

But a lot of what it ends up doing is pitting people with physical illness and people with mental illness against each other, with no real acknowledgement that a lot of people are living with both kinds.

Navigating the grey areas of ACE representation in gaming & beyond with Defira85 | Fresh out of Tokens

defira85:

femhype:

defira85:

HEY LOOK so I was very humbled to be asked to talk to Fresh Out of Tokens about asexuality in gaming (and asexuality in pop culture in general) and the episode went live today, woo! 

Listen to me trying to sound all professional and educated (actually you SHOULD listen, because it’s a great podcast. And a great topic. Go listen)

Really wonderful discussion! Some reading for you, once you’re done listening:

  1. “Coming Up Aces: The need for Better Asexual Representation in Games
  2. Asexuality & Cole’s Humanity in the ‘Dragon Age’ Trespasser DLC

Let’s always, always make an effort to listen to the voices in this community who are directly affected by the representation (or lack thereof) found in games. 🙏

I’m IMMENSELY grateful for that second article, I was linked to it a few days ago, and it says absolutely everything I would have said had we recorded after the Trespasser DLC had dropped (as it was, we recorded all the way back in August, so I had no idea that my pleasant optimism about Cole was about to be shattered)

I retweeted the article, but for those of you who don’t follow my twitter, the article about Cole in Trespasser is absolutely necessary reading. Thanks Femhype!

Navigating the grey areas of ACE representation in gaming & beyond with Defira85 | Fresh out of Tokens

Starting using continuous glucose monitoring today! Which has the potential to be super awesome.

But right now there are growing pains which mostly consist of my pump alarming/screaming at me and me wanting to Hulk Smash things because yeah.

polkque:

revolutionarygays:

dysphoriahell:

support:

Go Off the Grid

A couple of months ago, we changed “ignore” to “block” and added some new features that increase privacy. Now we’re introducing a “Show this blog on the web” toggle that gives you even more control over who sees your stuff. If you’re stressed about lurkers, this is the toggle for you.

When you disable “Show this blog on the web:”

  • Anyone who tries to visit your blog on the web (ie. support.tumblr.com) will see an error page 
  • Someone following your blog can only see your posts on their dashboard when they’re logged in
  • Logged-in users who know your blog exists can follow it from the follow page here: tumblr.com/following
  • There’s no sacrifice of social features! Your followers can read, like, reply to, and reblog your posts
  • You can still block anyone from following your blog

To hide any non-group blog from the web, click “Settings” under the account menu at the top of the dashboard, then click the name of the blog you’d like to update on the right side of the page. Scroll down to the directory portion of your blog settings and toggle the “Show this blog on the web” option off.

Voila! Well, actually, pas ici! Your blog disappears from the web in a plume of smoke.

THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT IVE BEEN HOPING FOR MY ENTIRE LIFE ON THIS WEBSITE !!!!!!!!!!

I CAN FINALLY F-LOCK MY BLOG THANK U GOD

yooooooooooooooo