artist, writer, musician/vocalist, chef, and gamer. i love cats, coffee, horror, fashion, music, and gardening. disabled warrior losing the battle against disability 💪 i'm blunt and direct and that’s the only warning you’ll get.
landback, free palestine, black lives matter.
this blog has a zero tolerance policy for racism, (trans)misogyny, ableism, & zionism. no apologia for or fetishization of pedophilia or incest allowed. i block liberally and do not unblock so don't ask.
anon is off. askbox response time varies as my inbox is 3500+. mutuals can have my discord.
endo friendly, i block anti endo blogs. system details are private and only disclosed at my discretion.
no minors. softblock to break mutuals is preferred. if you shit talk me behind my back i will find out so just block me.
❌ zenos and edelgard fans need not apply ❌
last updated june 2026
if you're reading this you fell for my trap. look at zahe'ir 👇
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Remember when Xbox was going to basically ban used games for the xbox one, and Playstation made fun of them with that video titled "how to share games on Playstation" and it was just one guy handing another a game disk? And now Playstation is getting rid of physical disks entirely
In case anyone hasn't heard, the cyclospora outbreak affecting tons of people in the US right now is coming from Taylor Farms produce. Best to stay away from bagged lettuce and prepared salads completely right now, but especially the ones mentioned in the screenshot:
Taylor Farms
Earthbound Farms
Little Salad Bar (Aldi)
Marketside (Walmart)
Kroger House Brand
Target private label greens
Costco salads and greens etc
Trader Joe's chopped salad kits and fresh produce
Fast food: McDonalds, Taco Bell, (Yum! Brands), Chipotle, Subway, Pizza Hut, KFC, Olive Garden, Top Golf, Red Lobster, Burger King, etc.
This is not the first time I've heard about a Taylor Farms foodborne illness outbreak. I stopped eating their salads after reading a description of the conditions in their facilities. Doesn't sound like they've improved anything.
We need a fully funded and staffed FDA, and regulations with teeth - and that's exactly what we don't have under Trump. To make things worse, the CDC is no longer tracking these outbreaks. We're on our own.
hey, it's lucian again. the last post is still gaining reblogs, but not donations. im still disabled, still not scheduled for work, still without medicaid coverage, still in debt.
if you haven't heard my story by now, i was hospitalized for a week last april after a particularly bad seizure, and i haven't quite been able to recover since. my roommate works full time and while i've worked whenever and wherever i've been physically able to, i've still been reliant on good will and donations for over a year now to pay the bills. and now without medicaid, which im working tireless to get back, i can't access or afford my seizure prevention or pain medications, or update my vaccines.
im still taking direct donations through my paypal, but i now have a formal gofundme up with an adaptive goal that will increase to encompass what i listed there: the next 2 month's worth of rent, my current credit debt balance, and an additional allotment for major costs such as my phone and electric bills.
I am a transgender disabled man attempting to survive unstable employm… Lucian Hartway needs your support for Help Disabled Trans Man Affo
as ever, im immensely grateful for all the help that has been given to me here on tumblr over the last year, and for all the emotional support that has been shared with me and my household. my dream remains to stabilize my life, and work towards returning to a point where i can give back financially to the community that has helped me so much in recent years.
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my close family member is going through a crisis right now; due to an error in paperwork, its SSDI isn't going to arrive until later and it is currently $700 in the negatives. i'm making a donation post on its behalf, as it relies on the SSDI for living costs due to both physical and mental disability. if you want to help a chronically disabled gay and trans person this disability pride month, please consider sharing this post and donating.
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"Six weeks into the term, I assigned my rhetoric and writing students a 20-page article. It was the same length I had assigned for five years and the same length I had read without complaint as an undergraduate a decade ago. Not one student finished it.
When I asked why, a student answered honestly: It was too long, and she kept losing track of what the paper was about. This was not a remedial class: These were students who had cleared the admissions process and written essays good enough to get them here. Yet a routine academic reading assignment had defeated them.
Every generation of professors has complained that their students cannot read. The lament is usually overblown, but data have caught up to anecdote, and what I am seeing in my classroom is no longer a hunch. There is a measurable, generational collapse in sustained reading and writing, and the academy is responding to it with improvisation and exhaustion rather than the structural overhaul it requires.
In February 2024, Adam Kotsko, who teaches in the Shimer Great Books School at North Central College, wrote in Slate that students who once handled 30 pages of reading per class meeting now seem “intimidated by anything over 10 pages and seem to walk away from readings of as little as 20 pages with no real understanding.” Crucially, he added that this is “not a matter of laziness on the part of the students” but of underlying skills they were never given a chance to build.
The Chronicle of Higher Education’s 2024 investigation found the same pattern across institutions as different as the Stevens Institute of Technology and Wellesley College, where the average SAT exceeds 1400. Nicholaus Gutierrez, an assistant professor at Wellesley, told The Chronicle that the baseline for what students consider a reasonable amount of work has dropped so noticeably that he has cut his readings accordingly; a 750-word essay now strikes many students as long. At Stevens, the science and technology studies associate professor Theresa MacPhail described following the mantra of “meet your students where they are” for so long that she has begun to feel “like a cruise director organizing games of shuffleboard.”
Worse, the national data tell the same story in colder language. On the 2011 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) writing assessment, which is the most recent comprehensive writing benchmark, only 24 percent of 12th graders reached the Proficient level, and just 3 percent reached Advanced; another 21 percent scored below Basic. The reading side of the ledger is worse, and getting worse fast: The 2024 NAEP results released in September 2025 show 12th-grade reading scores at the lowest level recorded since the assessment began in 1992. Thirty-two percent of 12th graders now score below NAEP Basic in reading, meaning that, in the assessment’s own language, they likely “cannot draw general conclusions based on concepts presented explicitly in a text.” And yet more than half of these same seniors reported being accepted to a four-year college. That last sentence is the whole problem in one line: We are admitting a cohort that cannot read at a college level and are pretending otherwise.
Why is this happening? One reason, of course, is smartphones.
I came into teaching as a skeptic of the anti-smartphone argument: I had a phone in my pocket throughout high school and college in the 2010s, and I read long books anyway. I now think I was wrong, because the neuroscience has caught up. In a 2017 paper, Adrian F. Ward and colleagues at the University of Texas at Austin’s McCombs School of Business showed that the mere presence of a participant’s smartphone — whether that be face down, powered off, untouched, or across the desk out of vision — measurably reduces available working memory and fluid intelligence on cognitive tests, with the largest effects on the most phone-dependent users. A 2022 study by Motoyasu Honma and colleagues at Japan’s Showa University used near-infrared spectroscopy to compare reading on a smartphone with reading the same passage on paper, and found that smartphone reading produced overactivity in the prefrontal cortex, suppressed sigh generation, and led to general lower comprehension scores; the authors argued that the sigh inhibition and prefrontal overload were causally linked to the comprehension decline.
So when a student tells me they “kept losing track” of a 20-page article, I have to acknowledge that they may be describing a measurable neurological condition. The neural pathways that support sustained attention are built by use, and they atrophy without it. Your body is a use-it-or-lose-it system, and the brain is no exception.
Another reason for the decline in student reading capability is increasing reliance on generative AI. In June 2025, Nataliya Kosmyna and colleagues at the MIT Media Lab released a preprint titled “Your Brain on ChatGPT.” They divided 54 participants into three groups writing SAT-style essays — one using ChatGPT, the second group using a search engine, the last group using nothing — and monitored brain activity with a 32-channel EEG. The ChatGPT group showed the lowest neural connectivity of the three, with up to 55 percent reduced connectivity compared with the brain-only group, and “consistently underperformed at neural, linguistic, and behavioral levels.” Eighty-three percent of LLM users could not quote a single line from essays they had written minutes earlier. When the LLM group was forced to write without AI in a follow-up session, their brain activity did not bounce back to baseline; the researchers coined the term “cognitive debt” for the lingering deficit.
This is the first neurophysiological evidence that early reliance on LLMs measurably alters the brain’s engagement with writing tasks, and it is consistent with what those of us in front of classrooms are watching happen in real time. When I assign analysis, I am not trying to extract a polished product; I am trying to put the student’s mind through resistance in order to make it stronger. Offloading the struggle to a chatbot does not “free students up for higher-order work.” It deprives them of building the strength to do any substantial cognitive work at all.
There is a final factor that is contributing to this decline in reading skills, and that is that the students arriving in my classroom today are the first cohort to have experienced Common Core-influenced reading instruction across the entirety of their K–12 schooling. Whatever the standards’ original intent, the on-the-ground implementation in many districts replaced sustained reading with the practice of pulling “evidence” from disconnected short passages, the same format used on the standardized tests that increasingly determine school funding. The education scholar Natalie Wexler, among others, has documented this pivot in detail: Students drilled on “finding the main idea” in two-paragraph excerpts never build the stamina or background knowledge that longform reading requires. The pandemic then added fuel to a fire that was already burning. NAEP scores for 13-year-olds dropped sharply in 2022 and have not recovered. A 2023 EdWeek survey found that 24 percent of secondary-school administrators described pandemic learning loss in English and language arts as “severe or very severe.”
In July 2025, the journalist Mary Harrington argued in The New York Times that “thinking is becoming a luxury good.” The ability to read deeply and reason at length is fragmenting along class lines as ultra-processed digital media replaces text in everyday life, much as ultra-processed food has replaced cooking. Her longer treatment of the subject in First Things makes the more provocative case that we are witnessing the end of print culture itself, and with it the end of the cognitive substrate on which modern liberal democracy was built.
I see this stratification in the classroom and on the page every week. My students from districts that protected sustained reading through small class sizes, strict phone policies, and faculty who refused to teach to the test all arrive with their attention relatively intact. My students from districts that surrendered to devices and standardized testing arrive cognitively winded. A democracy that requires a literate electorate is now training one fraction of that electorate out of literacy while marketing to the other a “deep work” lifestyle as a luxury good. The students who cannot read a 20-page article today are the voters who will not be able to read a bill, or the jurors who cannot follow a closing argument, tomorrow.
I do what I can in my own classroom to address the problems. I break 20-page articles into two halves and assign the first half with explicit analytical tasks. I require exploratory writing before formal drafts. I model (visibly, on the board) how to track an argument across pages or distinguish a source’s claim from my own analysis. I make structured peer review explicit, because the workshop format I used to take for granted now collapses into “this is good” and “maybe add more details” the moment I step back.
But I want to be plain about the limits of what an individual instructor can do, and all of these solutions have costs. Scaffolding a 20-page article into halves compromises the integrity of the argument I am asking students to engage, just as modeling note-taking in a credit-bearing rhetoric course is using a college slot to teach a middle-school skill. None of the syllabi I teach are designed to deliver this type of cognitive rehabilitation, and pretending otherwise has produced credential inflation. We cannot keep conferring degrees on students who cannot do what the degree is supposed to certify.
I’m afraid I don’t have answers. I do, however, have some questions that may point us in the right direction. If higher education is going to respond to the reading crisis as a structural problem rather than a private burden carried by composition instructors and adjuncts, it has to stop avoiding the following questions: If a majority of incoming students cannot read at a level the curriculum requires, are we admitting students we cannot serve, or offering a curriculum we cannot provide?
Why are first-year writing and reading-intensive general-education courses still the most adjunctified, lowest-paid, highest-load corner of the university, at the precise moment when their work has become the most important work the institution does? What is the responsible institutional response for AI usage: Is it a syllabus statement, or a sequencing principle that requires students to demonstrate the cognitive work themselves before AI assistance is permitted?
Why are most college classrooms still phone-permissive by default? K–12 districts from Florida to California are now banning phones bell to bell; higher education has somehow lagged behind the public schools. Universities benefit from a pipeline they did not build and refuse to repair. What would it mean for a university system to invest seriously in the reading instruction happening in the high schools that feed it, rather than treating remediation as something to be quietly outsourced to first-year composition instructors?
The thing I am no longer willing to do is pretend this is a temporary adjustment period, or that “students will adapt.” They will not adapt on their own. The conditions that produced this collapse are still in place: the phones, the algorithmic feeds, the test-prep excerpts, staffing models that load the reading-intensive work onto the most precarious faculty, and now the chatbots that finish students’ sentences before they’ve even begun to think of them. If we want literate citizens, we will have to rebuild the conditions for literacy deliberately, against the grain of every incentive currently pointed the other way. I know the academy has the will to do that. It also has the obligation."
— Tyler Jagt, 1 June 2026, "My Students Can’t Read"
The generational collapse in literacy is measurable, persistent, and likely to get worse.
hey, it's lucian again. the last post is still gaining reblogs, but not donations. im still disabled, still not scheduled for work, still without medicaid coverage, still in debt.
if you haven't heard my story by now, i was hospitalized for a week last april after a particularly bad seizure, and i haven't quite been able to recover since. my roommate works full time and while i've worked whenever and wherever i've been physically able to, i've still been reliant on good will and donations for over a year now to pay the bills. and now without medicaid, which im working tireless to get back, i can't access or afford my seizure prevention or pain medications, or update my vaccines.
im still taking direct donations through my paypal, but i now have a formal gofundme up with an adaptive goal that will increase to encompass what i listed there: the next 2 month's worth of rent, my current credit debt balance, and an additional allotment for major costs such as my phone and electric bills.
I am a transgender disabled man attempting to survive unstable employm… Lucian Hartway needs your support for Help Disabled Trans Man Affo
as ever, im immensely grateful for all the help that has been given to me here on tumblr over the last year, and for all the emotional support that has been shared with me and my household. my dream remains to stabilize my life, and work towards returning to a point where i can give back financially to the community that has helped me so much in recent years.
something is wrong with my support animal baby her eye is swollen shut and she’s clearly in pain im on hold with veterinary urgent care right now and waiting to get a ride there but im really freaking out even if this ends up being nothing huge tonight will end with a bill i cannot afford please
baby is home safe, if rather unhappy with her new cone. her eyes will recover with a host of medications over the next week and careful supervision from me, but it still cost $405 to get her taken care of. i was able to set it up to pay in monthly $100 installments, which buys me some time
id like to not do this but haiii o/ its my birthday month and im stressing about doctors bills that are past due so if anyone would like to help me out so i can take care of those without overdrafting and be a little less anxious for my bday o7
c*missions are perpetually open but i ask that you message me first on @bloodyodyssey to get a good idea of what you want because kofi doesnt let you review orders before accepting them and id hate to take payment up front without knowing if its something i can do or not.
if you have no desire for one though then donos via pp or ca are preferred considering the cut kofi takes!
kofi
cash
pp
amounts needed:
24/108 doctors bill due 7/21
0/233 labs due also 7/21
^but ill bank on paying the labs when i can bc im not hopeful on getting enough for both so soon
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