[Image Description: A photo of a white woman bound with rope to a wheelchair. She is wearing a blindfold and she is grinning like an idiot. /end Image Description]
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[Image Description: A photo of a white woman bound with rope to a wheelchair. She is wearing a blindfold and she is grinning like an idiot. /end Image Description]

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
Something we don’t really talk about on this account is that we’re a wheelchair user. And today, after four years of fighting insurance, our custom wheelchair finally got approved!!!! It will be here in 4-6 weeks!! It’s our first big kid wheelchair after using a busted hospital chair for so long. Here’s a wheelchair user regressor moodboard!!!
in honor of disability pride month & my one year anniversary of becoming a wheelchair user, here's a list of weird and/or unexpected benefits I've encountered of using a wheelchair!
-getting to wear uncomfortable shoes, high heels, shoes that are too small or too big, etc, without pain
-never having to deal with painful thigh chafing
-never having to look for a chair or stand at a benchless bus stop
-being my own shopping cart at the grocery store
-carrying heavy bags no longer hurting my arms & back cause I can just put them on the back of the chair or in my lap
-getting to use underchair bags to sneak things into venues that don't typically allow bags >:)
-underchair bags also make me basically impossible to pickpocket
-i no longer experience height dysphoria cause literally nobody knows how tall i am
-no longer getting hip/thigh dysphoria either cause all sitting down legs kinda look the same
-being always a perfect dog petting height
-always having a lap available for a kitty
-wrapping myself up in blankets when it gets cold and staying way cozier than my walking friends
-always having a cushion with me if i need one
-never having to walk on hot pavement (only relevant if I'm barefoot but still)
-the list can go on! rb with your own little bits of disabled joy!
It's not "wasting my spoons" if I'm having a good time and enjoying myself.
I love you amputees with prosthetics covered in stickers. I love you cane and crutch users with colorful and stylized walking aids. I love you wheelchair users with decorative spokes and lights on your wheels. I love you people who wear joint supports or braces with designs on them, whether you bought or commissioned them that way or customized them yourself. I love you people who wear helmets covered in sharpie doodles. I love you mobility aid and adaptive device users who make your equipment your own to truly reflect that it's an extension of yourself. I love disabled joy and whimsy.

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
EVERYBODY STOP WHAT YOURE DOING I HAVE THE BEST NEWS! I GOT A WHEELCHAIR!!!!!!!! I CAN LEAVE THE HOUSE ALONE AGAIN, I CAN BE SAFE AND INDEPENDENT AND HAPPY AND SEE MY FRIENDS AND HAVE A LIFE AGAIN!!!!!!
Get baby wiped, idiot
The narrative that “you should care about disabled people because one day that’ll be you” is ableist in and of itself.
You should care about disabled people’s rights because you should care about the disenfranchisement of a marginalized community.
Becoming disabled is not a punishment. Becoming disabled is not a threat. Becoming disabled is not cosmic retaliation for being ableist. Becoming disabled is morally neutral.