when i was a kid I was really bad (or really good depending on your definition) at hidden object games. which is to say that I would not specifically search for the objects the book asked me to look for. no. that would make no sense. what i instead did was open a spreadsheet
i then proceeded to list every single object in the image in my excel spreadsheet, highlighting the objects the book asked me to find in red as i went. Then, by the end, not only had i found the objects, I had also found and categorized all of the other objects as well. This way, if anyone asked me to find any other objects in that image, i was fully prepared
on an unrelated note i was diagnosed as autistic before third grade
You used the letter a 46 times!!
And 555 letters, so the letter a is about 8.29%
The letter a is on average used about 8.2% of the time, which means you used it more than average!! :)
a-counter you are my best friend and greatest ally
im expecting a lot of "pride month is over, now it's time for wrath month" posts. that's cool and all. but july is disability pride month.
pride month is when you're SUPPOSED to be angry. it's a celebration AND a riot. that was the best time to get angry. second best time is now. but it's not wrath month. let disabled people have this.
please get angry with us. please fight with us! we are both losing our rights, if we ever even had them to begin with. please don't talk over us, especially during our own pride month.
did you know over 10,000 people die a year while waiting to be told whether or not they can receive disability benefits?
did you know while being provided disability benefits, disabled people cannot have more than $2,000 total in their bank account? the average rent for an apartment in the united states, as of last month, is $1,995. per month.
while they want to kill queer people, they want to kill disabled people just as bad. please look out for your disabled friends and family. please look out for those of us who don't have friends and family. those of us who are out on the streets.
queer unity and solidarity between butches and femmes and those who are neither, between lesbians and veldians, between bis and pans and polys and omnis, between aros and aces, between trans and non-binary people, between, between LGB and TQIA+, between transmascs and transfems and transneutrals and trans-others, between aces who fuck and aces who don't, between aros who date and aros who don't, between the fluids and the statics, between polyamorous and nonamorous people, between intersex and trans and non-binary people, between unlabelled people and labelhoarders, between questioning folk and those who know and those who don't care to find out, between closeted and out people, between stealth trans folk and those who who are openly trans, between periorienteds and variorienteds, between mspecs and aspecs and non-binary and intersex people and everyone else who doesn't fit binaries, between people who use old language and people who use labels that were coined yesterday, between those with easily understood identities and those with complex identities, between fat queers and queers of colour and disabled queers and other queers who are marginalised among queers, between queers of all flavours and shades of grey and stripes of the rainbow.
queer solidarity for all, queer unity in the fight against oppression, because otherwise, they will win.
queer unity and solidarity as we exit queer pride month and enter dissbled pride month.
Queer rights may be about our right to be normal- to be normal couples, to live normal trans lives, to be normal people. But queer rights are also about our autonomy to be odd. We are QUEER, after all- weird, odd, not normal. And that is something that was originally imposed upon us, but we have taken it. It is ours now. Because lgbt rights are about our right to be normal, yes, but it is also about bodily autonomy! It is about our right to live our lives with odd genders and weird relationship structures and queer bodies. Assimilation might sound like a fine way to escape prejudice- but quite frankly, it doesn't matter. Because we are not just fighting for our rights to live like cishet people, we are also fighting for our right to live without having to worry about putting a toe out of line. We are queer, and we always will be. We won't really be free until we can live our lives as odd, as strange, as queer as we want.