
đ They/It/He/She - AdultAuDHD, Schizospec, PluralQueer in Gender and Sexualityâ¨Soulbond, SpiritualSemiverbal, Voidpunk, Alterhuman, Disabled, Chronic Illness, Mental Illness
22 posts
1st Image Is Original - Sketch On My Phone.

1st Image is Original - Sketch on my phone.
Photos below are from playing with Tumblr Filters. Curious about othersâ opinions if any.


More glitchy, moody, psychedelic iterations using Tumblr Filters.







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More Posts from Chaos-lizard
psychotic people and people with personality disorders and physically disabled people and people with higher support needs and intellectually disabled people and visibly different / disabled people and addicts: am sending you so much love
Listen.
EVERYBODY knows (or should) that you DO. NOT. STOP. in Vidor, Texas.Â
Itâs best to just run out of gas elsewhere. Whatever you do, black folks, DO NOT STOP IN VIDOR, TEXAS.Â
Thereâs a good chance youâll get lynched or just come up missing - and Iâm not joking.

also do NOT stop in Harrison, Arkansas!!!! (relatively close to OK and MI) a nazi town with a BIG KKK organization.





Reblog To Save Life
@noodle-shenaniganery I promise Iâm working on your ask about what âsoulâ is, I have just been way too sick to answer the way I want so will finish answering eventually
gender essentialism is what happens when you hear about gender being a social construct and a performance, but don't actually want to stop viewing men and women as inherent opposites. so now instead of saying "women are x and men are y, because biology" you say "women are x and men are y.... because socialization!" & change literally. nothing. else. about how you talk about gender
PSA
Some people who use a walking stick can walk without it.
Some people who use a wheelchair can walk.
Some people who sign/use computerised speech aids can speak.
Some people who use canes can see.
Some people who use subtitles can hear.
Stop policing accessibility.
These things are aids that improve the quality of life for people with a huge variety of needs, abilities, and challenges. We use these things to make a hard task easier, to make fun times more fun, to lessen pain, to improve communication. We shouldnât have to wait until weâre completely unable to walk/see/hear/speak (etc) to access these things. We shouldnât feel ashamed for needing help. Thereâs no magical line where you become âdisabled enoughâ.
Stop policing accessibility.