Studyblr by CJ, for ND/spoonies. UChicago class of 2020. I track the tag #acaddemia-look .
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Not a doctor or a med student, but I have to say I find it weirdly ironic how doctors, who are supposed to be the people making sure everyone is healthy, are forced to have a super unhealthy lifestyle. I wonder how many times doctors have asked me, "do you eat three meals a day?" while they themselves do not. I wonder how many made sure I was getting enough sleep, eating healthy, going to the bathroom on a regular schedule, when they couldn't. I wonder how many people have been told their illnesses were due to poor lifestyle habits; specifically poor lifestyle habits their doctors had to keep as well. Not sure where I'm going with this, and I get that people don't get sick on schedule, but something about this feels really, really messed up.
It be like that sometimes.
“I asked one of the doctors at work if she’d had lunch, and she just sort of… laughed at me.” - My roommate (a radiographer). We were having a chat about how different lunchtime is for different colleagues in hospital. I do feel that it comes across a little horrific to non-medics when you casually mention that you can go through 13h shifts and just not find time to eat, or drink, or pee. It’s just so normalised in our circles that sometimes it’s weird to realise other people think that’s… really bad? Because it is really bad, but it’s so normalised in medical circles that it just becomes something you hate but accept happens sometimes. I remember recently reading someone’s comment complaining that someone hadn’t eaten for like 7h, and my first thought was ‘that’s not so bad’. And that’s wrong, because not eating for 7h is unpleasant, and when I go all day on a 9-5 without eating, it’s sucky. But it’s nowhere near as sucky as those 13h shifts where you don’t get to eat or drink or pee. And just like 13h shifts make the 9-5 day feel so short (seriously, it’s the only good thing about long day shifts; normal workdays just feel so easy in comparison!), experiencing something worse alters your perspective about things that are actually still not right. I’s not just the shifts when you never eat anything, it’s the way you learn to ignore your own body that’s the real problem. It’s not healthy by any means; because we have to eat when we can (no scheduled break, people get sick when they get sick) you learn to eat when you have time), not when you are hungry. When you combine it with night shifts and generally flipping your circadian rythm around like a ragdoll, it can make it difficult to maintain that connection with your body; and knowing when you are hungry and when you are full. And that’s really important for the metabolism and for avoiding over- or under-eating. When you get used to ignoring when you are hungry, and telling your body “we eat when we eat”, basically divorcing yourself from its needs… it has repercussions when youre not working. I can’t speak for everyone, but I definitely sometimes have to remind myself to eat when I’m not at work, because I can easily skip a meal or two before I realise. Which never used to be the case, before medicine. Which actually all leads on from a conversation I had at work last night with the night nurses and the difficulties they have making sure that they actually get to take their break. It’s really tough when you can’t predict when people are going to get sick, and we all jsut have to do the best we can and support each other. And hopefully work towards ensuring that everyone gets a break at a reasonable time whenever possible. I want to be that kind of senior; the kind who ensures their juniors get a break, but also the kind who leads by example.
#random thoughts#and look i know the healthcare system in the usa is fucked up in OH SO MANY DIFFERENT WAYS#and i feel like this is one of them
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This masterpost is requested by @piiess
As we continue to commemorate World Mental Health Day, let us continue to remember that “It’s okay not to be okay.”
Dealing with mental health while studying
Saving your grades from a mental health crisis by @smartstudy
Chronic illness + studying by @studysenior
Coping with mental health by @overstudies
A few bad feelings and how to beat them
Tips for surviving college (with a mental illness) by @annafreuds
Healthy body, healthy mind staying fit while exercising the brain by @scolae
Stop glorifying unhealthy study habits by @thestudyingnightowl
Studying with mental illness by @linamstudies
Studying with mental illness by @harlostudies
Studying with a mental illness by @student-succulent
Romanticizing mental illness is dangerous and misleading by @daddyslittlwprincess118
Helping your mentally ill friends through exam periods: masterpost by @celeztialstudies
Managing mental illness as a student by @medkip
Mental health and university how to deal with a bad week a masterpost by @milsostudy
How to (realistically) study when your mental illness doesn’t want you to by @midiluc
Autism
How to cope with loud fireworks if you’re autistic
Burnout
How to deal with study burnout by @eintsein
How to avoid education burnout by @neuroticmedblr
Tips for avoiding burnout and staying motivated by @coffeesforstudiers
Burnout 101 by @polcry
Overcoming burnout while continuing to study by @rewritign
Avoiding burnout by @acdemic
Eating disorder
Recovery record by @agent-hardass
Dyslexia
Dyslexia masterpost by @izzystudies
ADHD
Studying with adhd by @glowsoleil
Apps for disorganised +/or ADHD students by @studiix
ADHD resources by @psychlu
Depression
Study tips whilst dealing with depression by @sdklfhdsdkfjhg
Studying with depression by @rannedomblr
Studying with depression by @notquitenightingale
Struggling with depression while in school by @inactivegardenum
Depression/executive dysfunction cleaning tips by @dormouse11
Depression tips by @lesbiananabray
Advice for severe depression and anxiety and executive dysfunction by @urie
Advice for dealing with long term depression and anxiety by @13chancess
Things I never knew about depression until I finally had a doctor explain the disease to me by @academicfeminist
Tips for someone who also battles with depression by @bloggerforstudentprogress-blog
Bullet journaling with depression by @littleninjastudies
Anxiety
Coping with anxiety by @hufflepuffwannabe
Coping with anxiety by @sheisrecovering
Coping statements for anxiety by @onlnecounsellingcollege
Anxiety attacks aren’t always hyperventilating and rocking back and forth by @ugly-bread
Anxiety distraction games by @peachou
Anxiety masterpost by @dotgrids
Why doing something relaxing does not help with your anxiety by @merrybitchmas91
Living and studying with anxiety by @hayley-studies
Dealing with test anxiety by @studybuzz
Study sounds by @studyquill
Mood disorder
What is a “mood disorder” anyway? by @battle-with-bipolar
Meditation
Meditation and focus
Selfcare
A very brief guide to self-care by @ejlandsman
Some self-care/mental health tips for the upcoming school year by @badvogues
Ways to practice selfcare by @librarystudies
Resources
Apps for your mental health by @highlightcrs
Mental illness apps by @recoverywarriorx
Some reminders
Mental health is just as important as physical health by @cwote
Don’t let your mind bully your body
There’s a difference between: pushing yourself and pushing yourself pass your limit by @chibird
Your life can look so different, so much better, in just a few months. keep going by @studyblr
Reminder: you can’t change the past and worrying makes you suffer twice. we all forget that once in a while.
Remember that time you thought you wouldn’t survive? Well you did and you can do it again
You aren’t a problem that needs to be solved
You are not unloveable
Mental health first, everything will follow
I may not be there yet but i’m closer than i was yesterday
Everything you feel is real
Allow yourself to recover
You matter
It’s a disorder, not a decision
Its okay if the only thing you did today was survive
Focus on the good
Stop beating yourself up. You didn’t do anything wrong
Hey, it’s not your fault
You don’t have to justify your emotions to anyone
Never apologise for how you feel
Other masterposts by me
Selfcare
Apps for students
Literature
Ace your essays
Chinese
Icon credits to @nerdastically
#tips from the source#mental illness#learning disability#add#adhd#dyslexia#depression#anxiety#mood disorder#burnout#resources
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Our major requires an intro course, a phonetics/phonology course, a syntax course, and a semantics/pragmatics course. We also need to take 3 credits of a non indo-european language (or demonstrate equivalent proficiency in a non-ie language and take 3 other linguistics electives). On top of that, we have to take 6 linguistics electives, which vary depending on whatever the professors feel like teaching that quarter. Our school has a decently sized grad linguistics program so we can take grad classes as electives.
What courses are required for your linguistics major?
I’m curious. The way my school does it, I only have to take Phonetics, Phonology, Historical, and a Syntax class. No pragmatics, no Morphology (even though thats KINDA included with phonology) and no semantics.
Instead, you take like 4 classes as electives within linguistics, and those are whatever subjects the faculty like to teach.
My electives were Bilingual Minds (a Psycholinguistics class), Bilingual First Language Acquisition (a language acquisition class, cross disciplinary in Linguistics terms), and a class called Why Chinese has No Alphabet (historical class about Chinese Orthography). I still need to take one more and I’m debating between Neurolinguistics and Computational. I would also love a sociolinguistics class tbh. (I know one of the professors I am working with is working on a course called Latinx Linguistic Repertoires and I am so excited for it).
What did/do you have to take at your universities?
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I’m not that active at the moment, but I fit like four of these! Even if I don’t post super regularly, I still log on pretty often.
Looking for more studyblrs to follow
Alrighty, I am in need of more studyblrs to follow. If any of the following apply to you, reblog so I can follow you. I feel like going on a following spree.
You’re a new studyblr
You’re a small studyblr
You’re a STEM studyblr
You post original content that’s NOT “aesthetic”
You’re considered a nontraditional student
You’re a DREAMer
You’re willing to put up with my math shenanigans
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Tips for students who have difficulty with handwriting
This includes students who can’t write it all, students who can write but have difficulty writing neatly enough for others to read, students for whom handwriting is painful or fatiguing, and probably some other people as well. Remember that disability is almost never a binary thing; it’s totally valid to need help with tasks that involve handwriting even if you technically can write some.
These tips are aimed mainly at undergraduate students in the US, though high school students and graduate students may also find some of them useful, as may some people in other parts of the world.
These tips come primarily from my own experiences completing an undergraduate degree in math with a very limited ability to write. Remember that everyone’s body and experiences are different. You should consider these tips just as some suggestions or a starting place towards finding what works for you.
Get registered with the disability services office on your campus. If you are struggling to write, then you have a disability. It doesn’t really matter what the underlying reason is, as long as you can get a doctor to write a letter for you stating your challenges and limitations.
Depending on your school, disability services may be great or they may be useless. If they’re great, take advantage. If not, being registered with the office still give you official standing to go talk to your instructors about what you need.
Talk to your professors/TAs/other instructors at the beginning of each semester. I’ve written a general guide on how to do this, an email template for a meeting request, and some thoughts on communicating chronic pain in particular. (Note: you don’t have to share the particulars of your disability if you don’t want to! I have generally been pretty open about mine, so that’s what I can give better advice about. But you should, of course, make your own decisions!)
Stay in communication with your instructors throughout the semester. It’s always good practice to remind your instructors about your accommodations before any test/exam/field trip/other event where you need accommodations. And of course, ask for help in the course if you need it. Go to office hours. If your professor knows that you are an actual person, they are far more likely to be willing to work with you.
Set boundaries. Especially if you have some ability to write, you may be tempted to try to do more writing than your body can handle. This might be because other people are pressuring you to be “normal,” because you are pressuring yourself to be “normal”, because it is a hassle to deal with getting appropriate accommodations in your classes, because you are embarrassed to ask for help, etc. For this reason, it is really important to know your own boundaries before you enter the classroom. For example:
“I will sign documents, but that’s all the writing I’m going to do.”
“I will handwrite things like homework, when I can set my own pace and use the right tools for me, but I will try to handwrite anything in a classroom with time constraints.”
“I will stop writing when the pain level in my hands reaches a 5 on a 10 point pain scale.”
“I will complete multiple-choice tests and quizzes/exams requiring one or two word answers, but I won’t write anything longer than that.”
Get your accommodations in order. Exactly what accommodations will work for each person is of course a very individual thing, but here are some that you might consider/discuss with your disability services counselor:
a notetaker in your classes (usually just a peer who give you a copy of their notes after class),
using assistive technology (some examples below) for in class assignments/quizzes/exams,
working with a scribe for tests and exams,
working with a scribe for handwritten homework,
flexibility on assignment deadlines (when handwriting would be required in any part of the process of completing the assignment),
extra time for quizzes and exams (either because your handwriting is slow or because you are using assistive technology that is slower than handwriting),
unlimited untimed breaks during tests and exams (if you struggle with pain or fatigue, this gives you an opportunity to rest, stretch out your muscles, etc.).
Consider assistive technology. These are tools that you can use in class, on your homework, and/or on tests and exams. The possibilities vary from low-tech and simple to more high-tech and expensive. If you have access, an occupational therapist or assistive technology specialist can help you find good options for you.
Here are some things to consider to make any writing you choose to do easier:
grips for your pencils/pens (there are lots and lots of these, and you can even use hair curlers),
a slant board to better position your paper, using a different writing instrument (soft leaded artists’ pencils, felt tip pens, markers, gel ballpoint pens have been helpful for me),
using an electric eraser if you write in pencil and need to erase often,
using some tool to keep your paper from sliding (e.g. a clipboard, slant board with a clip, Dycem on your desk underneath notebook/clipboard, using weights on your paper),
writing on a chalkboard or whiteboard instead of paper, physical supports for your forearm, a tool that helps hold the pencil/pen for you (e.g. this or this or this).
And some assistive technology to consider as a replacement for handwriting (used all the time or just sometimes depending on your needs): typing your work instead of writing by hand (perhaps with an ergonomic or otherwise alternative keyboard), speech to text software (Windows now includes this in the OS, so all you have to do is buy a headset), an eye gaze keyboard (this technology has come down and cost a lot in the past couple years, check out OptiKey if you are interested).
If you get into a tough position where you aren’t sure how to complete an assignment with your disability-related limitations, ask for help! Generally speaking, it’s best to start with your professor or TA, though of course the disability services office may also be able to help. (The details will depend a lot on the people involved, so use your own best judgment.) Be clear when you’re talking to these people that you’re looking for help solving a problem, not asking to be excused from a course requirement.
Sometimes the standard accommodations that your school is willing/able to provide won’t work for you. This could be because the accommodations are simply inadequate, because a particular course or field of study has challenges that the disability services office does not understand/did not anticipate, because you have many limitations due to multiple illnesses or disabilities, or for many other reasons. In this case, you have to get creative and enlist help from your allies. I can’t give you a formula for this, but I will share some of the more unusual accommodations that I have received at various times. Perhaps they will give you some ideas.
For a few of my math courses, I obtained permission from the instructor to turn in a joint homework assignment with a peer. I think this request was approved largely because I had been a student in the math department for a few years, the professors knew both me and the other student, and we were both very strong students who had a genuine desire to learn the material.
For many math courses, I completed my homework assignments by working the problems on my own (or with peers when allowed) and taking very succinct to notes for myself. I then had a scheduled time each week to meet with the professor and explain my solutions.
I’ve taken lots and lots of oral exams, especially in math.
I have submitted tape-recorded “essays” on exams in humanities courses.
For short quizzes, I have met with the instructor or TA 10 minutes before the start of class to take the quiz orally.
#your studyblr tips#tips from the source#chronic pain#chronic fatigue#disability#hand pain#disability services
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to ADHD students:
• I’m proud of you. The education system works against us at every turn but you’re still hanging in there, and that’s amazing.
• Long term goals are lovely but they won’t motivate you. ADHD brains know two times: now and not now. Long term goals fall under “not now”, so if you try to use them to motivate yourself your brain won’t buy it. Some things that help me get motivated: using coloured pens, bringing a tasty drink like juice or pop to my desk, playing music I can sing along to.
• Get. Diagnosed. With an official diagnosis, you can access accommodations through your school. You don’t have to struggle through school being held to neurotypical standards. You can get things like extra time on tests, extensions on assignments, access to digital copies of textbooks so you can use text-to-speech software, the ability to write tests and exams in a smaller room with fewer distractions, noise cancelling headphones during tests. I live in Ontario so I can’t guarantee all of these things in other places, but you’ll never know what accommodations are available to you until you apply for them.
• Work for the amount of time that you can. You can only handle five minutes? Do work for those five minutes. You can stretch it out to fifteen minutes today? Awesome! It’s excruciating for us to get work done without it being a crisis, I know. But doing work in small increments every day goes a long way. Doing nothing because you can’t work as long as a neurotypical is just going to leave you with more work to do the night before.
• Keep fidgets and/or stim toys at your desk. If you get overwhelmed or can’t focus, grab a fidget and allow yourself to just sit and fidget for a little bit. Tactile stim toys are my favourite since they’re very grounding for me.
• Try not to beat yourself up for what you didn’t get done earlier. This is a hard one but it’s so so hard to get anything done while you’re upset with yourself, especially for us ADHDers who get easily caught up in emotions. You have a disability. It’s not your fault that you couldn’t get it done earlier. You’re working on it now and that’s what’s important.
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The Lithium Ion Theory
You might have heard of the Spoon Theory, an analogy to explain energy when living with a chronic illness. However, recently I decided to go on a soul-search of how I would describe living with the energy levels and other issues that come with a chronic illness. After some thought, I came up with something I would call the “Lithium Ion Theory”, just because I like to be complicated ;) We can’t get any cutsie name out of it, like “spoonie” for its followers, but that’s fine, because living with chronic illness isn’t cute, and it often is complicated.
So, what is this “Lithium Ion Theory”? To put it simply, it’s just the use of battery levels to measure energy levels with a chronic illness. But this battery isn’t just any battery – it’s an lithium ion (Li-ion) battery. The standard battery, an alkaline battery, can be used once, and then discarded, and they tend to be cheaper. However, Li-ion batteries, the typical rechargeable type, vary from alkalines and relate very closely to chronic illnesses. I have six main comparisons of Li-ion batteries to chronic illnesses that I could think of right off the bat.
First, most lithium ion batteries are known to be rechargeable, but loose charge pretty quickly with use, and don’t necessarily charge to 100%.
Sleep = recharge. Ideally, after sleeping, my battery level would be at 100%, but that isn’t always the case, especially on bad chronic illness days. If I haven’t slept well or didn’t get enough sleep (or overdid it the day before), it’s almost as if my battery barely charged overnight. When you’re chronically ill, you’re lucky if you make it up to 90% or so overnight, but you’re usually even lower upon waking.
Second, each use of a device depletes battery levels.
As with any battery, each action that I complete throughout the day can drain my battery little by little. Something like making and eating breakfast may take 2-3%, however, something like showering or driving may take closer to 10%. An exhausting school day, a day at work, or a day where my anxiety has kept me in a panic can completely drain my battery. Every action depletes the battery, and the amounts for each vary day by day and by how much effort I put into everything. Something as simple as the weather can determine how efficient I am throughout the day.
Third, it’s harder to use Li-ion batteries when they’re charging or at critically low levels.
Now we all know what happens when iPhone batteries hit 20% – they alert you and you can choose to go into “low battery mode”. Activities performed while under 20% when low battery mode isn’t enabled drains the battery extra quick, and activities performed when it is enabled end up taking a longer and aren’t happening at full capacity. When those with chronic illnesses are low on energy, even the smallest task can drain energy faster, and might even be impossible to do (you cannot install an app when you’re under 50%!). And it’s very discouraged to use Li-ion batteries (like the ones in your phone), when you’re charging because it can damage the battery. If someone with a chronic illness is relaxing and trying to “recharge”, doing tasks – no matter how small – can be damaging to their energy improvement or physical/mental wellbeing.
Fourth, Li-ion batteries need a protection circuit to be considered safe for use.
I like to relate this factor to chronic illness because, oftentimes, those with chronic illnesses need “safety features” in their lives. These safety features are things such as medications, specialty appointments (like physical therapy), medical devices (like canes, wheelchairs, braces, etc), and/or medical adaptations (car adaptations, bathroom adaptations) to stay safe or as healthy as possible.
Fifth, Li-ion batteries tend to be more expensive compared to other batteries.
Anyone living with a chronic illness knows it’s much more expensive compared to the healthy life, as do Li-ion batteries in comparison to other batteries. Outside of things fully covered by insurance or government aid, the costs of living with a chronic illness is not for the faint of heart, and you don’t get to choose whether you pay for this stuff like you would in electing to buy a rechargeable battery over a cheaper one. With better private insurance, extra doctors’ appointments, medications, equipment, etc, you have bills that the healthy person never dreams about.
Sixth, Li-ion batteries exert more energy (from a scientific standpoint) when powering things.
And last, but definitely not least, doing activities while chronically ill can take much more out of us than it would your typical healthy person, even when we’re at higher battery levels. Again, I mention something as small as brushing your teeth – in a healthy person, it might not even take .5% away from their energy levels where it could take something like 3% away from someone with a chronic illness. A long walk/run with some mild inclines might take 10-20% of energy in a healthy person (depending on how active the person is in general), whereas it could take 50% (if not more) in someone with a chronic illness that is able to stay semi-active.
But don’t healthy people experience this energy depletion? In a way, I guess, but not to the full extent. Healthy people tend to start their day at 100%, unless they’ve forgotten to plug in (i.e. didn’t get enough sleep or are acutely sick), and usually don’t require the same amount of physical or mental exertion on most activities that they would with a chronic illness. They would use this analogy in the same way that healthy people could technically use spoons from the Spoon Theory to describe their energy levels. EVERYONE knows how healthy people experience energy loss, but they don’t go through life having to weigh whether or not the activities that they want to will take too much out of them until they reach lower energy level amounts, so do they really need an analogy to explain it?
I dislike the Spoon Theory for many reasons, which was why I went on the search for a more appropriate-to-my-life analogy. To each their own, but I’d rather be able to explain my energy levels as a sick person in a way that most people can relate to than to use an analogy with silverware. I’m sure even the most established “spoonie” might agree that Li-ion batteries parallel much more to the lives of the chronically ill, but, when it comes down to it, energy levels of a chronic illness sufferer are the same no matter how you phrase it!
(battery information from http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/secondary_batteries)
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job interviewer never confirmed a time?
I’m applying for summer jobs, and recently heard back from a company that they’d be interested in a phone interview with me. They gave me a list of all the dates and times they are available and told me to send them which of those days and times worked for me.
I did that. And then, I never heard back from them. It’s been three days, and the interview dates/times start today in about an hour. What do I do? Do I email them back? Is this their way of saying that they don’t actually want to interview with me anymore? If I do email back, what do I say?
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It is winter, which therefore means it is chronic sinusitis season. (Summer is chronic migraine season.) I haven’t been able to breathe through my nose in about 3 days. Everything is totally fine. (Also if anyone on here has chronic sinus issues of any kind, please come and say hi and we can chat!)
Academic wise, I switched my analysis class for my history requirement (I ended up going with Islamic history). I need a break from math for a quarter, I have a hard extracurricular schedule, and next quarter I can take analysis as 1 of only 3 classes, the other 2 of which will be really easy.
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An Update
So I'm not dead. This quarter went okay. Grades were fine, social life was a lot better than last year, and I started branching out a bit with my extracurriculars/figuring out my major. Health shit hit the fan, though, both mentally and physically. I'd started a new dose of one of my psych meds this summer and it turned out to be the wrong dose. My ADHD was way worse, and to top it off I started having issues with abdominal pain. The abdominal pain ended up being something really minor, but it took ages, and tons of tests to figure that out. And I still haven't entirely figured out the meds situation.
Anyway, that's all to say that running a blog about disabled students has become a lot harder because... well... I'm too busy actually being a disabled student. While college has been absolutely amazing for me, in so many ways, my free time is generally not spent here--it's spent laying on my bed, staring at the ceiling and applying various ice/heat packs as required by my imperfect biology.
I want to spend time here. I think studyblr can be a great resource, and I want to be a resource for disabled students! I really care about that, I love school and am passionate about accessibility. But, realistically, that's hard. I have a very finite amount of spoons, and so many things I want to do with them.
I've been doing more disability work IRL, getting involved in my school's disabled student organization--helping to organize info sessions about accommodations and stim toy parties finals week, and fun things like that. So that's been kind of filling the need for me to interact with the disabled community--I didn't have a disabled community at all when I started this blog!
Anyway, that's all to say that this blog is not dead, but I don't know what'll happen to it. We'll see as the school year rolls on.
TL; DR: I really want to be active on this blog but it's hard to find the spoons to do so. Also, since I've found disabled community IRL, I feel less of a need to find it on the internet.
#spoonie student#studyblr#Disabled Student#disabled studyblr network#spoonie#personal#personal stuff#uchicago: year two
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be poetic. if you find the way the light falls through your window and onto your bedroom wall pretty, write about it. call it soft and golden as sunlit honey. if it makes you glad to be alive then it’s not silly. you look for the beauty of things, be proud of that. say the heavy rain is kissing you. write about the glow of the moon, the dancing of flowers. make your world magical. collect your metaphors and treasure them.
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Financial issues
Hey guys so if you didn’t know I have a paypal. All you do is go to my blog and there it is. My sister and I are both disabled and I have a service dog. Last month I was in the hospital and the month before our house flooded leaving us homeless until mid October. I’ve been struggling to buy enough food for Pippi and been dipping into the food money I get every two week from family. I can’t eat orally bc I’m not sure. But my sister still needs to eat and my feeding tube formula is really expensive. Insurance doesn’t cover it and every two week is $322 of formula. If y’all feel called to I would really appreciate donations.
I can try my best to provide something in return such as like a drawing. I’m not good at art but maybe. I could write you a card. I don’t know. My sister makes medical masks. That instagram is called Vestsforthebest we also make service dog gear so you can support us there.
Thank you again
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Studyblrs! Please turn off "Best Stuff First" in “Dashboard Preferences” in General Settings
REBLOG TO SAVE A BLOG (DO IT FOR YOUR OWN BLOG!)
You’re missing out on heaps of original study tips posts and heaps of great stuff by creators, not just me! My study tips are really detailed but can be specific at times, I don’t want to have to resort to poorer quality posts or clickbait titles to bring in the activity :’(
Studyblrs are one of the biggest communities on tumblr, we can make a difference!
@staff please remove this feature! I’m an original study tips maker and this killed my activity! Tumblr is about original creators as much as reblogging, and having this option on will mean only the popular bloggers get featured more and more. It’ll be so much harder for new studyblrs to get a foot in!
Reblog to protect your own original content from being filtered!
Check your activity graphs. I’m sure you’ll find yours drops off at the same date. #spreadtheword #protectyourcontent #protectoriginalcontent
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do you have any tips for being autistic and handling uni? i’m like three months in and struggling
i’ve answered this a lot, but unfortunately no, i dont
i don’t handle uni well at all + have never coped with any educational setting well and my performance and commitment and motivation fluctuates rapidly because i struggle so much
the small things i try and do are
remain really disciplined in my routines to make bad and good days easier
communicate openly and honestly with my tutors *** cannot emphasise this enough, it makes all the difference to have a tutor on your side + aware of your situation and needs
let myself rest when i need to, no matter what’s due + despite any pressing academic responsibilities
visual prompts stuck up around my apartment to help with executive dysfunction
working for as long as possible when i do feel good
keeping a planner so that even if i’m behind in work, im aware of everything happening, whats coming up, whats overdue etc
being aware of quiet places i can escape to in uni if i need a few minutes/half an hour to myself
recognising within myself when i’ve reached my daily limit while at uni (i struggle with the studio being too loud + can feel when im about to become too overloaded and should go home to continue working)
recently i’ve found a couple of things that help me focus better + actually remain focused for a while- a yellowy/orange lamp, crunchy snacks on my desk, using the noisli app + i make sure to always do/have these whether at uni or at home to create a ‘working routine’ so that (hopefully) my brain recognises the steps and cooperates
i take small stims to class with me to help me focus and process when the lecturer is talking
even though i have a planner i often find it useful to use a scrap piece of to ‘dump my brain’ on- i write down any uni stuff that is worrying me, anything overdue, anything coming up (i just jot down all my uni thoughts basically).
i also find it beneficial to have another/separate weekly to-do list sheet to use alongside my planner, where i have more room and can write down everything i want to do (like chores and errands or (more importantly) roughly plan out what uni work/modules i want to focus on on which days of the week)
thats all i can think of for now honestly, but hopefully it will help a bit! on my study blog i tag all autistic posts with “autistic-things” (link) so there might be some useful info there!
stay strong, im rooting for you !!
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It’s sad how much of what is taught in school is useless to over 99% of the population.
There are literally math concepts taught in high school and middle school that are only used in extremely specialized fields or that are even so outdated they aren’t used anymore!
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100 Days of Productivity 35/100. (I had to look it up.)
This is what my bed looked like today, when I could no longer sit upright at my desk by about 2pm today.
I achieved five hours of work (which is a complete miracle on the five hours of sleep I had last night and the waking up at 5am and the meltdown in the local council offices and all sorts of fun). Didn’t manage the 3-2 ratio - it was more like 3 hours reading, 1.5 hour writing, some other work stuff. Could be a lot worse though.
Staying on that ‘5 hours a day’ train yes we are!
[Image description: bed covered with papers, hiding a peek at a notebook with a pink post-it note on. Bedsheets have elephants on them.]
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pretty girls with messy hair, mismatched socks, and canes are the best and I love each and every one of you
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