Trump basically declared disabled people ‘unfit to work’ as he put it by revoking the Equal Employment Opportunity Law of 1965. It means employers no longer have to legally give accommodations to disabled employees. This will render so many Americans jobless and barely anyone is talking about it because disabled people like me are treated as expendable.
im really in a bad place i hope the sun doesnt start setting crazy early at like 4pm. i said i hope the sun doesnt set early at like 4pm that would be bad for me
stared at this design so long my friend on a call thought I fell asleep
it doesn't sit right with me but I actually feel if I touch it some more I will ruin it AUGHH
@squ1g33 ngl I saw this and thought you posted it
Theta Sigma’s favorite candy
I realized I can draw Eugene Drawtectives Finch as Drawfee Bobby Hill and I’m reminded that being an artist is awesome actually
Happy Autumn Equinox!
I'm so ready for it 🌰🍂🍄🍁
i deserve to be an eel. in a crevice with a bunch of other eels. opening and closing our mouths over and over
By the way, you can improve your executive function. You can literally build it like a muscle.
Yes, even if you're neurodivergent. I don't have ADHD, but it is allegedly a thing with ADHD as well. And I am autistic, and after a bunch of nerve damage (severe enough that I was basically housebound for 6 months), I had to completely rebuild my ability to get my brain to Do Things from what felt like nearly scratch.
This is specifically from ADDitude magazine, so written specifically for ADHD (and while focused in large part on kids, also definitely includes adults and adult activities):
Here's a link on this for autism (though as an editor wow did that title need an editor lol):
Resources on this aren't great because they're mainly aimed at neurotypical therapists or parents of neurdivergent children. There's worksheets you can do that help a lot too or thought work you can do to sort of build the neuro-infrastructure for tasks.
But a lot of the stuff is just like. fun. Pulling from both the first article and my own experience:
Play games or video games where you have to make a lot of decisions. Literally go make a ton of picrews or do online dress-up dolls if you like. It helped me.
Art, especially forms of art that require patience, planning ahead, or in contrast improvisation
Listening to longform storytelling without visuals, e.g. just listening regularly to audiobooks or narrative podcasts, etc.
Meditation
Martial arts
Sports in general
Board games like chess or Catan (I actually found a big list of what board games are good for building what executive functioning skills here)
Woodworking
Cooking
If you're bad at time management play games or video games with a bunch of timers
Things can be easier. You might always have a disability around this (I certainly always will), but it can be easier. You do not have to be this stuck forever.
No dl-6 au take where Miles becomes a defense attorney and is the one, alongside Mia guiding him, who defends Phoenix in turnabout memories, which causes Phoenix to fall even more in love with Miles than he was already prior and makes him admire him and Mia alot, which guides him to study to become also a defense attorney but he just ends up being Miles’ personal assistant instead of a full defense attorney and the rest of the aa cases follows just them 2 being a mix of coworker and gays as fuck for each other.
snort...