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#apecon
coinrehberim · 2 years
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En Popüler Metaverse Altcoin Kritik Seviyede! › CoinTürk
En Popüler Metaverse Altcoin Kritik Seviyede! › CoinTürk
Okuma zamanı: 3 Dakika Güçlü toplulukları ve geleceğe yönelik iddialı hedefleri ile öne çıkan Metaverse altcoinleri, yatırımcılarına ciddi kazanımlar getirdi. Bunların en popüleri bu yıl piyasaya çıkan ApeCon (APE) ve kritik. Peki APE yatırımcılarını neler bekliyor? Kritik seviyeler, güncellenmiş görünüm ve daha fazlası. Detaylar burada. ApeCoin (APE) ApeCoin (MAYMUN), 29 Nisan’da ATH seviyesine…
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galwaygremlin · 3 years
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Didn’t want to derail the last post because it was talking about physical issues/disabilities, but doctors totally have biases and preconceived notions about how much developmentally disabled people are “supposed” to know about our conditions.
When I was going through the diagnostic process for autism, the psychiatrist was surprised I knew what the DSM was. Granted, at sixteen I was the oldest child being evaluated in that office, but still. I’d been informally diagnosed a year beforehand, and she didn’t think I knew what the DSM was? That was the first thing I checked for information when I heard the word “autism”. Another evaluator expressed surprise when I knew what one of the tests was, the impulsivity test they do on the computer. It’s not like I’d even done extensive research on the test; it was something I’d read about in passing.
Neither of those kept me from a diagnosis. But each time, I felt like I’d slipped up somehow, like they were going to say I wasn’t “disabled enough” because I had two basic reference points for the tests they were doing on me.
They also wouldn’t explain anything to me, like I wasn’t possibly capable of understanding. If you regularly work with curious children and you can’t explain to a sixteen year old what’s going on with them in a way they can understand, you’re not doing your job right.
Pivoting slightly, I experience a looooooot of symptoms of (C)PTSD. And coping skills/tips I’ve found for people who have PTSD help me a lot. But because I live in a relatively stable two-parent household, my therapist just told me to stay off of google when I brought it up. Said there was no way I had it and all my experiences could be explained away by my autism. She also didn’t want me to talk about childhood Bad Times, which makes me... ehh. Seems sketchy.
Medical professionals’ attitudes toward those of us with developmental disabilities and mental illnesses force us to pretend we don’t know anything and we’re relying on them for all possible knowledge about the conditions we live with every day, which creates an unpleasant power imbalance (or illusion of power imbalance) and doesn’t allow us to just describe what’s going on and get evaluated/diagnosed/treated for it. There’s some kind of stigma that patients are always lying to doctors and doctors have a responsibility to root out the lies, even if there are none. They block every question, every concern, every personal observation that a patient has that looks like a lie to the doctor because it doesn’t fit into their narrative of what’s going on.
Disabled people don’t deserve to be constantly up against that power structure at every appointment. It’s not fair to us. The burden of understanding and managing our conditions is always on us, but when we DO understand, we’re discredited for it.
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Micro session
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agrimesstudio · 4 years
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Everything is all set and ready to go for Altus Pop Expo this weekend! If you are in the area, stop by and check it out! In the meantime here is a recent commission I did of All Might from My Hero Academia! More on the way! #agrimesstudio #altuspopexpo #apecon #allmight #allmightfanart #allmightart #myheroacademia #myheroacademiafanart #artworks #digital_art #comiccon #altusoklahoma (at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma) https://www.instagram.com/p/B9HsIoGACgM/?igshid=1t49lbci7oh2
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studysnooze · 6 years
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HELP?! :’)
I’m planning on taking AP Econ next year and I want to get ahead by studying this summer. Do you recommend I use blank paper and file it in a binder, loose leaf paper and also file it or have a completely separate notebook and just have 2 notebooks next year for econ? I’m honestly not so hot about the notebook idea but I’m open to hearing any thoughts anyone has
Thankss xx
Nonso
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bujo-study-art-blog · 5 years
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Who's taking AP Econ this year? (These are just class notes so they're not the best:) #apecon #apeconomics #notes #studynotes #studygram #study #studymotivation #economics https://www.instagram.com/p/B1zo1InAJ_F/?igshid=zxymsdal5lvx
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lofeel · 4 years
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saripleats · 7 years
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1.10.2017 I haven't posted in forever but i think im gonna start
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robbstaarks · 7 years
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mutuals send me a 🌠 and i’ll tell you three things i associate you with
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theroseofmypeople · 4 years
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Just finished my last two days of starting college. Thought about them and realized I miss my old APECON teacher asking if we are alive today at the beginning of class everyday. I just miss his class in general.
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badgetoon · 7 years
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#apecon new exercises to draw and think! http://ift.tt/2xljJlJ
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galwaygremlin · 3 years
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Day 4, I missed yesterday because of ~ pain ~ but the prompt was what topics surrounding autism don’t get discussed enough
First of all I’m gonna link everyone here because I agree with all of it but I don’t know how to phrase things that well.
As for my answer, I guess I have two? Things I personally wish were talked about more because they’re relevant to my life, and things that should just get more attention and platform in general.
Personal:
1. How to live on your own as an autistic person. I know most of us don’t do that, but I have to in a few months, and I’m scrambling for preemptive solutions, tips, resources, anything I can use to keep myself afloat. I’m not really functional enough to do so but my choices are move out or get really really sick in my parents’ house because they won’t let me see a doctor.
2. Leading off from that, I think most of the focus when people talk about autism in a family setting goes to parents. Parents are praised for doing the bare minimum for their autistic kids, no matter what age the kid is or what their needs are. I’ve been told by a psychiatric professional that I should be grateful my family “puts up with me” because I “can’t have been easy to raise”. This person also refused to talk about my childhood at all, so I don’t know where they got that idea. It’s really hard to grow up autistic! Especially when you’re undiagnosed and/or unaccommodated! I’m not saying we deserve credit or praise for the stuff we have to go through, but I am saying that we should stop acting like autistic kids are a huge burden and we get everything made so easy for us while our parents suffer. Even when we’re not living in outright abusive or neglectful homes, we still experience trauma and negative things that allistic or NT kids wouldn’t.
3. Medical ableism. If you’re autistic, no matter what your abilities are, whether you have comorbid disorders, whether you’re physically or intellectually disabled as well, whether you’re self-diagnosed or pro-dx’ed, you are going to have a Bad Time trying to get help for anything. All the paperwork in doctor’s offices is really confusing, and in my experience people get annoyed when you ask questions about it. If the doctor knows you’re autistic, they refuse to believe you when you talk about symptoms, and/or they try to attribute everything to your autism. They’re more likely to label you as a “difficult” patient or get frustrated with you. They will talk over you and refuse to explain things and get mad when you look up explanations. I’m sure there are autistic people with good experiences getting healthcare, but I’m not one of them and I know it’s not common. That goes for mental and physical healthcare. (If anyone has tips on dealing with this I would love to hear them)
General:
1. People who have intellectual disabilities as well as autism, how IDs interact with/affect autistic traits, listening to and lifting up ID voices. This is in the link I put up there, but it bears repeating.
2. Autism and gender identity, and LGBTQ+ identities in general. I want to hear more people talking about intersectionality, accessibility in queer spaces, their experiences growing up and as adults, what their identities mean to them.
3. The barriers that BIPOC face in the diagnostic process. Medical ableism and racism combine to make it difficult, sometimes impossible, for autistic people of color to get diagnosis, therapy, accommodations, etc. We need to be talking about this more.
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I love studying, but we’re at the point where all the teachers are giving more work than they ever could’ve crammed into a 45-minute windowing and using COVID-19 as an excuse to do so. I understand they need to prove we’re working consistently but it’s getting out of hand at this point.
Patiently waiting until Friday to hear about the new AP testing dates and seeing how I divy up test taking and revision
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galwaygremlin · 3 years
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Ngl ive been reading your apecon tag as “ape con”. Like, a con for apes. Or maybe about apes. Idk. It never occurred to me that it was supposed to be AP Econ.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
kdfjalksdj i figured it could be read that way but it’s quicker and easier to type that than ‘political theory’ or ‘things to checkmate my idiot classmates with’
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ap macroecon practice 📝
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