Able Bodied People Seem To Be Under The Assumption That If They Do Everything Right That They’re Immune

Able bodied people seem to be under the assumption that if they do everything right that they’re immune to developing a chronic condition

That’s not how it works.

I can’t count the amount of times I’ve tried to explain to people that their health isn’t a sure thing, one day you can wake up sick and just never get better….

More Posts from Bitchthingie and Others

2 months ago

Being neurodivergent and chronically ill is crazy because you already have issues with executive functions and then your body hinders you even more. AND your sensory issues are heightened by the pain you feel.

1 month ago

Like a half hour after taking pain relief meds: oh actually it doesnt hurt anymore i probably didnt even need to take those


Tags
1 month ago

if you’re starting a sentence with “as a white person” “as a cis person” “as someone who’s skinny” etc etc that is your sign to stop ✋ and consider if what you’re about to say is actually that important, or if you’re just expressing your penitence to the exact group of people who would really rather not hear you talk about how guilty you feel. like maybe just think for a couple seconds about why you feel like you have to finish that sentence

1 month ago

choosing to allocate spoons to hanging out and having a good time at the cost of perfectly completing all your work is not a failing it is in fact an act of survival. “too sick to work = too sick to play” is in fact ableist bullshit that you don’t have to buy into. and the fact that leisure time is treated like a privilege is a fucking travesty

4 months ago

I've been disabled for almost 29 years. Here's what I've learned.

Tablets sink and capsules float. Separate out your tablets and capsules when you go to take them. Tip your head down when taking capsules and up when taking tablets. Liquigels don't matter, they kinda stay in the middle of whatever liquid is in your mouth.

If your pill tastes bad, coat it with a bit of butter or margarine. I learned this from my mom, who learned it from a pharmacist.

Being in pain every day isn't normal. Average people experience pain during exceptional moments, like when they stub their toe or jam their finger in a door, not when they sit cross-legged.

Make a medical binder. Make multiple medical binders. I have a small one that comes with me to appointments and two big ones that stay at home, one with old stuff and one with more recent stuff.

Find your icons. Some of mine include Daya Betty (drag queen with diabetes), Stef Sanjati (influencer with Waardenburg syndrome and ADHD), and Hank Green (guy with ulcerative colitis who... does a bunch of stuff). They don't have to be disabled in the same way as you. They don't even have to be real people. Put their pictures up somewhere if you want; I've been meaning to decorate my medical binders with pictures of my icons.

Take a bin, box, bag, basket, whatever and fill it with items to cope with. This can be stuff for mentally coping like colouring books or play clay or stuff for physically coping like pain medicine or physio tape.

Decorate your shit! My cane for at home has a plushie backpack clip hanging from the end of the handle and my cane for going places is covered in stickers. All of my medical binders have fun scrapbooking paper on the outside. Sometimes, I put stickers and washi tape on my inhalers and pill bottles. I used my Cricut to decorate my coping bin with quotes from my icons, like "I've seen enough of Ba Sing Se" and "I need you to be angrier with that bell".

If a flare-up is making you unable to eat or keep food down, consider going to the ER. A pharmacist once told me that since my eye flares can make me so nauseous that I cannot eat, then I need to go to the hospital when that happens.

Cola works wonders for nausea. I have mini cans of Diet Pepsi in my coping bin.

Shortbread is one of the only things I can eat when nauseous. Giant Tiger sells individually-wrapped servings of shortbread around Christmas or the British import store sells them year-round. I also keep these in my coping bin.

Unless it violates a pain contract or something, don't be afraid to go behind your doctor's back to get something they are refusing you. I got my cardiologist referral by getting in with a different NP at my primary care clinic than who I usually saw. I switched from Seroquel to Abilify by visiting a walk-in.

If you have a condition affecting your abdomen in some way (GI issues, reproductive problems, y'know) then invest in track pants that are too big. I bought some for my laparoscopy over a year ago and they've been handy for pelvic pain days, too. I've also heard loose pants are good for after colonoscopies.

Do whatever works, even if it's weird. I've sat on the floor of the Eaton Centre to take my pills. I've shoved heating pads down my front waistband to reach my uterus.

High-top Converse are good for weak ankles. I almost exclusively wear them.

You can reuse your pill bottles for stuff. I use my jumbo ones to store makeup sponges and my long skinny ones to hold a travel-size amount of Q-Tips.

Just because your diagnostics come back with nothing, it doesn't mean nothing is wrong. Maybe you were checking the wrong thing, or the diagnostic tool wasn't sensitive enough. I have bradycardia episodes even though multiple cardiac tests caught nothing. I probably have endometriosis even though my gynecologist didn't see anything.

You can bring your comfort item to appointments, and it's generally a green flag when someone talks to you about it. I brought a Squishmallow turkey (named Ulana) to my laparoscopy and they had her wearing my mask when I woke up. I brought a Build-A-Bear cat (named Blinx) to another procedure and a nurse told me that everyone in the hall on the way to the procedure room saw him and were talking about how cute he was. Both of those ended up being positive experiences and every person who talked to me about my plushies was nice to me. If you don't feel comfortable having it visible to your provider during the appointment, you can hide it in your bag and just know it's there, or if you're in a video appointment, you can hold it below frame in your lap.

Get a small bucket, fill it with stuff, and stick it in your bed (if you have room for it). I filled a bucket with Ensure, juice boxes, oatmeal bars, lotion, my rescue inhaler, etc. in October 2023 in anticipation of my laparoscopy and I still have it in my bed as of January 2025.

If your disability impacts your impulse control (e.g. ADHD, bipolar disorder), you should consider setting limits around your spending -- no more than X dollars at a time, nothing online unless it's absolutely necessary, and so on. Or, run these purchases by someone you trust before committing to them; I use my BFF groupchat to help talk sense into myself when I buy stuff.

Feel free to add on what you've learned about disability!

2 months ago

[Lab Results Came Back Fine] [Me, To My Body] ACT LIKE IT THEN!

4 months ago

I would like to see more people talk about how jobs treat disabled employees.

I used to prep, wash dishes, and cook at mellow mushroom. I had chronic pain that wasn't NEARLY as bad as it is today, but it was still very debilitating. I told my employer "i cannot stand more than 4 to 6 hours. I CANNOT do shifts longer than this due to my illness." And even though i made my boundaries VERY clear, everyday i worked it was 8 hours at the least and 10 or 12 at the most. I would go up to my manager and say "look i really need to leave, my shift is over, my chronic pain is killing me." And he'd say "we really need to here, you HAVE to push through." And so i did, and after one, ONE month of that job my crps got incredibly worse to the point where i could no longer walk my dog around the block which was .5 miles. I quit, and that was FOUR years ago, and ever since that day I HAVE BEEN BEDRIDDEN AND HAVE TO USE A WHEELCHAIR. It is my biggest regret in life.

My best friend who has seen my whole journey has recently developed undiagnosed chronic pain, and she is in the EXACT same scenario i was 4 years ago. Busting her ass at a pizza place with extreme pain that hurts her so much she tells me "im in so much pain i don't even feel like a person." She doesn't feel LUCID. And her manager and coworkers are saying the same thing "if you don't help us you will let us down, we'll be in the shit."

That job thats hurting you isn't fucking worth it. I promise you no money is worth losing all your physical abilities and never getting them back. Your coworkers and boss do not give a shit about you, so don't you dare suffer for them. They will never understand your struggle and they will never try. They truly think being understaffed is worse than whatever pain you experience. They would rather you permanently damage yourself than inconvenience them. FUCK THEM. DON'T FUCKING DO IT!

1 month ago

I hate the sound of babies crying, but I can't hate a baby. They've been here for like five minutes and approach this situation with an unhesitant attitude of "my needs are unmet and I am going to make it everybody's problem", and I respect that.

  • biblically-accurate-crow
    biblically-accurate-crow liked this · 1 month ago
  • d3m0n-b0yss
    d3m0n-b0yss liked this · 1 month ago
  • little-watcher
    little-watcher liked this · 1 month ago
  • silverliningspidey
    silverliningspidey liked this · 1 month ago
  • londor
    londor reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • dreamforrest
    dreamforrest reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • awesomeallergies
    awesomeallergies liked this · 1 month ago
  • babypop-lolliepop
    babypop-lolliepop reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • babypop-lolliepop
    babypop-lolliepop liked this · 1 month ago
  • v0id-clawz
    v0id-clawz reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • v0id-clawz
    v0id-clawz liked this · 1 month ago
  • verdancy-hime
    verdancy-hime liked this · 1 month ago
  • the-purpursparv
    the-purpursparv liked this · 1 month ago
  • meowmaidz
    meowmaidz liked this · 1 month ago
  • pinceldemar
    pinceldemar liked this · 1 month ago
  • trianglethem
    trianglethem liked this · 1 month ago
  • raytoroboros
    raytoroboros liked this · 1 month ago
  • neddalian
    neddalian liked this · 1 month ago
  • m0th-b0nes
    m0th-b0nes liked this · 1 month ago
  • zephyronthewind
    zephyronthewind reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • redorpink
    redorpink liked this · 1 month ago
  • marsy-mayhem1
    marsy-mayhem1 liked this · 1 month ago
  • leafyreef
    leafyreef liked this · 1 month ago
  • ozwald-gatorsnoot
    ozwald-gatorsnoot liked this · 1 month ago
  • saacofballs
    saacofballs reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • saacofballs
    saacofballs liked this · 1 month ago
  • kittyhellsystem
    kittyhellsystem reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • kittyhellsystem
    kittyhellsystem liked this · 1 month ago
  • iamshifting
    iamshifting liked this · 1 month ago
  • holderoflostmemories
    holderoflostmemories liked this · 1 month ago
  • huntersroses
    huntersroses liked this · 1 month ago
  • soj-1347
    soj-1347 liked this · 1 month ago
  • dragonman5643
    dragonman5643 liked this · 1 month ago
  • striking-mouse
    striking-mouse reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • striking-mouse
    striking-mouse liked this · 1 month ago
  • kiwibirbkat
    kiwibirbkat reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • kiwibirbkat
    kiwibirbkat liked this · 1 month ago
  • aroacebaggins
    aroacebaggins liked this · 1 month ago
  • ollievion
    ollievion liked this · 1 month ago
  • strangespoons
    strangespoons reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • holdthefuckupwhat
    holdthefuckupwhat liked this · 1 month ago
  • your-pal-nebula
    your-pal-nebula reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • your-pal-nebula
    your-pal-nebula liked this · 1 month ago
  • theblueboxscholar
    theblueboxscholar reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • nyrhtak04
    nyrhtak04 liked this · 1 month ago
  • fukurouonthesea
    fukurouonthesea reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • fukurouonthesea
    fukurouonthesea liked this · 1 month ago
  • witchbutkindaman
    witchbutkindaman liked this · 1 month ago
  • tuna2dope
    tuna2dope liked this · 1 month ago
  • phoenix-jasper
    phoenix-jasper liked this · 1 month ago
bitchthingie - barely functional™️
barely functional™️

blogging from the depths of autistic burnout • he/him • adult

300 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags