Thứ Năm, 13 tháng 12, 2018

Got Polio? Me neither. Thanks vaccines shirt

I’ve always found one thing to be true, that’s also good to remind people, If you’ve met one autistic person, you’ve met one autistic person. Nobody is the same.  Got Polio? Me neither. Thanks vaccines shirt. Nah a lot of people seriously don’t get that. I once saw someone claim that every autistic person on Tumblr was faking it because Tumblr is big on fandoms and “autistic people have no imagination,” based on one young autistic boy he knew that was unable to imagine things. Actually, I think you should add the stereotype of “autistic people no imaginations” to this list. Up until recently, even some professionals believed this, thinking our special interests had to be in dry things like train schedules and that autistic people didn’t enjoy fiction, even though in reality a lot of autistic people have special interests in various fictional fantasy worlds.

Got Polio? Me neither. Thanks vaccines shirt, ladies tee, tank top, hoodie.

Got Polio? Me Neither. Thanks Vaccines Ladies Tee
Ladies Tee
Got Polio? Me Neither. Thanks Vaccines Hoodie
Hoodie

Official Got Polio? Me neither. Thanks vaccines shirt, classic guys, guys v-neck, sweatshirt unisex.

Got Polio? Me Neither. Thanks Vaccines Classic Guys
Classic Guys
Got Polio? Me Neither. Thanks Vaccines SweatShirt
SweatShirt
I realize that many of the young people on the spectrum. Got Polio? Me neither. Thanks vaccines shirt. Hose families treat them like a burden, and who was raised to believe that their developmental disability is an unending curse, rather than, like most things, a curse AND a blessing, are justifiably angry. But they direct their anger at the world at large, especially women. I dunno. Maybe it was their mothers who were the worst offenders. I’ve sure seen some of them in these subs, talking about the “challenges” of raising a child on the spectrum, when it’s always a challenge raising a child. Kids, on or off the spectrum, need to be appreciated for the separate human beings that they are. And some parents can’t deal with that in general. We, as kids, are so very “separate” human beings that those parents resent them. None of that excuses the hostility, even though it does a lot to explain it.


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