Lifehack - Tumblr Posts
Secret Recipes To Try At Home
I miss the days when, no matter how slow your internet was, if you paused any video and let it buffer long enough, you could watch it uninterrupted
I use yellow sticky notes as bookmarks for the books that I read.
You should try it, it’s easier when your bookmark doesn’t accidentally fall when you open your book on the bus and lose your place in the book!
This one no longer sticks after being used in 4 books. The black dots are ink stains on the glue strip.
Isn’t this awesome? 😊
Life hack for girls #girls #lifehack #girllifehacks #legs #shaving #shavinglegs
Friends are like Trees 🌳
My good friend Kier gave me this advice awhile back, and it's helped me immensely to cope with my abandonment issues. I took the time to make this quick little comic in hopes that this advice will help others as it helped me. 🖤
(reposting from my Twitter because I feel it would be appreciated here haha)
So it is written, so it shall be done.
I just found out that my gecko’s tail works on my phone's touch screen, so I'm gonna let her make a text post and let autocorrect interpret her words.
Funks go e y y man kill zucchini angst
Not autistic, but as someone with bad hearing in a family of stutterers this seems super helpful!
Autistic Lifehack: Hearing Problems
If someone says something that you only partially understand:
DON’T ask for clarification with a generic “What?” or “I’m sorry?” (In my experience, people will repeat the phrase the exact same way without helping you to understand).
Example: Them: “Hey, do you like pahganabasa?” Autistic Person: “What?” Them: “Do you like pahganabasa?” Autistic Person: “I’m sorry, what?” Them (annoyed): “Do you like pahganabasa?”
Instead, DO repeat the part that you did understand, and substitute a “What?” for the unintelligable part.
Example: Them: “Hey, do you like pahganabasa?” Autistic Person: “Do I like what?” Them: “Pineapple pizza?” Autistic Person: (Understands the words!)