If I got rid of everything that didn't "spark joy"...I'd be on the side of the road with the cat and my coffee maker.
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Alex179: Everything that is living is dying. It will stop dying when it is dead.
I'd love it to be more about advocacy in the real world. As a whole, the autistic community (at least this corner of it) seems to have gotten a lot of the drama out of their systems, fighting with each other. But the fucked-up stuff that drove people here in the first place is still in full force.People are still scared to ask for the reasonable accommodations that in most places are their legal right.It's still hard to get a diagnosis in adulthood, despite skyrocketing diagnostic rates in children.Even when there are plenty of services for children, people are still hitting legal majority and being dumped out in the cold.There's been some of it already, with parents sharing stories of trying to get help for their kids and deal with various conflicts that have come up with their schools. But I think there's the potential for a lot more. Where is the energy going, that had been caught up in the conflict of forum drama? It doesn't just disappear. Are people focusing more on their IRL lives? Have they given up on being able to change anything?Might the cats become easier to entice, if we quit trying to herd them and they get sick of hissing and spitting at each other?
You'll never self-actualize the subconscious canopy of stardust with that attitude.
Quote from: Pyraxis on February 14, 2009, 06:35:38 PMI'd love it to be more about advocacy in the real world. As a whole, the autistic community (at least this corner of it) seems to have gotten a lot of the drama out of their systems, fighting with each other. But the fucked-up stuff that drove people here in the first place is still in full force.People are still scared to ask for the reasonable accommodations that in most places are their legal right.It's still hard to get a diagnosis in adulthood, despite skyrocketing diagnostic rates in children.Even when there are plenty of services for children, people are still hitting legal majority and being dumped out in the cold.There's been some of it already, with parents sharing stories of trying to get help for their kids and deal with various conflicts that have come up with their schools. But I think there's the potential for a lot more. Where is the energy going, that had been caught up in the conflict of forum drama? It doesn't just disappear. Are people focusing more on their IRL lives? Have they given up on being able to change anything?Might the cats become easier to entice, if we quit trying to herd them and they get sick of hissing and spitting at each other?i have concluded that people have a twominute attention span and that without the drama you lose them.
But there's not much drama on Dunc's board and that's where a lot of people have gonee.
But in some ways, more substance.
I've been sticking around.
Quote from: RageBeoulve on February 18, 2009, 10:51:27 AMI've been sticking around. Hopefully it's worth it.