I'm on my alpha boop mindset rn
youre not the one im looking for but im cold (a fire is a fire)
Happy Pride Month! 🌈
boop
REAL REAL REAL
“Is it okay if I draw fanart of your fanfic?👉🏼👈🏼”
My brother in Christ we shall have a spring wedding
Happy disability pride month to
wheelchair users
crutch users
cane users
walker users
people who use other mobility aids not mentioned
people who don’t use mobility aid
people with diagnosis/es
people without diagnosis/es
people looking for a diagnosis/es
people not looking for a diagnosis/es
people that can’t afford a diagnosis/es
people with supportive families
people without supportive families
people who’s family situation is questionable/confusing
people who need their families support
people who don’t need their families support
people who identify with cripplepunk
people who don’t identify with cripplepunk
people who aren’t sure if they can identify with cripplepunk
people who’s disabilities are mis-portrayed in the media
people who’s disabilities are never portrayed in media
people who’s disabilities are portrayed in the media but in stereotypes
people who’s disabilities are common
people who’s disabilities are uncommon
people who’s disabilities are rare
people who’s disabilities are invisible
people who’s disabilities are visible
people who’s disabilities are debilitating
people who’s disabilities aren’t debilitating
people who’s disabilities affect them daily
people who’s disabilities don’t affect them daily
people who need mobility aids but either can’t afford them, don’t want them, or can’t get them due to unsupportive environment/families
people who have cool looking mobility aids
people who’s mobility aids look ‘medical’ or ‘boring’
people who decorate their mobility aids
people who don’t decorate their mobility aids
people who name their mobility aids
people who don’t name their mobility aids
ambulatory wheelchair users that can walk far
ambulatory wheelchair users that can’t walk very far
ambulatory wheelchair users that use other mobility aids
ambulatory wheelchair users that don’t use other mobility aids
permanent wheelchair users
wheelchair users with paralysis
wheelchair users with muscular atrophy
cane users that also use crutches
cane users that only use canes
people with multiple mobility aids
people who colour coordinate with their mobility aids
people who love their mobility aids
people who are neutral about their mobility aids
people who don’t like their mobility aids
deaf/HoH people
visually impaired people
people who use braces
people with genetic conditions
people with chronic pain
people with acquired disablilities
people who became disabled later in life
people who became disabled young
people who have always been disabled
people that deal with ableism
people that can work
people that can’t work
people on welfare
people on NDIS
people that ‘fall through the cracks’
people that can hide their disability
people that can’t hide their disability
people who also struggle with mental health
people who don’t struggle with mental health
people that take lots of medications
people that don’t take any medications
people that can’t afford medication
people that can’t take medication
homeless disabled people
people below the poverty line
people above the poverty line
people with other disabled friends
people with no disabled friends
people that served in the army
people that are independant
people that need carers
people that like their carers
people that don’t like their carers
It was funny make this lol
Gang wish me luck I have an audition at a broadway theater tomorrow.
Horror movies will dead ass be like my house sucks and my family is falling apart
On Intersex Awareness Day, we ask the world to support intersex people in our right to live authentically and unapologetically. But one day hasn’t been enough—so welcome to #IntersexAwarenessWeek!
Intersex Awareness Day, October 26th, marks a historic day in the start of the intersex movement. A group of intersex people and their allies protested at an American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) meeting nearly thirty years ago, to oppose the medical abuse and discrimination they’d endured.
Today, we are still fighting for that bodily autonomy. We're fighting for our freedom to exist as we are, beyond the stereotypical sex binary. We're fighting against the belief that doctors' opinions of how our bodies look matter more than ours do.
But we are also visible. The intersex-inclusive flag is flown across the country. Intersex people's bodies are starting to be taught in health classes and across medical schools. Intersex people are featured in films, memoirs, runways and on the morning news. We are here, and we're not hiding again.
Learn more & educate others! Look through our images and share them far and wide! Linked below is our Intersex FAQ for all the basic questions, and we'll be sharing new resources and tips to be an ally all week long! (We will only be blazing this post, however!)
We also suggest checking out other United States intersex organizations such as Intersex Awareness, Intersex Justice Project, Club Intersex, TIGERRS, The Houston Intersex Society, and InterConnect!
For those not in the USA, here is a list of international intersex organizations!
maybe it was never meant to be