Oc-tober day 6
Roxy, a shapeshifter for mha
I'm not crying, I have something in my eye😭
💔🤍 Finally I can put them together
both art are available on INPRNT
✨Reblogs are appreciated✨
#CorazonWeek2024
Day 6 | Family |
I regret nothing
🪇 🦴 💀 🪇
@just-shower-thoughts
Oc-tober day 3
I think one is self explanatory...
Only thing, he's a self taught magic user, which means he's not very good at complex enchantments.
The Going Merry wishes everyone a happy Christmas~
An artist : Aw man! I saw my arts were reposted on Instagram. I’ve asked them to take my arts down but they ignored me.
Me : Say no more! Click this link, then click ‘fill out this form’. Fill the form and wait for about 1-2 days, the staffs will remove the image you were reporting from the reposter’s account :^)
#CorazonWeek2024
Day 3 | Identity |
Close up ⬇️
And little explanation here, the most famous musical note is called a chrome, which is half a beat, and this sign is the equivalent in terms of time but as a pause⬇️
Oc-tober day 4
Her name's Akane, meaning "red demon" due to her eye color and the fact that she's completely devoid of emotion 👀
As a recently diagnosed autistic who also has had artrosis since I was 13 and suspecting elher danlos syndrome, raised in poverty and currently unable to work enough hours to pay my own rent (therefore forced to stay with my parents) I would need that money even just to afford therapy, the medical appointments and a pair of decent knee braces, maybe even the painkillers or a cane, bc I have been in a spot where the pain was so great I could barely hold my own weight while standing and had to take my dads old crutches. I know wheelchairs and prosthetic limbs are so expensive, and they don't last forever, it's not a one time investment. Like, being disabled is so much more expensive than the average person would even imagine.
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