This Is That Giraffe Bottle I Was Talking About In Case Anyone Else With Complex Needs Wants It. It's

This is that giraffe bottle i was talking about in case anyone else with complex needs wants it. It's pretty cool and I'm definitely keeping it in mind for when I eventually DO need to transition to something that doesn't need to be picked up at all.

giraffebottle.com
The Giraffe Bottle line of hands-free drinking solutions allow users of all abilities to stay hydrated independently.

More Posts from Fishability and Others

4 months ago

Cosplayers, please don’t forget about those of us with disabilities at cons. Don’t push that walker or wheelchair out the way in artist’s alley because the owner of it isn’t touching it. Don’t give people funny looks for standing without their aids while they’re looking at things. Don’t get angry at the wheelchair user who has no choice but to go past your photographer because you’re taking up the entire space. Don’t kick out other cosplayers mobility aids. Keep space around you for disabled people, because we exist in your community and we just want to have fun like you do.


Tags
1 year ago

the worse climate disaster gets, the more you’ll see closet eugenicists start to advocate for letting people die. you need to be prepared to combat the ideology wherever you see it, because it’s only going to get worse and worse Read everything having to do with climate disaster critically. If the central argument underlying what’s being said is that the death of disabled and/or racialized people is inevitable, natural, or desirable– that’s a fascist.

they might be appear to be a garden variety republican or liberal or even a leftist at first, but know that if that argument is being made, their underlying ideology is one of supremacism, and given additional climate stress, they will become more blatant about it.


Tags
1 year ago

in recognition of World Down Syndrome Day on March 21


Tags
11 months ago
So Many People Wouldn’t Have Asthma In The First Place If It Wasn’t For These Corporations…Shifting
So Many People Wouldn’t Have Asthma In The First Place If It Wasn’t For These Corporations…Shifting
So Many People Wouldn’t Have Asthma In The First Place If It Wasn’t For These Corporations…Shifting

So many people wouldn’t have asthma in the first place if it wasn’t for these corporations…Shifting blame from actual culprits to people with asthma (and people who can’t help but use plastic straws at that) is peak capitalism.


Tags
6 months ago

A friend of mine recently broke her foot.

She's a wonderful friend. A deeply kind and considerate person. One of the first things she did after getting out of the hospital was to apologize to me.

"I'm so sorry. I had no idea."

"Hun, you're the one with the broken foot. What are you talking about?"

"I had no idea it was so hard for you all the time... There are stairs everywhere... Even in places where there's supposed to be a lift. And often the lift doesn't work. And there's pavement where my crutches keep getting stuck.... I'm so tired because walking like this isn't the same but there are no benches where I can rest....

You tried to explain and I thought I understood.... But I really had no idea. And this is what it's like for you ALL THE TIME.... I'm so so so sorry"

God how I cried.


Tags
4 months ago
White text on a green background that reads "Have time for an online survey about disability?" and below it is another sentence that says "(it's for school!)"

I'm working on my graduate thesis at Delta State University (fear the Fighting Okra!) and I'm looking adults with disabilities to take part in an online survey. The survey will probably take 15-20 minutes to complete and it's about how social friction is perceived in interactions between disabled and able-bodied people. So if you're 18 or older and self-identify as disabled or partially-disabled, I would love to hear from you on the survey:

"Let Me Get That For You": Analyzing Frictional Situations in a Disability Context (via Google Forms)

This research survey has received approval (IRB number 2025-037) from Delta State's Institutional Review Board. It will be live and accepting responses for the next 4-6 weeks depending on the number of responses received. But there's also something for you!

Trade offer meme image, featuring man with long hair and steepled fingers. The text of the trade offer in the image says "i receive: survey response" and "you receive: chance to win amazon gift card"

The survey itself is anonymous, though you can optionally enter a drawing for an Amazon gift card at the end of the survey. I can't buy a gift card for every response (as much as I would like to be able to do that) but I can give away a token of appreciation to a randomly selected portion of you. Email addresses are collected only for those who wish to participate in the raffle; any collected emails are deleted after each weekly drawing and only used to contact whoever won that week.

If you have any questions about the project, feel free to send me a message on tumblr!


Tags
3 months ago

Blog Update ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡

Salutations all! Just letting everyone know that I've gone through all my posts and updated everything with alt text to make it more accessible. ˚ʚ♡ɞ˚

Also I now have everything up on my AO3 and will be posting on there alongside this blog. So if you prefer to read on there, thats also an option! о( ˶^▾^˶ )о

Please let me know if there is any tweaks, things I can do, or keep in mind to make this blog easier for you to use. I have a family member and close friend with dyslexia, so I've been trying to use emphasis and colors in my posts to assist with that.

In case anyone is interested, here are some references for blog, website, and graphic designing in a disability friendly way~

Image showing a diagram of how to design for disabled users. The top is titled, "designing for users with anxiety". In a column of correct things to do, the items "give users enough time to complete actions", "explain what will happen after the completion of a service", "make important information clear", "give users the support they need to complete a service", and "let users check their answers before they submit them" are listed. In a column of incorrect things to do, the items "rush users or set impractical time limits", "leave users confused about next steps or timeframes", "leave users uncertain about consequences of their actions", "make support or help hard to access", and "leave users questioning what answers they gave" are listed.
Image showing a diagram of how to design for disabled users. The top is titled, "designing for users on the autistic spectrum". In a column of correct things to do, the items "use simple colors", "write in plain language", "use simple sentences and bullets", "make buttons descriptive", and "build simple and consistent layouts" are listed. In a column of incorrect things to do, the items "use bright contrasting colors", "use figures of speech and idioms", "create a wall of text", "make buttons vague and unpredictable", and "build complex and cluttered layouts" are listed.
Image showing a diagram of how to design for disabled users. The top is titled, "designing for users with dyslexia". In a column of correct things to do, the items "use images and diagrams to support text", "align text to the left and keep a consistent layout", "consider producing materials in other formats like audio or video", "keep content short, clear, and simple", and "let users change the contrast between the background and text" are listed. In a column of incorrect things to do, the items "use blocks of heavy text", "underline words, use italics, or write in capitals", "force users to remember things from previous pages", "rely on accurate spelling", and "put too much information in one place" are listed.
Image showing a diagram of how to design for disabled users. The top is titled, "designing for users who are deaf or hard of hearing". In a column of correct things to do, the items "write in plain language", "use subtitles or provide transcripts for video", "use a linear, logical layout", "break up content with sub-headings, images, and video", and "let users ask for their preferred communication support when booking appointments" are listed. In a column of incorrect things to do, the items "use figures of speech or idioms", "put content in audio or video only", "make complex layouts or menus", "make users read long blocks of content", and "make telephone the only means of contact for users" are listed.
Image showing a diagram of how to design for disabled users. The top is titled, "designing for users with physical or motor disabilities". In a column of correct things to do, the items "make large clickable actions", "give form fields space", "design for keyboard or speech only use", "design with mobile and touchscreens in mind", and "provide shortcuts" are listed. In a column of incorrect things to do, the items "demand precision", "bunch interactions together", "make dynamic content that requires a lot of mouse movement", "have short time out windows", and "tire users with lots of typing and scrolling" are listed.
Image showing a diagram of how to design for disabled users. The top is titled, "designing for users with low vision". In a column of correct things to do, the items "use good color contrasts and a readable font size", "publish all information on web pages", "use a combination of color, shapes and text", "follow a linear, logical layout", and "put buttons and notifications in context" are listed. In a column of incorrect things to do, the items "use low color contrasts and small font size", "bury information in downloads", "only use color to convey meaning", "spread content all over a page", and "separate actions from their context" are listed.
Image showing a diagram of how to design for disabled users. The top is titled, "designing for users of screen readers". In a column of correct things to do, the items "describe images and provide transcripts for video", "follow a linear, logical layout", "structure content using HTML5", "build for keyboard-only use", and "write descriptive links and headings" are listed. In a column of incorrect things to do, the items "only show information in an image or video", "spread content all over a page", "rely on text size and placement for structure", "force mouse or screen use", and "write uninformative links and headings" are listed.

Tags
2 weeks ago

This is probably still good OpSec, but mostly I need to reblog this to cite it for a paper.

fishability - Disability Awareness, Access, and Positivity

Tags
4 months ago

why isn't there much info about coathanger pain with POTS?? or at least why is this not more common knowledge? i don't think i've ever seen anyone talking about this. every time i've asked about it (+other POTS symptoms it comes with in my case) in chronic illness spaces people have suggested everything from fibro, MCAS, a CFS leak, a herniated disc, CCI, etc. but nobody ever said "coathanger pain."

but dysautonomia international posted a silly little graphic on their instagram and now i have my answers to why i was having a ton of symptoms that did suggest a herniated disc but there were no signs of disc herniation upon getting an MRI and for some reason it was triggered by working morning shift/having to be upright for a long time in the mornings. i would get excruciating, searing pain that feels pike a knife has been shoved into the base of my neck and the whole of my upper back would have this icy burning sensation. accompanied by me losing the ability to think straight, losing my coordination, and slurring my speech. i left work crying one morning because of how much pain i was in before i eventually came to the conclusion i couldn't do morning shifts.

that's coathanger pain. my spine is okay (i think...for now, anyway.) according to The Stuff they don't know what causes coathanger pain necessarily but they theorize it has to do with reduced blood flow to those areas of the body (which would track since POTS tends to involve blood pooling in the extremities and such.) it's also not exclusive to POTS and is associated with dysautonomia or orthostatic intolerance in general i think.

One example of the power of obtaining the autonomic history is the Coat Hanger Phenomenon. In people who have neurogenic orthostatic hypotension or orthostatic intolerance, they can complain of pain, or like a charley horse kind of sensation, in the back of the neck and shoulder areas in the distribution that’s like a coat hanger. And it goes away when the person is lying down. That’s an important symptom. And the way I explain it is that the muscles that control your head are tonically active, otherwise your head be falling down all the time. Tonically active. That means they’re using up oxygenated blood all the time. Well suppose you’re in a critical situation where there’s a drop in blood flow at the delivery of oxygenated blood to the head. In that situation these muscles are not getting enough oxygenated blood. They’re tonically active, so they’re producing lactic acid and you get a charley horse, just like you’d have a cramp anywhere else. It’s a skeletal muscle thing. So, I think when somebody complains of Coat Hanger Phenomenon, that’s a very important sign or symptom. And that is not invented. That’s a real phenomenon. It points to ischemia to the skeletal muscle holding your head up.

(Dr. Goldstein, The Dysautonomia Project)

worsening cognitive dysfunction, slurred speech, and worsening coordination because blood's not getting to my brain. bordering on emergency-room-level pain in my upper back and neck because not enough blood is getting to those parts of my body. got it.

anyway, i legit have NEVER seen this discussed until recently and i thought i should share.


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • zorekryk
    zorekryk reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • grumpyoldsnake
    grumpyoldsnake reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • lymeprincess
    lymeprincess reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • heywantsomecats
    heywantsomecats liked this · 9 months ago
  • asides-and-analecta
    asides-and-analecta reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • imnotverybright
    imnotverybright reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • imnotverybright
    imnotverybright liked this · 10 months ago
  • skaianbruja
    skaianbruja reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • bookish-embroidery-witch
    bookish-embroidery-witch reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • mynamemeanscloud
    mynamemeanscloud reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • headboxnonfunctional
    headboxnonfunctional reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • 2stupidfeet
    2stupidfeet liked this · 10 months ago
  • catloverkid00
    catloverkid00 liked this · 10 months ago
  • ehlersdanlosyndrome
    ehlersdanlosyndrome reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • smolpocketmonstercoffee
    smolpocketmonstercoffee reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • smolpocketmonstercoffee
    smolpocketmonstercoffee liked this · 10 months ago
  • lymeandcoconut
    lymeandcoconut liked this · 10 months ago
  • thisisnthomework
    thisisnthomework liked this · 10 months ago
  • whenunderwater
    whenunderwater liked this · 10 months ago
  • bigkingbowser
    bigkingbowser liked this · 10 months ago
  • mangothedoodler
    mangothedoodler liked this · 10 months ago
  • princessmuk
    princessmuk liked this · 10 months ago
  • pendramas
    pendramas liked this · 10 months ago
  • aspenspeaks
    aspenspeaks reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • aspenspeaks
    aspenspeaks liked this · 10 months ago
  • larklatroy
    larklatroy liked this · 10 months ago
  • akindplace
    akindplace reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • helpfulpoppy
    helpfulpoppy reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • poetic-poppy
    poetic-poppy liked this · 10 months ago
  • paint-it-happy
    paint-it-happy reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • whyshouldilistentoyou
    whyshouldilistentoyou liked this · 10 months ago
  • pluto1012
    pluto1012 liked this · 10 months ago
  • aptitude-weaver
    aptitude-weaver reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • tm-trx
    tm-trx reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • asteroid461
    asteroid461 liked this · 10 months ago
  • enderlordisadumbusername
    enderlordisadumbusername reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • zorekryk
    zorekryk liked this · 10 months ago
  • bnyrbt
    bnyrbt liked this · 10 months ago
  • reallyverynormal
    reallyverynormal reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • enragedtiefling
    enragedtiefling reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • dissociacrip
    dissociacrip reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • mosspapi
    mosspapi reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • arsnof
    arsnof liked this · 10 months ago
  • homoerotictangerine
    homoerotictangerine reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • bantambookeater
    bantambookeater reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • queerest-beetle
    queerest-beetle liked this · 10 months ago
fishability - Disability Awareness, Access, and Positivity
Disability Awareness, Access, and Positivity

74 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags