longmoreinstituteondisability:

chutzpadik:

(screams from the rooftops) addiction counts as a disability too, and the refusal to allow addicts access to the disability community:

  • ignores the fact that otherwise disabled people ( esp poor disabled people, trans disabled people, disabled people of color) make up a disproportionate percentage of addicts
  • says a lot about how we as a community still cater our safe spaces around the comfort of abled people
  • needs to stop .

It’s also important to remember that in the US, addicts played a crucial role in establishing disability rights.

Take, for example, the role of addicts in the 504 protests.

In 1977, over a hundred disabled people occupied the old Federal building in San Francisco. They did this to force the government to put into effect the first disability civil rights law (Section 504). The protestors were able to stay the course for 26 days until the government signed 504.

A number of community organizations supported the protest by picketing outside, providing supplies, and creating publicity. One of those organizations was Delancey Street, a residential self-help organization for drug addicts. They provided food from their café to the protestors.

Without the help of Delancey Street and other local organizations, the protestors couldn’t have stayed in the building long enough to force the government’s hand. If not for the protestors, 504 might have never been signed–or it might have been signed with watered down regulations like “separate but equal” (the exact words used by a government official) schools for disabled children. If 504 hadn’t set such a strong precedent, the Americans with Disabilities Act wouldn’t exist.

Without the work of addicts, disability rights as we know them would not exist.

The US disability community owes a lot to addicts. Exclusion from the community is no way to express gratitude.

Of masks and men

bonesandblood-sunandmoon:

nornoriel:

Of masks and men

(and women, and fabulous people outside the gender binary)

So, this is The Theological Post I’ve Been Avoiding that I briefly referred to awhile back.  This post basically serves as an explanation for why I don’t post more about specific entities I know, and one of the (complicated, manifold) reasons why D doesn’t want me connecting D-the-person as [D’s title] on the public Internet.  I was going…

View On WordPress

I should try to find the updated source post for the idea, but I found that this general idea that Nornoriel talks about in this clicked when I came across a Luciferian’s post about [what I call] the comet-shard theory [because I needed a way to refer to it]. Pretty much Everyone I interact with immediately jumped on using it because it helps my brain to understand that They’re not going to respond as carbon copies of what others have talked about (and it helps to make sense of some of the time issues I’ve run into with some Norse Deities by interacting with younger and older versions of Them).

Case in point: m’Lady Sigyn. So many people talked about Her as a Child, and I initially tried to approach Her that way, but it did not click. I didn’t know why until after the umpteenth dream of a Domme holding rope and the key to a collar, and then it was like ‘oh, okay, my comet-shard is definitely not a young, innocent child then’. It doesn’t mean I’m wrong, or anyone else is wrong; it just means that my comet-shard isn’t the same version of Sigyn that others experience. I typically have to commission stuff because I don’t get the cupcake, pastel associations, but it ultimately doesn’t make a difference for anyone but Sigyn and I.

livingwithdisability:

Help for web browsing with colour blindness. 

Chrome has a new extension called Color Enhancer

It is fairly simple to use and can help you change the images on your screen to improve contrast or make them of colours that you can see more easily if you are partially colour blind.

“A customizable color filter applied to webpages to improve color perception, for people who are partially color-blind”

Link to the extension here

twistedingenue:

psychicpossum:

lancrebitch:

lizardtitties:

ive-lost-my-spoons:

katrinarosa:

MY FELLOW FIBRO WARRIORS (and others who experience cognitive fog)

This product is so freaking cool. I got my pack at Papersource, I bet you can find them online. I know we all make lists, but really, how often do we check those lists? Not often enough.

Now your list can go on your wrist!! Hot damn.

Oh my god I need, link???????

These are the best idea ever!

oooooh

You can buy them [here]

oh my goodness, this would be great for ADHD too.

nanihoo:

That’s why I think Loki orbits Sigyn, not the other way around. 

Even if he doesn’t realize it, Sigyn’s everything Loki searches for. She’s accepting and assuring, she really sees him, can prop him up or knock him down a few pegs when he needs it, she’s his equal, in good time and bad. Sigyn doesn’t need Loki, she has no use for manipulating or lying to him. She can stand on her own two feet just fine without him and that gives him the freedom to go on his little chaos runs. I think that also gives him the drive to earn her attention. 

He may come and go, but wherever Sigyn goes Loki’s sure to be somewhere in orbit around her. 

Hello! I’d like to know something more about Sigyn, since despite my researches I don’t seem able to find much about her. Than you in advance for your time!

fuckyeahnorsemythology:

Unfortunately there really is not very much about Sigyn in Norse mythology, so it’s possible that you actually have found all of it and still feel shortchanged. In the Edda poems Sigyn is mentioned only in Völuspá, and all it says is:

Þar sitr Sigyn
þeygi um sínum
ver velglýjuð

There sits Sigyn (under Hveralundr, with Loki)
not (yet?), of/concerning her 
husband, happy.

Snorri explains early in Gylfaginning that Loki is married to Sigyn and they have a son named Nari or Narvi (that is, Snorri gives both names). Váli is not mentioned at that time. Later he describes the events mentioned in Völuspá, that Loki is bound to the rock and Sigyn protects him from poison by holding a bowl over him, and this description is also found in the prose epilogue to Lokasenna.

This really is all of the remaining mythological information on Sigyn. What is especially strange and frustrating is that she actually is mentioned in early skáldic poetry in a kenning for Loki – farmr Sigynjar arma ‘burden of Sigyn’s arms’ in Haustlöng by Þjóðólfr úr Hvini, and possibly also farmr arma hapts galdrs ‘burden of the arms of the captive of magic in Eilífr Goðrúnarson’s Þórsdrápa (or something like that, it’s a little difficult to unpack… this is the “incantation fetter” that you see floating around, though I’m not sure how one would translate haptr, which means a captive or prisoner, that way. It’s not clear why this would refer to Sigyn).

(Edit 5/5/15: I messed up, reading hapts as the genitive of the word haptr meaning ‘captive’, following this translation of the poem, and failed to notice that it can also be hapt ‘fetter; deity’. See this post for more)

Sigyn also seems to appear on the Gosforth Cross in England, holding the bowl over the bound Loki:

image

(image from Wikimedia Commons)

The references to her in skáldic poetry and the scene’s appearance on the Gosforth cross indicate that it was already well-known in the Viking age, but it doesn’t really tell us much more about Sigyn. A last thing I would like to add is that it is considered highly debatable whether Loki originally played a part in the myth of the death of Baldr. A lot of scholars believe that blaming Loki for Baldr’s death was a late innovation in Norse mythology, maybe not even occurring until after Christianization. If that’s true, we can’t help but wonder why exactly Loki’s binding is already known in early times, before the motivation for it. It’s also interesting to me that the image above from the Gosforth Cross appears on the same panel as a figure interpreted as Heimdallr (because he’s holding a horn) fighting a monster that is clearly not Loki. Granted, we don’t need to believe that both images are depicting things happening at the same time, and Loki is a shapeshifter, but it does seem to be evidence, even if weak, that the artist who made the Gosforth cross would have disagreed with Snorri that Heimdallr and Loki kill each other at Ragnarök.

That is about all I have to say about Sigyn as a mythological figure. If you’re interested in the meaning of names I did write a piece on why I think the meaning “victorious girlfriend” (a frequently given definition of Sigyn) is wrong on my own blog here (link). It’s a little dense but you might find it interesting.

-þorraborinn

tangleofgarlands:

infamymonster:

a-trans-goddess:

totallydeliciousnightmare:

micdotcom:

In this week’s “Flip the Script,” we’re tackling the question: When is it okay to use the word retarded? 

I use this quite regularly for no reason and I also have an uncle who has Down Syndrome, so I think I and a lot of other people around me need a friggin reality check

Yes! Please get out of the habit of using this word! It’s never okay 😦

YES PLEASE. THIS WORD DISGUSTS ME

Y E S