Mary, MaryFrom Season 1, Episode 12 - "I've Got A Little Song Here"
Mary, Mary From Season 1, Episode 12 - "I've Got a Little Song Here"
-
jorkeryuri liked this · 1 year ago
-
chaos-from-basil reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
datclassicrockfan42 liked this · 2 years ago
-
smallmilo reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
return-of-the-penor reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
return-of-the-penor liked this · 2 years ago
-
evilcharacter liked this · 2 years ago
-
tazzypenguin reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
mattiestmatthew liked this · 2 years ago
-
tiberiusmulder liked this · 2 years ago
-
sethbrunflemcfly reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
dethstarseth liked this · 2 years ago
-
lenny-kosnowski reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
lenny-kosnowski liked this · 2 years ago
-
samcalavicci reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
samcalavicci liked this · 2 years ago
-
tantamount-treason reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
tantamount-treason liked this · 2 years ago
-
some-what-of-a-cat reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
kittym0ew liked this · 2 years ago
-
yaggerdangs-remedy liked this · 2 years ago
-
jathis reblogged this · 2 years ago
More Posts from Chaos-from-basil
To be clear- Cinderpelt finding a new sense of purpose and direction as a medicine cat OF HER OWN FREE WILL after suffering a life-changing injury is not ableism. Firestar constantly feeling sorry for her when she's clearly happy and lamenting the fact that she never got to be a Warrior every time she so much as crosses his line of sight is ableism.
Briarlight being physically unable to preform traditional Warrior duties and finding other things that she can do around camp that make her feel good about herself as a contributing member of her community is not ableism (though they really should've explored it more). Millie explicitly saying that Jayfeather keeping her daughter alive is only prolonging her suffering and that she will always have an "incomplete" life is ableism.
Longtail choosing to retire to the elders den early because he feels unable to comfortably preform his Warrior duties after the loss of his sight is not ableism. Jayfeather being told his blindness means he has no other choice but to become a medicine cat and then being bullied into it by the adults in his life and even his ancestors, despite the fact that he states again and again that he wants to be a Warrior, is ableism.
Disabled characters existing, and not being able to do all of the things that fully abled characters can do is not the problem, and rewriting them to be able to do everything able bodied warriors can is not the solution. The problem is denying disabled characters agency, refusing to accept that they can find happiness and fulfillment in non-traditional roles in Clan life, and treating their lives as though they are somehow diminished by their disabilities.
This Just Doesn't Seem to Be My Day From Season 1, Episode 9 - "The Chaperone"





THE MONKEES (1966-1968) ↳ 1x07 The Monkees in a Ghost Town




“…No Peter.”