kittehkwrites:

pyaasa:

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To all the Americans that may follow me, or know anyone that lives in America and is currently doing this, it’s important to make sure you’re actually deleting the data from the app and not just deleting the app itself.

Tweets from @/dabeanqueenn explain why and they offer alternative methods & apps.

https://twitter.com/dabeanqueenn/status/1540364493909360640?s=21&t=NMsVjcQil-A31EjqdVfNYw

an important note on this: DELETING THE APP DOES NOT DELETE THE DATA — you must request for your data to be wiped  I successfully had mine wiped from Flo last month. details in thread below https://t.co/0lhZ12Fl6P  — ❀ sarah ❀ (@dabeanqueenn) June 24, 2022ALT
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All in all, if you’re still using digital methods to track your cycles, make sure your data is end to end encrypted or switch to using calendars/paper and pens to track it.

Please be careful.

(via crazyworkz)

sweatermuppet:

violence is the appropriate response to oppression btw

(via crazyworkz)

ot3:

honestly i think a good place to start for People Who Don’t Have Disabilities But Want To Help Out People Who Do is to just… take more breaks when you’re doing stuff. set a precedent where you are not always pushing through fatigue just because you can. it is literally humiliating to have to be the first and or/only person to take a break from stuff constantly. it makes me feel so terrible to be doing the least amount of work in a group setting even when i am doing as much as i am physically capable of, even in circumstances when i know no one else is necessarily judging me for it. 

(via crazyworkz)

sawasawako-archived:

sawasawako-archived:

idc anymore i think we should be a burden to each other

and yes this includes a certain degree of tolerance for emotional burden, all else being equal. my love for you, and loyalty to you, is not dependent on how easy you make it for me to love you. i don’t value you for how little trouble you cause me. i want to learn how to take you for who you are, instead of who i want you to be or who i think you should be

(via disabledwarrior)

mallgothed:

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you guys are the real heroes

(via oodlyenough)

eroticcannibal:

The thing that really let me think in the right way about parenting was realising that raising a good person and raising a “good child” are incompatible.

How can a child develop the ability to challenge and question authority if they cannot challenge and question adults? How can a child learn to value and defend their autonomy if they cannot refuse the demands placed upon them? How can a child learn to fight bigger injustices if they cannot fight over something they feel isn’t fair? How can a child learn to be at peace with their emotions and the emotions of others if they are not allowed the freedom to express their emotions without consequence? How can a child learn to listen to and care for their bodies if they are not allowed to sleep when their body asks or eat what their body demands?

Unquestioning obedience is not a good trait. Fear of authority is not a good trait. Always being sweet with a smile on your face is not a good trait. Being unable to create conflict is not a good trait. Being unwilling to fight is not a good trait. Compromising your boundaries is not a good trait. Prioritising pleasing others over your own needs and autonomy is not a good trait.

Good parenting means intentionally making your life harder. A difficult child is a good person. Your job is to guide your child into becoming the best adult they can be. It is not to make your own life easy. It is not to have the approval of others. It is not to make their teacher and grandparents lives easy. Your priority is your child and nothing else.

(via lierdumoa)

daniel-danny-fenton:

senirac:

daniel-danny-fenton:

daniel-danny-fenton:

roseverdict:

daniel-danny-fenton:

I think it would be really cool if there was an AU where the whole of Amity Park was convinced that Danny Fenton died in the lab accident. After all, who gets shocked with an entire dimension’s worth of electricity and lives? Nobody. Nobody could survive that.

So they pity the Fenton family, particularly the parents who, for some reason, refuse to believe their son is dead. They send him off to school and make him meals just like a regular living boy, but somehow remain confused when their perfectly functional ghost-hunting equipment locks in on him. They somehow never suspect that their own son is the very thing they spend their lives trying to dissect and destroy.

But Danny… the ghost of Danny… he’s clearly not malevolent. And it’s obvious he doesn’t know he’s dead.

The second month of freshman year, when Danny Fenton came trudging through the halls like a typical teenager too tired to be at school on a Monday morning, the whole school froze. The boy (ghost?) didn’t seem to notice as he grabbed his schoolbooks from his locker, and headed towards first period like it was normal.

The news of the Fenton Works lab accident had been on every Amity Park news station the week before. A tragedy, someone so young and hopeful meeting such a miserable end.

And yet, the Fentons did not appear to grieve.

The ghost of Danny Fenton acted as he did before his untimely demise, and if one didn’t know better, they’d be convinced he was still alive.

However, little things gave it away.

Every room Danny entered was immediately the temperature of a meat cooler. Students took to having jackets on hand if they shared a class with him. He didn’t have a pulse either, which Coach Tetslaff found out one day when Dash Baxter hurled a ball just a bit too hard at the smaller teen, apparently knocking the boy out.

The most damning evidence of all, however, was the fact that Danny Fenton didn’t age.

One could consider him a late bloomer, but it was obvious something was up by junior year as his best friends, Tucker Foley and Samantha Manson had gained inches on him, starting to look more like young adults and less like the awkward duo of adolescents they were at the beginning of freshman year. Yet Danny looked the same as always, face as young and bright as it was at the beginning of high school, never aging past the edge of fourteen.

But Danny was no beast or monster as the Doctors Fenton claimed. He was quiet, and peaceful, and although a bit of a slacker from Mr.Lancer’s perspective, a good kid who just wanted a second chance at life.

So no one acknowledged his miraculous return from the dead.

They treated him like any other student or teenager. Dash Baxter shoved him into lockers like normal, students ignored him in the halls, and teachers called him in for detention if he had late work or missing assignments.

It was the least they could do. The longer they delayed the Fenton’s finding out about their son, the longer they could keep him safe, allow him to live his second chance at a normal adolescence.

After all, there were other benevolent ghosts too, like Phantom. Surely it was the right thing to do to protect this one innocent spirit?

i know i just reblogged this but these tags are a MASTERPIECE

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oh my fucking god

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s-screaming

Are Sam and Tucker in on it? Because I don’t think they would be. People would assume they know because everyone knows. But they are just as shocked and confused as Danny. I think Sam would snap out of it fastest, but would then start laughing. Traumatizing everyone.

they don’t know, but they are aware of how miraculous it is that no one seems to notice danny’s ghostly traits. in other words, they think everyone else is stupid and ignorant.

(via diamonds-and-dynamite)

the-light-of-stars:

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(via dingdongyouarewrong)

thisiswhereikeepdcthings:

Do not cite the deep canon to me, witch. I was there when it was collectively ignored.

(via oodlyenough)

petrichara:

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2- Mikko Harvey / 3- @beetlejuices / 4- Ocean Vuong / 5- Sarah Kay and Philip Kaye / 6- Franz von Stuck / 7- Cortes Edouard Leon

(via lierdumoa)