ooii, você poderia fazer alguns users com o nome bianca por favor?? agradeceria de coração 😩😩💗
biancista
biatopie
biancatopia
biasauros
selfbia
webbias
biancatale
biancatie
espero que goste, meu bem!! <3
(desculpa a demora)
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Naturally it changes between microphones but what do you usually hear when you record yourself that you don't hear in your own head
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A thought about Ableism* as a visibly disabled / mobility impaired person
*That is: the cultural habit of Forgetting Disabled People Exist, as opposed Disablism, which is Actively Discriminating Against Disabled People.
It is incredibly difficult to navigate through a crowd in a wheelchair (such as making your way to your table in a busy restaurant, or maneuvering through the ticket line at the movie theater**).
"Excuse me!"
"Coming through!"
"Watch your toes!"
"Excuse me!"
"Behind you!"
"Watch your toes!"
"Coming through on your left (right)!"
"Watch your toes!"
Becomes almost a patter song until you're in free space again. Most people are gracious about it, and shift without making a fuss or grumbling; many will even smile and say "Excuse me" back. And for most of my life I've just accepted this as normal, because those people were all standing, and I was moving through the crowd below their eye level, so it was only natural that they wouldn't (as readily) notice I'm there. Right?
But then I realized: Everyone notices when a nondisabled kid is moving through the crowd, and they shift to make room, automatically, without even consciously aware that they're doing it.
And my face and the kid's face are at the same height. So the "eye level" explanation just doesn't make sense.
Deeply ingrained ableism does, however.
And this also shows how ableism is different from active maliciousness. Never once, even on my most frustrating days, have I suspected people in a crowd of deliberately blocking my path because they don't want me to be there. But it's like I'm the person in the gorilla suit, walking through a staged basketball game, in one of those "Selective Attention Tests;" mainstream culture primes people to pay attention to those with a normate identity, so they just don't see disabled people as part of The Public™.
Ableism itself is not actively discriminatory. But it does make active, bigoted discrimination a whole lot easier.
**getting out of the line, once you have your tickets is especially trick; wheelchair users can't sidestep, and people tend to crowd behind you.
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new bibi or bia users please? thank u!❤️✨
── ◜✧◞ bibi / bia! ﹕ᶻz
bibiyooni / ska3bibi / bibi-ltca / danzbibii
bialuns / meiebia / biaceris / shuubia
bibisored / mightbibi / bibiveng / colbibii
biamisf / zybi-a / biazqaps / clonbia
sorry if you waited long for these! did double the amount just in case <3
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I dont want to change my url quite yet cause it simply fucks too hard but poughkeepsies I miss you I miss you so bad
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