@Schiya346 Meine Psychiaterin meinte, ich sollte doch Pflegegrad beantragen wegen MS und ADHS. Ich hab nur gelacht. Die Ärzte sind so weit von der Realität weg.
We don’t talk enough about how exclusion is traumatic. Either by intentional exclusion or just from the fact that they don’t bother enough to even think about you. Disabled people are excluded by default and I can’t tell you how traumatizing it is to have that be the norm.
Frauenanteil im Gamingbereich gesamt: 48%
Frauenanteil im Gamingbereich an Konsolen und PC: 45%
Aber klar. Gaming ist Männerdomäne😅
Ob der Geschlechterwechsel "passt", kann ich nicht beurteilen, zocke God of War nicht. Das "Argument", dass Gaming ein Männerbereich sei und /
Kämpfen lohnt sich: Der CSD Dresden kann nun doch als politische Versammlung stattfinden. Nach Wochen des juristischen Streits hat das OVG Bautzen die Versammlungsfreiheit gestärkt. Queere Sichtbarkeit ist kein Straßenfest – sie ist politischer Protest.
https://t.co/QQIkiFKi8w
Me: "I am so overwhelmed by my 10-item to-do list."
My ADHD: "What if we deep-cleaned the tracks of the sliding glass door with a toothbrush instead?" 😬
A college student with ADHD once explained why their essays end up filled with so many parentheses:
“Neurotypical people think in straight lines. My brain thinks in a giant web where every single concept is physically holding hands with twelve other concepts.”
In other words, their thoughts don’t unfold in a neat, step-by-step sequence. Instead, one idea immediately triggers several related ideas at once. While writing, it can feel impossible to ignore those connections because they all feel relevant and important, even if they branch off from the main point. Parentheses become a way to temporarily “park” those side thoughts without losing them.
So the essay ends up reflecting the actual structure of their thinking: layered, branching, and constantly interlinked. What looks messy on the page is really an attempt to capture a mind that doesn’t move in a straight line, but in a network where everything is connected to everything else.
All this complaining about bi women bringing their boyfriends to pride makes me think yall need to stop assuming someone isn't queer.
That boyfriend may be bi, trans, non-binary, ace, aro, intersex, or otherwise queer!