birabeero
birabeero
Beerterfly
3K posts
feed me and tell me i'm pretty
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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True crime podcast: Police say the suspect not only murdered his victims, but dismembered and ate their body parts piece by piece. I guess they had never heard of Blue Apron. Blue Apron provides dozens of delicious meals for
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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Oh, woe is me!  To be transformed, transmogrified, shapeshifted, bewitched, and bemoaned!  To be naught but a gourd!
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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17TH RULE OF FIGHT CLUB: PLEASE DON’T PUT YOUR MOM AS YOUR EMERGENCY CONTACT, WE DON’T WANT ANYONE’S MOM SHOWING UP HERE MAKING THINGS WEIRD
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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my look ? going through a hard time
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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feminism is about drinking wine from a box in the Walmart parking lot
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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does this new john krasinski horror film have actual deaf actors in this ASL horror film because if not what would be the point of stanning this film?
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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what does it feel like 2 be like………………….., calm
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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…i think i finally know what constitutes platonic bdsm.
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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Disability is not an abusive roommate
Nondisabled storytellers often seem to think of disability as an abusive roommate coming and imposing its will on a disabled person. When they think about wheelchair users, they don’t think about the mobility that’s made possible by assistive technology. They think about how they’d feel if someone chained them to a wheelchair and forcibly prevented them from walking.
This misconception is dangerous. When people see disability-related limitations as similar to violent restraint, they don’t know know to tell the difference between the innate limitations of someone’s body and limitations being forcibly imposed on them by others. When people don’t understand the difference between living with a disability and living with an abuser, they assume that abusive experiences are inevitable for people with disabilities.
In reality, there’s nothing inevitable about abuse. Coming up against the limitations of your body is fundamentally different from being forcibly restrained by someone else. Whether or not you are disabled, having physical limitations is part of having a body. Being disabled means that you have a different range of physical limitations than most other people do, but they don’t come color coded ‘normal’ and ‘disabled’. When you’re used to the way your body works, the disability-related limitations feel pretty similar to those that aren’t disability-related.
Using assistive technology is pretty similar to using technology for any other important reason. Everyone uses technology to do things that their bodies alone would be too limited to do. Most people use cars to go further than they could walk; some people also use wheelchairs to go further than they could walk. Some people type or use communication tablets to say more than they could with their bodies alone; some people use musical instruments; some people use both. People with disabilities have different limitations, and as a result, often benefit from technology that wouldn’t be particularly useful to nondisabled people.
When technology is associated with disability, people tend to have the dangerous misconception that using it is the same as being restrained. This can very easily become self-fulfilling. When people prevent disabled people from doing things, their inability to do it is often misattributed to their disability. For instance:
Wheelchairs as restraints:
Anthony lives in a nursing home.
Anthony speaks oddly, and most people interpret most of what he says as meaningless. They say ‘Anthony doesn’t communicate’.
Anthony can walk and wants to walk, but the nursing him staff don’t let him. 
George, the supervisor, tells Sage, another staff member, ‘Anthony wanders. We need to keep him in his wheelchair to keep him safe. Just lock the seatbelt. After a few minutes, he stops resisting.’
Every morning, Sage puts Anthony in a wheelchair that he can’t move, and ties him down so he can’t escape.
Sage tells Marge, a new volunteer, ‘That’s Anthony. It’s so nice to have a volunteer - he’s been spending most of his time in the hallway lately. He doesn’t walk or talk, but he loves visiting the garden! Can you take him there?”
Marge and Sage don’t know what Anthony actually wants, and it doesn’t occur to them that it’s possible to ask.
Anthony actually hates the garden and hates being pushed by other people. He prefers to spend his time in the library or with children in the children’s wing.
Marge assumes that Sage is the expert on Anthony, and assumes that Anthony’s disability prevents him from walking and communicating.
Marge doesn’t know that Anthony has stopped talking because he’s constantly surrounded by people who refuse to listen to him. 
Marge doesn’t know that Sage is tying Anthony to a wheelchair against his will to stop him from going where he wants to go.
Marge doesn’t know that she’s doing something to Anthony against his will.
When people see disability and restraint as the same thing, they fail to notice that people with disabilities are being violently restrained — and often unwittingly participate in physical abuse of disabled people.
The disability-as-restraint misconception also causes people to fail to understand that when they deny people access to assisstive technology, they’re preventing them from doing things, eg:
Mobility:
Beck is an eight year old who can’t walk.
Beck has a wheelchair, but he’s not allowed to bring it to school.
At school, he’s strapped into a stroller that others push around. 
His classmate Sarah has *never* had a wheelchair that she can push herself.
At a staff meeting, Lee, their teacher, says “Because of their disabilities, Sarah and Beck can’t move around by themselves. Even though they stay in one place all day, they’re so fun to have in our class!”
Lee is missing the crucial fact that the reason Sarah and Beck are immobile is because they’re being denied access to assistive technology. 
When people see disability and externally-imposed limitation as the same thing, they don’t notice limitations being imposed on disabled people.
Communication:
Rebecca types on her iPad to communicate.
Clay takes away Rebecca’s iPad.
Clay tells Sophie, ‘Rebecca is nonverbal. Her disability prevents her from communicating, but we’re working on improving her speech.’
Sophie sees that Rebecca can’t talk, and assumes that it’s her disability that’s preventing her from communicating.
Actually, it’s *Clay* who is preventing Rebecca from communicating.
When people see disability and abuse as the same thing, they don’t notice abuse of disabled people.
It’s important to be clear on the difference between disability and abuse. Disability is not an abusive roommate; people with disabilities are only abused if someone is abusing them. When people with disabilities are restrained against their will, this is not caused by their disabilities; it’s caused by the people who are restraining them. Restraint is an act of violence, not an innate fact about disability. When wheelchairs are used as restraints, the wheelchair isn’t the problem; the violence is the problem. When people are denied access to assistive technology, it’s not their disability that’s limiting them; it’s neglect. When we stop conflating disability and abuse, we’re far less likely to see abuse of people with disabilities as inevitable.
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birabeero · 7 years ago
Conversation
an anxiety dialogue
my brain: we have to do TAXES soon
me: yes? we have done them every year since 2009? why is this an emergency?
brain: what if we CAN'T AFFORD THEM
me: we will file an extension? we did that last year, remember?
brain:
me:
brain: there's a BEAR CH-
me: there is not a bear chasing us.
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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if i reblog these pictures of me in a bathing suit then maybe summer will come faster
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Hannah Blues
photos by Evan Atlas
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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me: i’m a bottom. i can’t do this
the drivers ed instructor: for the last time i don’t know what that means. i’m just trying to teach you to parallel park
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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smorch
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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do not fix your dark circles let the world know youre tired of its shit and ready to kill a man
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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it’s been awhile since i posted a grainy squinty-jade selfie
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birabeero · 7 years ago
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please, call me duncan
mr donuts is my father
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