Probably talking about disability. Maybe shitposting.
Long COVID is more common than asthma among children, estimated at somewhere between 10 and 20%.
Long COVID is more common than asthma among children, estimated at somewhere between 10 and 20%.
I knew several kids (family included) growing up who had asthma.
This is deeply upsetting.
I knew several kids (family included) growing up who had asthma.
This is deeply upsetting.
Being disabled is exhausting in a way I don't think I can describe and my disability is nowhere near as exclusionary. The help is needed and necessary.
Being disabled is exhausting in a way I don't think I can describe and my disability is nowhere near as exclusionary. The help is needed and necessary.
I think it is genuinely one of the most radical things you can do when you do it communally. There are lots of great folks, including the subjects of one of my favorite books, who did so and earned a lot of freedom from it.
I think it is genuinely one of the most radical things you can do when you do it communally. There are lots of great folks, including the subjects of one of my favorite books, who did so and earned a lot of freedom from it.
It had so much promise.
Also you bitches made fun of me for having internet girlfriends when I was a teenager and NOW LOOK AT Y'ALL.
I WAS A PIONEER.
It had so much promise.
Also you bitches made fun of me for having internet girlfriends when I was a teenager and NOW LOOK AT Y'ALL.
I WAS A PIONEER.
Dear Science is probably more for academics but it is still one of my favorites. McKittrick's dialogue with Sylvia Wynter is really incredible. It takes some effort to understand but Wynter herself is among my favorite scholars. Changed the game.
Dear Science is probably more for academics but it is still one of my favorites. McKittrick's dialogue with Sylvia Wynter is really incredible. It takes some effort to understand but Wynter herself is among my favorite scholars. Changed the game.
This book explains how Black folks built movements through everyday actions and created the conditions necessary for people like Fannie Lou Hamer to even exist.
This book explains how Black folks built movements through everyday actions and created the conditions necessary for people like Fannie Lou Hamer to even exist.
poomang.com/en/t/lovembt...
poomang.com/en/t/lovembt...