466 words 4 minute read If you've read Tonia Says over the years, I know you'll recognize who I'm interviewing next. I first blogged about...
One Nice Bug Per Day
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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dirt enthusiast
Jules of Nature
TVSTRANGERTHINGS


Janaina Medeiros
NASA

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Discoholic đŞŠ

oozey mess
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
đŞź
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

shark vs the universe
RMH
d e v o n

@theartofmadeline

Andulka
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466 words 4 minute read If you've read Tonia Says over the years, I know you'll recognize who I'm interviewing next. I first blogged about...

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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316 words 2 minute read We're back again this week with another opportunity to unpack what "I can't" means to disabled people. This week, I...
512 words 4 minute read I'm still floored by -- and so grateful for -- all the responses I got from my friends in the disabled community on ...
462 words 4 minute read âI canât.â Sarah says, and the words taste like victory in her mouth. Growing up unallowed to say the C word, Sarah ...
1,162 words 9 minute read âHow come you can advocate so well for other people, but you canât do it for you?â â[Self]-advocacy only counts if...

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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1,029 words 8 minute read I'm thirteen years old, when I visit a wave pool for the first time. "Do you want to get in?" I do. I get help in...
668 words 5 minute read We've all been there. Somebody was just super ableist, or "nicely" ableist, or somewhere public was not as accessibl...
932 words 7 minute read I'm a part of a couple CP groups and follow several pages by parents about CP, and I tend to see the same questions ...
For fans of the Disuphere universe...
QUITE ALIVE - (Book 10 in the series!) - Sam Jensen thinks her relationship with her older sister Sarah is âlong-deadâ â damaged by years of absence and misunderstandings. But like Samâs favorite book âThe Secret Gardenâ she hopes that with care and attention, sheâll find it âquite alive.â
2,847 words 22 minute read Read with caution "So, you have a little bit of White Coat Syndrome..." "Well, I don't like going to the doctor e...

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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2,243 words 17 minute read A few years ago, I was approached by a nondisabled parent about their child's upcoming transitional IEP into midd...
1,009 words 8 minute read TW: Emotional abuse of a child I'm in eighth grade. I'm trying to keep quiet about school. I can usually get Bs a...
1,470 words 11 minute read If you know me, you know it doesn't take much for me to nerd out and talk about writing. Since I'm between proje...
Guys I laughed waaaaaaaaaay harder than I should have.
I received one message I wont publish because it wasnât politely written, but the gist of it is that this person doesnât understand how all these people canât recognize theyâre being abused, and I can offer some insight to that.
When youâre born into an abusive family, you donât get an idea of what life is like outside that family. Itâs the family that tells you who you are, what is normal, what you deserve, your interactions with your family and relatives are all you have to go on, and what makes your normal.
In abusive families, grooming to accept abuse starts pretty early â they will touch you against your consent and argue you down that itâs normal, theyâll tell you that youâre supposed to take beatings because you deserve them, and it will make you stronger, also everyone else actually has it worse and youâre lucky to have such good family.
So what are you going to do? Ask around? Your parents already have you instructed ânot to talk about things that go on in the family to not embarrass yourselfâ and a lot of traumatic things that happened to you are too painful to talk about, or youâve completely erased them from your memory because they were too much to process. They tell you that all âoverly cruelâ things are only happening because you caused them, you wanted it, and the parents are victims who just had to do it. Or, your parents are misunderstood and trying their best and you are the evil unconsiderate child who refuses to understand.
Some of the things you canât tell theyâre not normal, like parentification, it feels like being useful and recognized as an adult and giving emotional support to your family members, you feel needed. If your parent is telling you itâs normal to be in your bathroom while youâre naked or sleep in the same bed with you, how are you going to know itâs not? Even sexual abuse can just feel like warm physical contact that doesnât hurt at the time, you canât tell how bad youâre being violated, you donât know the consequences. Nobody tells you itâs not normal.
These people decide what your life is like, they decide what the normal is. And theyâre the most important people in your life, youâre bonded to them, you want to make them happy, you want them to appreciate you, you go along with whatever they want, youâre a child and you want to believe they only want the best for you and theyâd never harm you for no reason.
And society backs this up, regardless of how badly youâre hurt by your parents, go tell someone youâre mad at them, youâll hear 'oh, they didnât mean it, they only want the best for you, donât act like a child.â
For some of us, weâve been told from very early on that weâre worthless, that we donât matter, so by addition, anything done to us canât be abuse because we donât matter enough to be abused. We feel like weâre stupid to even consider we might be abused, because that signifies relevance that we donât have. Some of us are told itâs only the matter of us being weak, because everyone else is treated all the same and only we are complaining and being sensitive about it. Thatâs the context of where the abuse happens, in our inexperienced childhood life where everything that happens is what defines the normal, you could be living in complete hell and believe 'oh thats just a normal lifeâ.
For me personally, it was incredibly hard to recognize that everyone else wasnât tortured like I was, wasnât facing the same terror or judgment or pressure, I couldnât see children being loved or safe, and I was conditioned to believe that anything more loving than what I had was 'spoilingâ and 'making them weak.â It was a very painful hit for me to acknowledge I had led a very different life than everyone around me. Most people resist realizations that are this painful.
You also have to consider, in our minds, a lot of the more serious traumas feel far apart from each other, separated by periods of 'what we think is normal and okayâ, and we try to forget the trauma, to shut it out, to believe it wasnât real or wasnât meant to destroy us. When a person comes to list out their most serious traumatic events to ask if itâs abuse, weâre suddenly getting  a picture of the worst moments of their life, everything theyâve tried to repress for so long. It takes courage to write this out; you start sweating, your hands get shaky, you feel like youâre doing something forbidden, youâre trusting someone to help you put in context the worst experiences of your life.
Another person reading it without context can easily tell itâs abuse. But the person with the context sees a different picture, and thereâs a strong bond with the abuser, grooming, pain of realization, pain of remembering, guilt for thinking itâs abuse, fear theyâre over exaggerating it, fear theyâve just betrayed their loved oneâs worst moments, fear of how they will look at the end of it, fear theyâll be turned away when they bravely asked for their worst experiences to be seen.
Itâs really hard to tell when youâre being abused when youâre the one itâs happening to. It takes finding a place where your feelings about it might be allowed, and where you feel safe talking about it. I admire the courage of everyone who shared theirs with me, and I understand why you couldnât see it or didnât know it was abuse. Neither could I.
Both of these are great points too, I forgot how shameful it feels to be abused; because youâre stripped of your dignity, itâs inhumane whatâs being done to you and it makes you feel less human. You donât want anyone to know that youâve had your dignity violated, you donât want anyone to even imagine that being done to you, itâs humiliating.
For me, itâs always been shameful that violence could break me and fear of death would override my personality, I thought everyone would think I was weak, and I was sure that if anyone saw me broken, theyâd be disgusted and grossed out, like my parents were.
Itâs impossible for a child to understand or explain why their parents would do horrible things to them without feeling ashamed, guilty, scared, humiliated, undignified, and incredibly vulnerable, because this can now be used against you, to hurt you.
Thereâs also a strong understanding that were it to happen to someone else, it would be abuse! But youâre groomed from early on to believe youâre supposed to take it and be strong about it and not whine because you deserve it and if you complain youâre a weakling.You feel like less than others, because youâve been treated like less for all your life, and you canât reasonably doubt that every single person in your family is wrong. So you doubt yourself. It makes more sense that the world is right about you, and youâre helpless to fight it.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
396 words 3 minute read I'm sure that even if you haven't been around disabled people, you've heard of at least one book on this list. That...
My interview with disabled blogger Tonia of Tonia Says as a part of GeekDis, where she joins me to discuss disability representation in pop culture.