there will be times when you’ll break down, and that’s okay
Tag: Disabilities
hello! I don’t know if anyone has already made a post about this before, but I just stumbled upon this app made specifically for when you’ve gone into a nonverbal anxiety attack!!!
it was made by Jeroen De Busser who is an autistic computer science student.
the app is really easy to use! all you do is open it and hand your phone to someone you need to communicate with during an attack but physically cannot, and it shows this cool little alert for the person to read, and then it takes them to an easy to use chat (that looks a lot like texting! except both of you are communicating using the same device).
the alert message is completely customizable and you can have it say whatever you need!
the app is called Emergency Chat and it’s available in the Apple Store and google play store.
I highly recommend it to anyone who might need it 🙂
OH MY GOD?!?!?? BOOST
That’s so bootiful!
thank you so much for this because i never know what to do when i cant talk to people and they just start trying to ask me questions and its really hard to force myself to say i cant talk and stuff. im definately getting this right now

October is dysautonomia awareness month! It is shocking that 70million people are impacted by dysautonomia and yet so few people know about it. Help spread the word and get dysautonomia as well known as other disorders. Share facts about dysautonomia all month to spread awareness. There are so many people living with dysautonomia and don’t even know it! #pots #posturalorthostatictachycardiasyndrome #dysautonomia #dysautonomiaawareness #dysautonomiaawarenessmonth #awareness #spoonieprobs #spoonielife #chronicillness #chronicpain #spreadtheword #helpraiseawareness #spoonie #invisibleillness #strong #strength #fighter #facts #fact
- stop calling people with adhd annoying for exhibiting symptoms
- stop calling people with adhd immature when the disorder literally includes a 3 yr developmental delay
- stop treating adhd like it’s not as big of a deal as other disorders
- stop dismissing adhd just because it’s common
- stop acting like adhd is not a mental disorder/illness when it’s LITERALLY neurological
- if you don’t have adhd it’s not your place to speak on it
- if you don’t have adhd it’s not your place to make jokes about it
- if you don’t have adhd, stop fucking spreading lies about adhd
Honestly a huge shoutout to everyone who had to stop doing what they love.
Shoutout to people who had to stop playing music and drawing because of arthritis.
Shoutout to people who loved to go hiking but can’t because of chronic fatigue.
Shoutout to everybody who’s ever had their health steal something they loved from them. Yall are so beautiful and worthwhile and I love you.
Chronically Coping with Financial Losses: 5 Ways to Save Money on a Limited Income
Chronically Coping with Financial Losses: 5 Ways to Save Money on a Limited Income
Back in the beginning of 2015, I was feeling pretty comfortable financially.
I transitioned to a higher paying job with fewer hours. I maintained a healthy yoga and meditation practice. Although I still experienced days of struggle with my invisible defect working in the background, my health was better in many ways and far improved from years prior as I’ve discussed in my other posts about my…
Yes, my Clint is deaf
And, yes. I know he’s not deaf in the MCU. But I don’t fucking care. He should be deaf.
Deaf Clint Barton is important!
Disabled superheroes are important.
Disabled superheroes going through things that their super powers, abilities, and skills cannot fix is important.
Disabled superheroes trying to figure out how they fit into an abled and very often ableist world is important.
Disabled superheroes becoming determined to not let their disability defeat them is important.
Disabled superheroes ASKING FOR HELP is important.
When You’re Chronically Ill and You’ve Never Met Your Best Friends in Person
When your best friends or people you have never met… Yep, I think that describes quite a few of us. Do you have friends online who you would call TRUE friends? Share about how you met, how often you connect. We would love to hear your experience! #InvisibleIllness #ThisIsChronicIllness
I haven’t read this article yet, but I think it will definitely apply to me.
My best friends communicate with me via Facebook and Tumblr, with the occasional email. 🙂I find the greatest comfort from my chronic illness friends online ❤
When You’re Chronically Ill and You’ve Never Met Your Best Friends in Person

This is going to be a very vulnerable post for me, and not because I’m half naked and showing my face. This is the beginning of a photography series involving chronic illness.
In December of 2015 I was diagnosed with a genetic disorder called Ehlers Danlos Syndrome after a lifetime of health problems that never seemed connected. EDS is a collagen error in my genes meaning my collagen doesn’t form the way it’s meant to. Since collagen is the glue of the body, this means that almost everything can be affected. From Wikipedia, “Collagen provides structure and strength to connective tissue. A defect in collagen can weaken connective tissue in the skin, bones, blood vessels, and organs, resulting in the features of the disorder.” People with EDS often have chronic pain in their joints due to loose ligaments and weak muscles allowing those joints to frequently dislocate. Muscle spasms and nerve pain are also common. The pain involved with EDS is what this set of photos focuses on.
I experience chronic pain every day. I tend to keep it hidden because continually complaining about my pain will only make it harder to handle. It’s not something you can see so I know people, aka my family, have a hard time believing that it’s actually happening, especially when I push through my pain with a smile.
This set of photos is meant to help people visualize the pain I experience that they don’t get to see. It’s meant to bring an understanding that you can never know what someone may be experiencing that you can’t see.
The pink/red spots highlighted on my body are places where I experience pain regularly, most often all at the same time.
(Okay to reblog, please don’t remove the caption, 100% NOT for blogs with raunchy porn or fat fetish/feeder blogs)
thank you for sharing this. you’re brave and beautiful.
having an invisible disability is so frustrating. it’s easy to get mad at the people around me for inadvertently making my life harder, but even when they know intellectually that i have these problems – and even specifically what the problems are – they can’t SEE when i’m having a rough day, they can’t SEE when i’m having a flare-up. some days, if there’s an empty 12-pack box on the kitchen floor, i can easily pick it up and take it out to the recycling bin; some days, i can’t even step over it, and just nudging it aside with my foot makes me wince. it’s not my friends’ and family’s fault they don’t know when i’m hurting. i don’t want to guilt people for that. what i do want them to understand is that the fact my illness is invisible makes it even suckier.
i’ve taken to using my cane in public even when i’m not having a bad mobility day, because people see it and are a little bit more careful around me, so they’re less likely to do something that will give me a bad day. OP, if you don’t use a cane, you might consider starting, even if balance while walking isn’t an issue for you; people bump into you on the sidewalk a whole lot less, and don’t let their dogs jump on you. 😀



![Chronically Coping with Financial Losses: 5 Ways to Save Money on a Limited Income | Only in this Head: Chronic Illness Life with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome | onlyinthishead.com | Image Credit: www.pexels.com | [Image Description: White background, with a pink piggy bank. Coins are around the bank]](https://onlyinthishead.files.wordpress.com/2016/09/cc-f-f-image.png?w=300&h=166)









