Send me good vibes/thoughts/prayers/whatever as I begin searching for a different job.

Night shift was okay for a while…but in order to stay well-rested, I have kept my schedule the same even on my days off.

This is causing mental health issues because being nocturnal while living in a home with a day shift worker (my dad) means I can’t really play any instruments, and the whole night part means I don’t really get out of the house much because…nothing to do except at home.

And work is physically intense and mentally straining because of having to fix things other people effed up, which means I don’t have much energy for doing hobbies that don’t make noise.

So tired 😦

Alaska teen’s biggest catch was a 57-foot-long whale. Animal-rights activists didn’t like it. He’s not backing down.

tariqah:

native-life:

Re-Blog to support Native hunting rights and fight against individuals who don’t understand our Indigenous cultures.Ā 

https://www.gofundme.com/legalfeesforchrisapassingok

He has a gofundmeā€¼ļøā€¼ļøā€¼ļøā€¼ļø Support himā€¼ļøā€¼ļø

Alaska teen’s biggest catch was a 57-foot-long whale. Animal-rights activists didn’t like it. He’s not backing down.

Don’t reblog. I just had to get this out so I could breathe again. I’d cut it, but I’m on mobile, so meh.

My boobs are like housemates that one can’t stand to be around but also can’t afford (at the moment, at least) to kick out.

I want them gone, totally gone, so badly. I’ve never wanted them and I’ve hated them from the moment I started getting them.

They feel and look foreign to me, alien and unnatural, disturbing.

I want them gone.

But I have enough trouble with anxiety as it is without people wondering why, oh why, would I want to remove healthy breasts. They do nothing for *my* health–the worsen my back issues, weigh down my breathing, cause skin irritation unless I use antiperspirant under them, but worst of all the hurt my mental health.

I want them gone so badly, but I am so afraid of what that step would take in so many ways.

Night Shift Thought(s) from last night:

It makes me feel really uncomfortable when people with young children do the “She’s such a girl / He’s such a boy” thing just because their child seems to be drawn to things that, based on societal expectations based solely on the child’s assigned gender, that a girl or boy is “supposed” to like; they assume that if the child seems to gravitate to these societally gendered things without them consciously pushing them on the child that this some how makes these “gender norms” innate to girls or boys.

These parents don’t realize that even young children can be influenced by things other than their parents–other relatives have an impact, any media the child consumes (even media a parent may to realize a child is consuming), and the way that children’s toys are packaged and marketed in-store can have an influence.

Certainly many children conform to gender norms in their tastes. This doesn’t just hinge on gender, though–children have personalities and may like something just because they like it, not because it’s a “boy thing”/“girl thing” and happens to match their assigned gender.

Some kids may seem to like things because they have received the message–from anywhere in their environment, whether parents realize or not–that those things are what their assigned gender is *supposed* to like.

As a kid who got the message “girls are *supposed* to like x, y, z” and then made the mental jump to “…but I don’t like x, y, z…does that me bad at being a girl?” and decided that clearly I had been rejected by girlhood and thus ran in the direction of “eww, girls” for many years because I didn’t understand girls who–for whatever reason–did conform to gender norms in childhood play and other things and only in nearing adulthood learned to accept that not conforming didn’t mean I failed at being a girl/woman and that conforming didn’t mean that other girls/women automatically saw me as a failure…

Well…it hurts to hear parents describe their children that way, unspokenly also saying that societal gender roles/norms are just natural, just biology. It hurts because I remember being that girl who mainly liked “boy toys”; and now I’m a gender non-conforming woman who doesn’t really understand what it feels like to “feel like a woman” or anything but just “just…me”, but who very strongly feels a need to stand by women and girls, both those like me who don’t “fit” and those who do that I spent so many years resenting.

And I wonder what these “my child is *such* a/an [assigned gender], lol” would say if their child…*wasn’t* so apparently gender conforming. And I don’t know if I would really want to know the honest answer.

beeth0ven:

There’s this myth amongst healthy people that being chronically ill exists in a vacuum. That yes, you lose your health, but everything else in life stays the same. And that’s just not even close to the truth. Being sick affects everything. Not a single aspect of life is left unchanged.Ā 

Chronic illness changes everything- the friends you have, the food you eat, the movies you can watch, the hobbies you do, your job, your education, your family, your relationships, etc, etc, etc.Ā 

There is no such thing asĀ ā€œjust health,ā€ orĀ ā€œjust physical ability.ā€ Ā Chronic illness is a malignancy, and it slithers its way into each and every aspect of a person’s life.

apersnicketylemon:

skepticalspectacles:

apersnicketylemon:

Stop censoring the words people are using to blacklist, you are actually exposing people to the word/subject you think you’re protecting them from. If rape is on my blacklist and you have an in depth account of rape and you used r*pe for everything, I WILL NOW BE EXPOSED TO IT because my blacklist DIDN’T BLOCK IT because YOU CHANGED THE WORD.

^^^^^^
To add: Censoring is only really necessary when it comes to a slur your cannot reclaim, but you still need to at least tag the post with the themes so anyone who has, say, antiblack violence blacklisted for instance, won’t be exposed to what it is that triggers them.

I would really appreciate it if people could reblog this instead of ignoring it because this IS becoming a wide spread problem. I have had several panic attacks over the last month due to things that are on my blacklist not being caught specifically because of people censoring the black list word. Blacklists can pick up on words inside posts, but they can’t pick up on those words when you change one or more letters to a star.

Stop censoring words in posts that aren’t slurs, you are not protecting us from exposure, you are forcibly exposing us to it. You are doing precisely the opposite of helping us.

So. New Mutants trailer. “Leave those kids alone,” indeed 😐

So yes, Fox managed to cast a Native American actress as Dani. But they chose to continue to whitewash Roberto de Costa–an Afro-Latino character whose mutant power manifested when he was attacked in a instance of anti-black racism (the comics don’t get a pass, either–they’ve often been guilty of this since the post-Claremont era began).

They have also whitewashed Cecilia Reyes, an Afro-Latina, and it looks like she’s been put in an at least slightly villainous role. Which I could see being a reason that Rosario Dawson noped out of the role. Dawson was good casting–she even had Puerto Rican heritage like Reyes.

Aside from the whitewashing…yeah, they said it was gonna be a horror movie, but the Demon Bear saga they’ve said they’re drawing from is NOT a “lock up a bunch of vulnerable, if powerful, teenagers in some creepy ass mental hospital” kind of horror. And I’m not happy 😦

My babies 😦