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#little person
scipunk · 10 days
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Blade Runner (1982)
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a-little-revolution · 6 months
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@ the anon asking about dwarfism in fantasy: think of it like this. dwarves in fantasy are seen as a separate race, but in real life, dwarves are human beings. to make your fantasy inclusive, you should aim to treat your dwarf characters like human beings, not like a separate race. this means give them all the opportunities that you would give your characters of other races. break away from stereotypes. your dwarf doesnt have to be a miner, barbarian, blacksmith, etc who lives underground. they can be a bard, a healer, a baker, a wizard, an aristocrat, a seamstress, etc. anything at all! they may need accommodations due to their size/stature, but the point is that people with dwarfism are PEOPLE with dwarfism, even in fantasy. even in fiction, people with disabilities shouldnt be depicted as some sort of "other race/species" & shouldnt be excluded out of fear of offending us. just treat us like human beings & everything should be okay!
sorry to barge into your asks & explain when you already did a great job explaining it yourself, this is just a topic im passionate about & this is my favorite way to describe it when people have a hard time understanding. lots of love ♡
Exactly!!! ☝️☝️☝️
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Frédéric Bazille (1841-1870) "Little Italian Street Singer" (1866) Located in the Musée Fabre, Montpellier, France
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neuroticboyfriend · 9 months
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thanks to ableism, heightism, and fatphobia, almost nothing is made to fit or work for my body ever. mobility aids. furniture. clothes. shoes. cars. etc. etc. if any of these do work out for me, they're usually expensive and i have a much more limited selection than abled, average height, straight sized people.
this isn't just inconvenience, either. things like furniture and shoes not being made for me causes me pain and takes a toll on my body, because i physically cant use them properly. making things fit me takes energy and money that i cant afford, but sometimes have to spend anyway. the safety measures in things like cars could injure or even kill me if i were to get in a bad accident.
being short, fat, and disabled in this society is so much harder than it has to be. it's unfair and downright dangerous that our bodies aren't being taken into account when designing almost everything around us. disabled people deserve better. fat people deserve better. people with short and tall stature deserve better.
we're just as much part of this world as everyone else, and we deserve to live in a world that acts like we exist.
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lilmamas1 · 1 year
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Valentina Valshe
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greatfemaleforms · 9 months
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narrans · 1 year
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56). "If you ever compare them to vermin again, I'll beat the shit outta you!"
PROMPT
56). "If you ever compare them to vermin again, I'll beat the shit outta you!"
Humans can be wonderful, giving, accepting creatures. They can shine a light in the darkest of times, providing aid and stability to those who need it. They provide hope to the hopeless, meals to the hungry, and endure the most wicked and unfortunate of circumstances if it is for someone they love.
Perhaps that’s why they could justify treating us so poorly…
Their kindness simply ran out.
Their tolerance could only go so far.
The cruelty built up and needed a place to vent like steam from a compression chamber.
We - that is… us pets - are not human, even though the only thing that makes us different is our size. Pets are, in essence, much smaller humans, the tallest of us reaching only six-and-a-half or so inches tall - and that was saying something. I, myself, am a solid five and a fifth inches tall, but who is counting?
Certainly not my so-called owners.
They could care less about me with the way they treated me before discarding me – literally. Up until that point, I had never known that humans could be decent creatures.
I remember like it was yesterday when everything really began. After being trained and “properly conditioned,” I was sold to one family as a birthday present for a little girl as her first pet. It was terrifying. Instead of a gerbil or fish, they picked me.
Little did I know it was going to only get worse there for several years.
The girl who “owned” me was a brat through and through. Her screams were ear shattering, but her tendency to hit whatever wasn’t cooperating was far worse. The bruises on my body left me a purple-yellow lump most days. I lost count of how long I was with them honestly.
It wasn’t until she broke my arm, however, that she decided to show me the only mercy I had ever received from her, but it was far from that at the time.
She threw me away.
She tossed me into that odorous hot pink tin can lined in thick black bags.
“Audrey! Please! Don’t do this. I-I-I-I’ll get better. Just…”
“Broken toys go in the trash. You are broken. So, you go in the trash. Good-bye.”
The lid snapped shut and, in a moment, I was plunged into darkness which lasted for hours. The last thing I saw were here dark eyes and wide toothy grin.
Haunting.
She was ten. She should’ve known better. No. She did know better and chose to do the wrong thing.
I slipped into unconsciousness from pain after trying several times to climb and claw my way out of the bag among the various snack bags that were half eaten. It was a miracle I didn’t slip into shock, because the next thing I knew was that I was being jostled around, taken out with the rest of the trash.
I tried shouting, but nothing happened; at least, nothing happened until the bag was still for a few more hours. While in the dark expanse of the bag, I felt another massive jostle again before the inside was flooded with light.
I remember my eyes adjusting just in time to see two pale green eyes widen before the impending digits of doom reached in after me. Trapped at the bottom of the bag and trying to protect my injured arm, I snapped out of my trance. I tried getting away and managed to land a solid punch on his finger, which, to my surprise, made his fingers retract.
“Woah, you’re alive?” he said in awe. My stomach churned as it sank into my hard plastic shoes. I remember kicking myself, thinking if only I had played dead in that moment, then I would be safe.
I’m glad I didn’t do that now.
Slowly, he tilted the bag and kept it propped open, speaking softly to me.
“Hey, sorry. Didn’t mean to make a grab for you. I just didn’t want to leave you in there like that. It’s not the decent thing to do,” he said. “You wanna come out of there? Or not ready to leave yet?” I wanted to sprint to safety, be left alone, and not have a broken arm to tend to, but I knew we pets never really got what we wanted.
Reluctantly, I stood and inched toward the entrance of the bag o he could just barely see me. My insides churned uneasily. I knew what was coming. I was going to be grabbed, bruises pinched between his fingers. There would be a breathless jolt that would whiplash my neck as I lifted up to his face so I could stare into eyes that were the size of my head. Only the most horrible fates danced before my eyes, but as I began the countdown to my demise, none came.
I kept counting just to pass the time as I continued to pinch my eyes shut.
Three… Two… One… Now.
No?
Three… Two… One… Now.
I breathed deeply and summoned what courage I could and squinted one eye open. Sadly, I didn’t manage a glance up and could only stare at his pants leg, which was horrendously dirty and looked like it was one of many layers he wore; and it was no wonder – it was freezing. His one hand hadn’t moved from the top of the bag, but that was all I could see at the time.
Heart racing out of my chest, I felt absolutely sick. Bile rose up in the back of my throat. I suppressed a cough and choked back the feeling that was compressing my chest.
I couldn’t take it anymore. I needed something – anything – to relieve the tension.
I dared to look up, and immediately I met his two massive pale green eyes and a face that undoubtedly once was full of freckles.
One look and I knew he was examining me, eyes latching onto my injured arm that practically hung limply by my side in two places as well as the aged bruises mingled with the fresh.
I didn’t know what it was, but I knew the look in his eye immediately.
Disgust.
However, it wasn’t disgust at me. It was disgust for me.
I watched a protective presence radiate from him like waves of heat. In his eyes raged a distain and loathing for the one who hurt me. A lump the size of his fist formed in my throat.
Was it possible he felt pity? Sympathy?
No… it was empathy.
His other hand, which hadn’t made a grab for me, was in a brace of its own, and I saw a healing bruise on his cheek that was now a pale yellow. Somehow, he saw and understood everything I had gone through. It was a thought I had a few times before that people could be unkind toward one another, but I had never actually witnessed it happening.
I watched a coaxing smile curve his lips as he snapped himself out of whatever evaluation he just performed.
“Hey there,” he said softly. “Bit banged up, are we? Let’s see what we can do about that.” He laid his hand on the ground for me to step onto, which was a new phenomenon for me since most humans would simply pinch my torso or wrap their sweaty fingers around my body. Thinking of no other option or alternative at the moment but to cling onto the thoughtful look in his pale green eyes, I stepped onto his fingers and sat down cross-legged in the center of his palm.
“It’s a tad cold out and I’ve got a little way to walk. Do you care for a pocket or shoulder in my hoodie?” he asked.
Wait…
He asked?
A choice?
“Um…” I fumbled, bracing my arm tighter against my body. A bitterly cold gust of wind whipped by. I didn’t want to be confined, but the pocket sounded warmer. Then again, I was already warming just by being near his hand. I did want to see where we were going.
As if he could read my mind, he asked, “Not used to choices?”
I shook my head.
“Figures,” he muttered, a hint of anger in his voice. “How about shoulder? I’ve got a scarf in my bag here. You can use it like a blanket.”
What kind of human was this?
I couldn’t help myself and nodded eagerly and, within no more than thirty seconds, he had wrapped his scarf around his neck and had nestled me safely in the folds of the fabric, pulling up his hood to protect the both of us from the wind.
Without another word, he stood and began walking down the street, tugging a backpack onto his back and walking briskly. I didn’t ask any questions, mind reeling from what was already happening.
I wanted to ask him questions. Where were we going? What was he going to do to me? Was he taking me to someone who would be my new “owner”? Or was he going to assume that role? Why was he hurt? How was he going to fix my arm? Was he going to fix it?
I decided against asking any of them though. I didn’t want to say something that might make him change his mind in helping me. He could easily chuck me into any of the trashcans that we passed by, landing me right where I started the day.
It was about an hour later when he seemed to spot what he was looking for and changed direction, now walking toward a part of a bridge guarded by a partially torn down metal fence. He slipped under with cat-like dexterity and climbed up the steep concrete pad until he was directly under the overpass.
He reached up and gestured for me to slip onto his hand.
“I need to get my area set up, and then we’ll take a look at that arm. Sound fair?” he asked. I decided to be compliant, though I wasn’t sure what this whole “area” was supposed to look like. He unraveled the scarf and set it off to the side, keeping me snuggly wrapped in it to keep me from being subjected to the wicked wind.
I could’ve run for it. I could’ve slipped away and slid down the concrete pad to freedom, but I didn’t move. It was already getting dark and there was no chance of me surviving the night with a broken arm and no supplies. Even with this stranger, I was still safer than I would be alone.
I watched curiously as he pulled his backpack off of his back and began assembling a one-person tent, a compact set of blankets, and a few lamps which he hung inside of his pale tan tent. He shoved his bag into the opening before poking his head out and looking back at me. I had to admit that I was a bit nervous, watching him make this tent and then move inside wordlessly without bringing me with him.
“Ready?” he asked. I wasn’t sure. Was I ready? Still numb from the pain of my arm, I thought only for a minute before nodding and letting his hands cup either side of the scarf that surrounded me. He moved slowly and brought me into the tent where he set me on top of his backpack, a scuffed medical kit resting in his lap.
I didn’t get a good look, but I saw there were dozens of tools on one side of his kit, and they were all tools I had seen in my life. They were small tools – perfect for pets like me. Unease crept into my chest. Why did he have these tools? They looked professional, as if they came from a veterinarian’s office.
I shuddered as I watched his fingers reach inside and pull out some odd-looking tweezers.
“Now, let’s see about that arm,” he said. I recoiled immediately and shoved myself deeper into the fabric around me.
“No! You find someone else to play doctor on. I won’t have you practicing on me!” I shouted.
He sighed slowly and nodded a few times but didn’t try again. Was he frustrated with me? Or was he thinking of something to say. I got my answer when he spoke directly to me.
“Sorry, I didn’t mean to scare you. Look, I’m not here to play doctor and know a thing or two about setting small bones. Believe me. Fingers make good practice,” he said. “We’ve only just met, but I need you to trust me. You don’t want that arm just hanging there like that, unless you like having a nice jolt of pain every time something taps it the wrong way.”
I bit the inside of my cheek and curled in on myself, accidentally bumping my arm against my knee in the process. Would he work on my arm without my permission anyway? Was it better to give him permission or resist, demonstrating my free will?
Either way, my arm needed help and I was in no position to make it better.
“Fine,” I muttered. He moved his fingers closer and slipped his finger under my injured arm. His keen, pale-green eyes absorbed every detail of my arm, flicking every so often to the other scars on my body.
He lifted his hand again and I slid onto the columns of flesh clumsily, abandoning my warm spot by his neck and jostling my arm in the process. He set me down on the table which had several long-dried coffee stains and spilled sugar crystals. I sat there on the desk while he washed his hand and came back.
“Feel like telling me how this happened?” he asked as he began opening up the material he’d need to brace my arm.
“Tell me about yours first,” I snapped, regretting my tone immediately for fear of punishment. His pale green eyes flicked up to my own, and my heartrate spiked just for a moment before he sighed.
“My dad. Finally decided to defend myself and got hurt in the process. Now, your turn,” said Bruce. Defend himself? Against his father? There was definitely more than met the eye with this guy, but I could see he was waiting for my response, and I guess I owed him that much.
“Kid,” I spat. “She wanted my arm to bend the other way like all of her other dolls.”
“Yikes, I’m sorry,” he said softly. “Humans are terrible, but bratty kids are some of the worst. May I?” His fingers approached, gesturing for me to place my broken arm onto the pads of his fingers. My heart was pounding out of my chest. Every part of me was shaking, but I had calmed down from my outburst a few minutes ago just enough to lift my arm and lay it against the tips of his fingers. He kept his pale green eyes on me and better examined my injury.
“I’m Bruce by the way. I assume that kid gave you some ridiculous name? Or do you have a name that you’d like me to use instead?” he asked.
“You don’t want to claim your right to that?” I asked bitterly. Bruce scoffed and rolled his eyes.
“Naw, I’m good. I’d rather hear what your parents named you,” said Bruce. I looked up at him, sensing he was being genuine. At least he had the decency of asking what my parents named me instead of what the training facility decided to call me. Did he know we actually had parents and weren’t just grown in a lab?
Fine. It was the least I could do since he did save my life.
“Pip. Just Pip,” I said.
“Like Pippy Longstocking? Or Pip like Pippen from Lord of the Rings?” asked Bruce.
“I don’t know,” I said, taken aback by his question. Was there a difference? Did my parents know the difference? “I like the sound of the Lord of the Rings one better though.”
“Me too,” said Bruce. His nimble fingers worked swiftly and, before I knew it, my arm was braced between fragments of popsicle sticks, string, and pieces of a cut shirt. Despite the size of his fingers, he was tender and careful. After I was bandaged up, arm in a sling, I stared at him as he carefully broke apart a pill meant for killing the pain and handed it to me. He also gave me some water to take with it as he began making some kind of dinner for himself, which came in those odd-packaged noodles.
We ended up eating in silence after I took the medicine before I summoned the courage to ask him about why he was out here on his own in a tent instead of a home. I had an idea of what happened when he mentioned his arm, but I wanted to hear it from him directly.
Turned out that he knew a little something about the viciousness of humans and empathized with the abuse pets suffered daily. His father was a cruel man, especially after his wife left him, leaving Bruce behind to endure alone. We compared scars and injuries, though I had to admit that Bruce’s injuries surpassed my own, which was surprising.
It was only because of the kindness of one other, a veterinarian who helped him through the darkest times in his life, that he was where he was in life. It was this veterinarian who he was going to go live with once he made it to his final destination. Bruce explained that his father made him move out of state “for a change of scenery” after his mother left, and Bruce finally had enough and was going back to live with the veterinarian.
I found myself endeared to him after hearing this story. Not only had this veterinarian helped Bruce, but he also helped him learn the skills necessary to help pets like me. He helped him see that there was no difference between us, and for this I would be forever grateful.
After talking well into the night, Bruce offered to take me wherever I wanted to go. Sadly, I had nowhere else to go. Bruce then offered me to stay with him, traveling as companions and not as pet and human. Whole-heartedly, I accepted and drifted off to sleep just under his chin when it was time for bed.
This was the start to something wonderful.
For the next four months, we traveled together in the most peculiar circumstances. We slept in odd places like under bridges and in parks in the evenings, and we used public electricity to charge his batteries. Sometimes, he collected cans or other odd ends for cash if he didn’t work the odd job. Never did he beg along the side of the road like the other nomads we came across while traveling.
While on the road, we came across more than just other people like Bruce. We came across others like me who were down and out, rejected, thrown away, or simple runaways. We soon found ourselves moving in an entire group of five, bringing three other pets along for the ride – Volley, Lowe, and Flick.
We made up the “Fantastic Five,” collecting spare change and living life on the road as we made our way across the country from one coast to the next. It was a good time for all of us. Late night talks and dream – real dreams – about the future. It was something none of us were really used to when given the chance.
For the first time, I let myself dream. I dreamt about walking on the beach and seeing an ocean sunset. The others had dreams of going to school, becoming an inventor, and even becoming a chef. Some of these dreams felt farfetched, but it was the fact that we could let ourselves dream that made the time worthwhile.
Of course, dreams were not the only things that made up our world. On our travels through the human world, there were still dangers and cruel humans. More often than not, Bruce had to fight away different humans so they would stay away from his things and, more importantly, away from us.
One particular individual, David, became a particular nuisance when we had to stay in the same campsite for a few weeks while Bruce gathered up enough money to stock up a decent supply of dried goods before making one of the longest treks of our journey yet. David would often sneak into or around the camp, pinching things from others’ campsites and claiming he didn’t steal anything when confronted.
Bruce, along with myself and the other three, were onto him from the moment Bruce set up his tent, and we were very careful to make sure to keep an eye out for David. From the moment that slimy git greeted us with a hello, I knew he was going to be trouble.
It wasn’t until one particularly warm morning, however, that everything happened.
I woke up, stretching into the warm spot by Bruce’s neck that I had grown accustomed to, and saw a shadow lurking nearby. I shoved the others awake and tugged on Bruce’s earlobe until he woke up.
“Hm? What’s going on?” he murmured sleepily, rolling over onto his back. The moment Bruce spoke, the shadow quickly vanished away from the side of the tent, and we were left alone once again.
“Pip? You see that?” asked Flick, rubbing his curly brown hair out of his eyes as he looked up toward the top beams of the tent.
“Yeah. Why’d you think I woke you up? I think it’s David again,” I said quickly, making sure Bruce could hear. In a moment, Bruce was sitting upright and was crouched by the edge of his tent, listening intently.
“You sure it was him? It might’ve been someone passing by,” suggested Bruce.
“I’m not sure, but I don’t know if it would be anyone else other than him,” I replied hastily, hoping I hadn’t raised the alarm for no particular reason.
“Well, did you see where he went?” asked Bruce. His hand lowered and, without hesitation, I stepped on and sat up on top of his shoulder so we could speak quickly and quietly without others hearing.
“No, but hopefully he’ll go bother someone else,” I said as softly as I could into Bruce’s ear.
“All the same, I think we should get out of here. Maybe it was him and maybe not. Regardless, we should get moving anyway. Besides, unless he really wants something of mine, David won’t follow,” said Bruce. I nodded in agreement, even though he couldn’t see me directly. “I’m going to fill up my water container and then we’ll be off.”
Without another word, Bruce quickly packed up his things and dismantled the tent, setting everything into his pack. The water spicket was only sixty or so feet away, which was quite a fair distance for a pet like me and my fellow companions, but it was, as Bruce would say, a “stone’s throw,” away from us. He would be gone from us for maybe thirty seconds and David was nowhere in sight, which was a relief.
“I’ll be right back,” he reassured as he moved quickly to the water spicket with his collection of empty containers.
The others and myself assumed our positions along his bag, slipping into pockets and securing our lines onto the edges of his bag, all while keeping an eye out for anyone approaching. My eyes were pealed sharp. I was keeping a close eye out – or so I thought.
One moment, my eyes were fixed on the nomadic campsite and Bruce mere steps away. In the next moment, the bag we were all on was being hoisted up into the air, jostling with the force of someone running away quickly. My head whipped around and felt my insides drop as I recognized the dark, matted hair on David’s head. I heard the others cry out indistinctly, and I knew in an instant we were in trouble.
Doing the only thing I could think of, I called out as loud as I could for the one person who I knew would be able to help.
“Bruce!” I shouted at the top of my lungs. “Bruce!”
Did he hear me? Did he even notice? All I knew was that I had to hang on within an inch of my life as my friends and I were jostled, thrown and bounced within an inch of our lives. My once broken arm ached with the force with which I tried clinging to the bag.
The nomadic campsite vanished from view as the thief darted from street to street with us in tow. A sick, churning feeling seized my insides. What was going to happen to us if Bruce didn’t follow or find us in time? More importantly, how were we going to help Bruce find his things and find us?
I didn’t have to worry or think for very long. Once we were a few streets over, David stopped running and threw the bag carelessly on the ground. We landed hard against the pavement, making my bones ache. The others cried out too, but I couldn’t see them from where I was on the top of the bag. Something else seized my attention – literally.
I was pinched harshly between the grubby fingers of the thieving human and was hoisted up into the air. I could smell the decay off of David’s breath as he squinted at me.
“Ah, I forgot about you little twerps,” he muttered. I glared up at him and squirmed in his grip, trying to get free.
“Get off of me and leave Bruce’s things alone!” I demanded. My insides were suddenly squeezed within an inch of my life. I gasped for air, trying to remember how to bring air back into my lungs.
“You making demands of me, pet?” he scoffed. “Squeaking and mewling all of your complaints. It’s a wonder why he keeps vermin like you around. I think I’ll do him a favor and exterminate the lot of you. One less mouth to feed.”
I felt his fingers start to tense around me again. My vision started to blacken. Every part of me screamed, and a shout of pain escaped my own body. The others were shouting, demanding for me to be released, but it did nothing for me. My vision darkened and I could see nothing.
Suddenly, I was completely weightless. What was going on? Was this dying? A jostled landing and a sudden relief let me bring air into my lungs again. I felt hands my size tapping my face and grasping onto my shoulders once feeling returned to my body.
I also heard a roaring shout from a voice I recognized all too well.
“Let go of her! And leave us alone!” shouted Bruce. There were sounds of dull thudding as David tried to fight back.
“Ow! Stop it! I was just looking after your stuff. I was afraid someone would st-”
“I’m not stupid! You picked the wrong guy to mess with! Don’t you ever come near my friends again, you hear me?” Bruce roared as his blurry form pounded David with his fists. David began to stumble away and retreat, wiping the blood away from his lips.
“Geez! They’re just vermin. They don’t feel…” Bruce grabbed the nearest rock and hucked it at David’s head as the other human ran away.
“If you ever compare them to vermin again, I'll beat the s*** outta you!” yelled Bruce. Thankfully, my vision returned in time to see the faces of the other three and Bruce hovering above me.
“Are you alright?” asked Flick as he began checking out my once injured arm. Volley lifted me up just enough for Bruce to lift me up into his palm. I sank into the warmth of his fingers.
“I’ll be fine,” I moaned, clutching my sides that I knew would have finger shaped bruises on them.
“Not until we’re far away from here,” Bruce muttered. “Come on. We need to get going before David decides to come back.”
We loaded up once again on the bag while Bruce carried me in his hand until I was well enough to sit up on my own on his shoulder. It wasn’t until we were several hours into our walk that I realized that I hadn’t thanked Bruce. I looked up and over at him, leaning into the crook of his neck and tugged on his earlobe to get his attention.
“Hey, Bruce. I meant to say it earlier, but thank you,” I said.
“It’s nothing,” said Bruce. “It’s the least I could do for a friend.”
I smiled to myself and curled in tighter. Bruce reached up and gently brushed his fingers against my side.
Friend.
What a human term, but what could be more fitting for us and our merry band.
The days were long, but we soon found ourselves on the doorstep of Bruce’s mentor and friend. The vet was an interesting man, but we – the other pets – took a liking to him almost instantly. We also took a liking to, as he called them, “house guests,” which were other pets like the three of us. Settling in took no time but, at the end of the day, there was no place I would rather be than by Bruce’s side, nestled into his neck as I had done for so long.
Humans are such interesting beings, capable of great evil and kindness. I was blessed enough to find one who knew cruelty and chose kindness instead.
We all have a choice, and now I choose to be happy.
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cluelesspigeons · 9 months
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This is written for the song “Little person” by Matt Maltese from @drarrymicrofic
Word count: 133
Drarry microfic: enjoying life
Harry spread his arms, closing his eyes. The wind around them was loud yet cold, though the hot sun beating down on them made it bearable.
“What are you doing?” Draco asked wearily.
Harry opened one eye and looked at Draco, a broad smile dancing around his lips. “I’m enjoying life.”
Draco raised an eyebrow. “Enjoying life? By standing in this field with your arms spread like that?”
“Mhm.” Harry nodded and turned his head away again. “You should try it some time.”
Huffing indignantly, Draco crossed his arms over his chest. “I do enjoy life, thank you very much.”
Next to him, Harry chuckled. He let his arms fall to his sides again and leaned closer to Draco, their lips almost touching. “I’m glad I found you again after all that time.”
Prompt from April 21st
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silver-splinted · 3 months
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Hey everyone *stares at instagram and tiktok users* let’s maybe NOT comment on people with dwarfism’s posts “omg steven hawking would love you” and stuff like that.
I get it. Shock value. “Omg disabled person likes weird nsfw stuff omg”. However, let’s not forget:
number one: disabled people can have sex lives
number two: yeah, it was a weird thing, which is why I expect jokes to be made about it
number three: maybe focus on people who are still alive who were on the island?? and the weird stuff they did?
number four: don’t be weird about it on little people’s posts. it would be EXTREMELY uncomfortable to get posts constantly reminding you of how a certain part of your identity (oftentimes considered a disability) is fetishised. They are posting content of their everyday lives, of activism, of education, of joy. And some people decide “omg what a funny thing to comment!!”.
And yes. Some people are commenting “just what steven ordered” on minor’s pages. What the fuck.
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♡♡♡ life's been good ♡♡♡ happy belated TDOV
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(they them for me, closest to camera, he/him for my partner, t4t, d4d)
Photo description: two selfies in a pink lit room, the first of me smiling; I have dwarfism and dark green curly hair, a beard, a gold vertical medusa piercing and septum ring. The second photo is of me with my tongue out as my partner peeks in the room from the door in the background. I am white and my partner is Portuguese, both our skin looks light pink in this photo. He has a brown mullet that's parted in the middle, a grey sweater and black plad pj pants. He holds a bong in one hand and the door knob in the other, smiling at the camera.
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🌻 The beginnings of spring in my lil life 🌻
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isabellevillosa · 6 months
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“Over the seven jeweled hills, beyond the seventh wall, in the cottage of the seven dwarfs, dwells Snow White, fairest one of all.” - Snow White
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patox-world · 2 years
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Looking for a snack?
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lilmamas1 · 1 year
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Tanya Tehanna
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the-kitty-hell-system · 7 months
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hi im a paraglegic little person cancer patient with brain damage and many many many other shit. I SMOKE WEED RAGAGAHAHHHHHH🔥🔥🔥🔥 I HEART WEED 420 YEAHH!!!!! im a lesbian i looove women women girls girls women women nonmen nonbinary ppl trans girls girls women females yeees!!!
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I have always thought of myself as fully able bodied and it took me decades to fully realize and accept that everyone around me views me through the lens of disability at all times because of my one visible difference. I just thought everyone was really weird and condescending for normal reasons.
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