lb-lee:

albinwonderland:

erikamoen:

Do you get head tinglies during haircuts? Do pages turning or paper crinkling give you an unexplainable buzz? Friend, you may be experiencing ASMR. Read all about it in Grace Allison’s guest comic on Oh Joy Sex Toy!

This comic brought to you by the support of my patrons on Patreon, thanks guys!

A great and informative comic about ASMR! 

Huh.  So, I went to Good Ol’ Youtube to learn more about this, wondering if ASMR was related to the weird (mostly unpleasant) sensations I get when I watch injections or piercing. (You never want me to come with you to a piercing or tattoo appointment, because I will twitch my head and shoulders uncontrollably to block out the sensations.) Turns out no, ASMR is similar, but not nearly so intense or unpleasant. (Though it can veer into it if I pay too close attention.)

And that’s how I ended up accidentally feeling much better and more relaxed after an emotional day.  Thanks, random ASMR people on Youtube!  I learned something new today!

I actually have heard of this before, but I thought my readers might not have.

(Be careful of those “roleplaying close personal attention” ones. The first explanation of ASMR I came across included a link to one of those, and my reaction to it was not so much “ooh nice” as “oh god she’s coming through the fourth wall to get me *tries to back away through the couch*”.)


Tags:

#ASMR #the more you know #people who can distinguish between their drive for sleep and drive for sex fascinate me #(I find it kind of amusing that *every* ASMR explanation I’ve read explicitly says it’s completely non-sexual) #(then immediately proceeds to describe it as sedating) #(or sometimes they do it in reverse order like here) #(people are *weird*) #the wondrous variety of sapient life

Cousins, ACs, autistics and cousins, autistic cousins, etc.

youneedacat:

We used to have a term in the autistic community, we called it ‘cousins’.

It started when Xenia Grant was talking to a guy who had hydrocephalus and had a lot in common with autistic people, but was not autistic.  She took a look at him and happily exclaimed, “Cousin!”

(I like to keep track of who coined terms.  It can be meaningful.  Xenia is the friendliest person I’ve ever met, autistic or nonautistic.  That’s the spirit that ‘cousin’ started in.)

Back when NT meant a nonautistic person, another abbreviation cropped, up, AC.  AC meant “Autistics and Cousins” and covered autistic people and… cousins.  So you’d talk about “ACs and NTs”.  But who were cousins?

Cousins were people with a neurological condition other than autism, but it gave them important things in common with autistic people.  Especially sensory processing, cognitive, and social traits in common with us.

Cousinhood wasn’t something that was based on a condition.  It was based on how that condition worked for a particular person.  So while sometimes we’d talk about ‘cousin conditions’, there was no condition where everyone with it was a cousin.

But some common cousin conditions included:  Tourette’s, hydrocephalus, OCD, schizophrenia, and AD(H)D.  Just as some examples.  Not everyone with those conditions was a cousin, but lots of cousins had those conditions or related ones.

The cool thing about cousin was that it dealt with the ambiguity of life.  It made it so that it wasn’t just ‘us and them’.  There was a broad hazy area around autism where people could be considered in many important ways ‘like us’ without being autistic.

Two people on tumblr that my brain automatically classifies as cousins are karalianne and lichgem.  (That’s assuming they’re not unknowingly autistic, of course.  Some people think of themselves as cousins but turn out to actually be autistic.)  I don’t see them as outside of the circle I draw around ‘autism’ for social purposes, because I draw that circle at the ‘cousin’ level rather than the ‘autism’ level.  

I kind of wish that most identities had this ‘cousin’ thing going, because it would resolve a lot of boundaries that people want to be strict and are not.  It deals with people who are a lot like a certain type of person, without exactly being that type of person.  And it does so in a really friendly and welcoming way.

I know that Tourette’s has a similar but not quite the same idea, called “Tourette’s Plus”.  Where the “Plus” conditions are conditions that people with Tourette’s often have in addition, like autism or OCD.  Not quite the same idea, but similar.

Eventually people started deciding that the problem with ‘cousin’ was that it made ‘autistic’ the center of the neurodiverse landscape, and that this wasn’t fair.  And maybe it wasn’t fair.

But still, I miss the days where you could say “AC” or “Cousin” and people would know what you meant, immediately.  And where cousins were considered an actual inside part of the autistic community, not just “allies”.  I know there are parts of the autistic community where all of this is still the case.  But not nearly as many as there used to be.

So I’m throwing the idea out there just in case anyone likes it as much as I do.  It’s not my idea, I didn’t think it up, it existed long before I even knew there was an autistic community (and I go pretty far back compared to a lot of people these days).  But I think it’s a useful idea, in some contexts, as long as you do keep in mind that autistic people aren’t the center of neurodiversity.

(But honestly I think if all neurodiverse people used the ‘cousin’ idea in their own communities, then it wouldn’t be about autism-at-the-center anymore it would just be a useful idea for people who are very similar to you in important ways without being quite the same.)

Anyway… Karalianne was talking about how she feels sometimes like she can’t even talk about certain things without qualifying them a lot, because she’s not autistic, and she’s afraid of encroaching.  And I remember a time when she was not considered encroaching because everyone knew she was a cousin and that was her place in the community and nobody (that I know of) ever questioned it back then.  And it upsets me that this is not the case anymore.  Because she totally is one of the first people to spring to mind when I think ‘cousin’.

And I wish that Xenia’s exuberant friendliness would somehow infect the term ‘cousin’ once again, because it needs that push.

karalianne:

I honestly think that the concept of “cousin” is part of why I have no problem with people self-diagnosing, like totally aside from all the practical reasons people don’t get officially diagnosed (and the fact that self-diagnosis is often the first step to formal diagnosis). And it’s why, on the ADHD blog, I tell people that even if they don’t actually have ADHD, they should feel welcome if they identify with the difficulties we have, because maybe some of the tricks ADHDers use will be helpful for them. The blog is for people who actually have ADHD, regardless of whether they’re self-diagnosed or formally diagnosed, but I will never turn people away if they have another thing going on that causes the same problems. Executive dysfunction without ADHD is a thing (like, an actual diagnosis); autistic executive dysfunction is often very similar to ADHD executive dysfunction (that’s how I first learned about it and how to deal with it, after all); anxiety and depression can cause executive dysfunction and attention problems. And so on and so forth. Heck, PTSD and brain damage can cause ADHD symptoms and ADHD meds are often really helpful for those people, so our tricks could be helpful too!

I still remember learning certain social skills via ASA. Everyone there was so welcoming and kind (welll, most people were) and willing to share knowledge and explain why people reacted to things the way they did. It was the first place I really felt like I belonged somewhere – online or offline. (Offline came with the love of the NaNoWriMo participants I started herding back in 2005. The faces have changed but I do feel like I belong in the group when we meet in person, and not just because I’m the “leader.”) I miss usenet just for that.

I think part of the change, for me, is that I did shift my focus over the years. I stopped focusing on autism so much. I started focusing more on ADHD. (That makes sense, of course.) I stopped working with autistic children. My life changed, and I changed, and I lost some of the connection to the community that I once had.

And I understand being wary of someone you don’t know. I faced it a lot when I was actually doing ABA for a living. I am wary of people I don’t know, too. I don’t blame anyone for anything, it’s just how it goes.

I do miss the term “AC” because it is a really helpful term to have. It’s better and more inclusive, I think, than “shadow syndrome.” And it gives people more of a sense of commonality and community and inclusion. It says “there are differences but still a lot of similarities and we can relate on that level and we are family.” (Family in the Lilo & Stitch way I think.)

flutterflyinvasion:

Let’s try this again, since Chrome bugged out.

I feel the same way, like every time I open my mouth I’m encroaching on autistic territory.  I do feel like like some of the ways my brain is wired due to my CP (and the assorted anxiety/depression conditions) is similar to autistics.  And I do consider myself neurodiverse.  So I really really like the idea of autistics and cousins.

(ALSO HI KARALIANNE YOU SHARE MY NAME EXCEPT I SPELL IT WITH A C!!!)

youneedacat:

FWIW you’re another person my brain automatically throws in the ‘cousin’ category.  Like it’s not a category I’m even conscious of having, it’s just like out on the borderlands of autism somewhere, but still ‘inside’ enough that I read it as ‘like me’.

slepaulica:

i still don’t know if I’m autistic or not (currently thinking it’s more likely than not, however), but I think I’m definitely a cousin. :)

Oh dear, “cousin” has fallen out of use? I always liked “cousin”, for pretty much the same reasons stated above.


Tags:

#autism #I spent a lot of time in the neurodiversity blogosphere around 2007-2008 #but not so much in the past few years #I suppose it’s not too surprising things have changed #but why change *that*?

tropicaltemper:

This sums up Americans complaining about Eurovision


Tags:

#Eurovision #did not annoy me #I was confused sure #but also curious #you just get these glimpses of bright colours and people yelling excitedly and women rocking beards and something about music #and there’s clearly a lot of cultural context behind this #but you have no idea what #and you don’t know how you would go about obtaining the cultural context #what is this ‘Eurovision’ of which you speak? #teach me your ways!

silversarcasm:

It’s April!

Whilst I’m sure you all mean well, please remember not to support or donate to Autism Speaks this month (or any month for that matter) as they are a terrible organisation who hurt the autistic community

Instead I recommend actually taking time to look at writing from autistic people and learn from them and, if you really want to help and donate, consider ASAN instead

Thank you xx


Tags:

#PSA #the wondrous variety of sapient life

aisu10:

can people not say things like “everyone wants sex” or “they’re teenagers, of course they want sex” because guess what asexuals exist

this is the kind of language that caused me to feel lost and alone as a kid and its really not cool to see it casually thrown around on my dashboard


Tags:

#asexuality #the wondrous variety of sapient life #sapience makes everything complicated #including and especially sexuality #even this is too simplistic #though still a step up from #’everyone wants sex’ #(to which I generally respond) #(‘define sex’) #(‘that is a ridiculously narrow definition of sex’)

moebius-stripper:

World-shattering realization.


Tags:

#this is me out for a walk #being a Generic Passer-by #but remember folks #protagonists save the world #but without us NPCs it wouldn’t be worth saving #I am a coward and I suffer routine-withdrawal easily #I’m basically Bilbo Baggins without the saving grace of being able to think on my feet #I’m a flavour character #but that means that wherever I go I make the world a little richer #a little more vibrant #NPC pride #tag rambles #I’ve had this rant floating around my head for a while now actually

iscallyr:

I know it’s important to a lot of beings to have reasons behind the things they identify as – spirituality, or brain chemistry, or hormones etc (and this doesn’t just apply to kin stuff either) – but I’ve just never had that? My attitude is that I am what I am, I feel this way and that’s all right.

I don’t really think it matters why I’m queer/asexual/agender/otherkin/whatever the fuck else I am, it’s not like it’s a problem that needs to be cured; to my way of thinking it’s just something that is.

Wonderfully unavoidable.

So last night the Magnetons made their first vlog. Just as I was about to begin bedtime prep, so I cut into the time usually set aside for daydreaming to watch it. This may or may not have been a good idea, because it got me thinking*: How different would an alt-universe version of me have to be in order to not know about healthy multiplicity?

The more I thought about it (i.e. 12:20), the more the answer resolved into: Pretty damn different, actually. Because the Internet is a major major part of my life, and to avoid each and every one of the two or three wiki-blog-walks just begging me to click on them, her Internetting would have to be done almost completely differently.

I could cut off most of it at the root by having Mom completely fail to tell her she’s autistic. (Nor can she learn any other way.) Once she starts researching that, it’s only a matter of time until she ends up at Ballastexistenz, where the Amorphas (at least back in mid-2007, when this was going on) often make intriguing comments.

Also, from there anti-vaccinationism led me to the science-and-skepticism blogosphere. They don’t have many kind things to say about plurality there**, but they do have kind things to say about Left Behind deconstructions. (That’s the new site. This is the old site, which is still running under new management and at which you can still find me (because page-ified Disqus is horribly annoying to use).)

This is another place she can’t have gotten to any other way. Partly because one of the Slacktivites is in a multiple system, but mostly because with the interesting links available, and the links from those links, it was pretty much inevitable I would end up here (blog NSFW).

(Which means Brin would probably not exist at all. I first took on this name to become a Slacktivite.)

Really I have no idea quite what she would be like. So many of the things that have shaped me over the past four years were in places she can’t have been. (Guess what prompted the realisation I was ace? Getting into an argument at the Slacktiverse.) Maybe with some of them she could have gotten similar experiences other ways, I don’t know.

I suppose this is basically a long, convoluted way of saying thank you. Thanks Amorpha, thanks Loony-Brain, thanks of a slightly different sort to Magneton***, for being so wonderfully unavoidable.

~~~

*At midnight. While I was trying to fucking sleep. (On the other hand, if I hadn’t watched it I’d have just been wondering what was in it. So I was pretty much doomed from the moment I saw it was there.)

**The arguments against never made as much sense as the arguments for. (Hard to argue with “I think, therefore I am.” If you do argue with it, depending on how consistently you apply the argument you end up with either bigotry or solipsism (because you can’t argue with your own “I think, therefore I am”; that’s kind of the point). Neither of these sounds very appealing.)

***Who weren’t unavoidable, or at least without Loony-Brain and the subsequent poking around healthymultiplicity.com would’ve had to find a different way to insist on being in my life. But seeing as how it was their video that inspired this ridiculously long post in the first place, and they’re the ones I actually talk to on a regular basis rather than just listen, they deserve a thanks too.


Tags:

#oh look an original post   #ramblings   #the wondrous variety of sapient life   #multiplicity   #plurality   #hypotheticals

We Are Magneton: 1nvadergir: How does it tend to happen in singlets? The only…

1nvadergir:

How does it tend to happen in singlets? The only explanation I currently understand from multiples is that anything can happen in-world, but I don’t have another world from which this seems possible. Could you give me an explanation? In my experience, I just feel more connected…

Depends on the person. I don’t have any phantom limbs myself (but then, neither do I have any limbs that could be phantom-ised).

My theory for how I personally became* this way? During the critical age for my development of species identity, I spent a fair bit of time around humans who acted very alien** to me. I figured that made me the alien. Add in Imagination (*SpongeBob rainbow*), the emotional detachment from my face that prosopagnosia had already given me, and significantly more force of habit than I’m comfortable admitting, and you get me in all my not-a-Changeling glory. (No, I’m not telling you what my species is actually called.)

(It’s possibly there’s some genetic predisposition: my dad’s a furry, though I didn’t know this at the time.)

I feel a bit jealous of the I-was-born-this-way otherkin sometimes. My identity seems so fragile. If I’d been told straight off about being autistic rather than my parents waiting until I was thirteen, I might be human today. Or maybe I wouldn’t. *shrug* I suppose in the end I am who/what I am, and the reasoning doesn’t need to be airtight.

*Some people are just born that way, but I don’t think I was.

**This probably had something to do with sub-cultural differences (they were in public school, I was homeschooled) and neurotype differences (they weren’t autistic).


Tags:

#Otherkin   #singlets   #reply via reblog   #the wondrous variety of sapient life

Oh god(s), the Tumblr set-up CAPTCHA wants me to say I’m human.

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wearemagneton:

brin-bellway:

I hate when CAPTCHAs do that. Yeah, it’s such a small thing, but the smallness makes it easy to fix.

I don’t care if you’re human or not. I just want to make goddamn sure you’re not a sentient robot or something.

…you’re NOT are you? —Tabs

This is my sister. She watches too many sci-fi movies for her own good. —Tom

As long as I’m a sentient non-evil robot, I don’t see why you should have a problem with that.

(Really I’m neither species. I cannot draw, so this is the point where I link to a picture of a Changeling and say “kinda like that, but with less hair gel”. (I’m not actually a Changeling, I just happen to resemble them. Thank god(s) for Deep Space Nine, else I’d have no pictures. Which reminds me, it’s almost Deep-Space-Nine-watching time. *wanders off to fandom-land*))


Tags:

#Otherkin   #tabs   #tom   #the wond   #the wondrous variety of sapient life


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