kiss kiss fall in love
βthe ending is always the sameβ
war of the foxes - richard siken / waterloo - ABBA / euripidesβ medea - the little theatre / anne carson / the three fates - luca cambiaso / the oresteia - aeschylus / road to hell II - hadestown / when i met you - mira lightner / andersenβs fairy tale anthology
eating can make you be not lightheaded
My mother had a regular, plain childhood. Nothing she ever complained about, anyway. And she complains often. No abuse or neglect or any significant pain.
So where did her cruelty come from?
Iβve been conditioned to expect villainous people- or even just regular mean people- to have pain themselves. Something unhealed and ugly they must let out in any twisted way.
But she didnβt. Thereβs no reason for her to be like this. Or to do the things she did.
And yet she is cruel.
And though there is something unhealed and ugly she gave me, I donβt want to let it out on anyone. I feel an instinct to soothe and mother people in pain. I canβt make sense of it. Itβs backwards.
And yet I love her. I will deal with the consequences of loving her for the rest of my life.
DEI does not mean lower standards.
You are thinking of white privilege.
By the way, you can improve your executive function. You can literally build it like a muscle.
Yes, even if you're neurodivergent. I don't have ADHD, but it is allegedly a thing with ADHD as well. And I am autistic, and after a bunch of nerve damage (severe enough that I was basically housebound for 6 months), I had to completely rebuild my ability to get my brain to Do Things from what felt like nearly scratch.
This is specifically from ADDitude magazine, so written specifically for ADHD (and while focused in large part on kids, also definitely includes adults and adult activities):
Here's a link on this for autism (though as an editor wow did that title need an editor lol):
Resources on this aren't great because they're mainly aimed at neurotypical therapists or parents of neurdivergent children. There's worksheets you can do that help a lot too or thought work you can do to sort of build the neuro-infrastructure for tasks.
But a lot of the stuff is just like. fun. Pulling from both the first article and my own experience:
Play games or video games where you have to make a lot of decisions. Literally go make a ton of picrews or do online dress-up dolls if you like. It helped me.
Art, especially forms of art that require patience, planning ahead, or in contrast improvisation
Listening to longform storytelling without visuals, e.g. just listening regularly to audiobooks or narrative podcasts, etc.
Meditation
Martial arts
Sports in general
Board games like chess or Catan (I actually found a big list of what board games are good for building what executive functioning skills here)
Woodworking
Cooking
If you're bad at time management play games or video games with a bunch of timers
Things can be easier. You might always have a disability around this (I certainly always will), but it can be easier. You do not have to be this stuck forever.
"the world isn't kind" ok??? Much more importantly are you?????
the neurodivergent experience:
20% of the time: wowwieee!!! i love my passions and interests!!!!! they make me so happy i want to jump up and down!!!!! weee!!!!!!! :3333333333
80% of the time: this mind is a prison