I'm in a support group for queer adults with disabilities (before I joined i didn't even know there *were* groups for that overlap, it's amazing and I love it) and we had our digital meeting on Monday. I shared your most recent flag update, where you had moved the new version to the public domain. Especially since we were talking about the ADA and its anniversary, it was very fitting. Everyone really liked it! Several people commented about the symbolism, in particular. So, just letting you know of some responses from outside tumblr. Thank you for putting it out there!
Thank you!
(Confession: At the time you first sent me this ask, the new version of the flag was not yet in the Public Domain. But it is, now! đ´đđ´)
Shamelessly plugging the new version, again â especially since I want it to eclipse the old one:
To the extent possible under law, Ann Magill has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to Visually Safe Disability Pride Flag. This work is published from: United States.
And for those who want detailed âspecsâ:
The ratio of overall breadth to overall length is 3 to 4. The ratio of the flagâs overall length to the width of each stripe is 10 to 1 (So the ratio of the overall length to the width of the combined stripes is 2 to 1).
The Hexadecimal codes for each of the colors are:
The Field: #585858
The Red: #CF7280
The Yellow: #EEDF77
The White: #E9E9E9
The Blue: #7AC1E0
The Green: #3AAF7D
Now, as to the symbolism: in the original flag, the zigzags were meant to represent ânavigating around barriers.â But instead, they were the barrier â so they were removed.
So let me put the story of the new symbolism into words â here and nowâ and thereby bring it into being:
The Black, as it was from the beginning, represents rage and mourning for those whoâve suffered violence and abuse because of their disabilities.
The five colors, in order from left to right, represent bodily disability, neurodivergent disabilities, invisible and/or undiagnosed disabilities (always in the center, because any disability can be invisible at any time), mental illness/emotional disabilities, and sensory disabilities.
The colored band starts at the top of the hoist, which is a starting place of honor, and ends at the fly, which represents moving outward into the world.
Walls and locked doors (behind which Disabled People have been hidden for too long) are right angles, and square. And so the colored band is a diagonal that cuts across those right angles, in defiance.
The five stripes are parallel, to represent our solidarity.
There! Howâs that?
your bare minimum isnât actually that bare or minimum. my dad once told me that thereâs nothing in this world thatâs easy and thatâs true tbh. everything we do takes energy, time, and effort. even the little things. if you feel like youâre not doing enough please try to think about your circumstances and whatâs currently available to you: chances are, thereâs something thatâs diverting or otherwise draining you. and to pull away from that and get something done regardless? well, i think thatâs really admirable! please try to take pride in the things you do accomplish in a day, no matter how small or trifling you perceive them to be. you canât be proud of your growth if you donât notice where you already are!
Just saw a spicy hot take in the notes of an ADHD post that was like âadhd isnât a mood disorder stop making excusesâ from a supposed fellow ADHD person and like yes, ADHD is not exclusively a mood disorder. Itâs 4 of them hiding under a trench coat with 15 other neurological disorders. And also:
ID, a screen grab from an article that reads: About 70 percent of adults with ADHD report problems with emotional dysregulation, going up to 80 percent in children with ADHD. In clinical terms, these problem areas include:
-Irritability: issues with anger dysregulation â âtantrumâ episodes as well as chronic or generally negative feelings in between episodes.
-Lability: frequent, reactive mood changes during the day.
-Recognition: the ability to accurately recognize other peopleâs feelings. Individuals with ADHD may tend to not notice other peopleâs emotions until pointed out.
-Affective intensity: felt intensity â how strongly an emotion is experienced. People with ADHD tend to feel emotions very intensely.
-Emotional dysregulation: global difficulty adapting emotional intensity or state to situation.
/end ID. (Source)
Like not to be wildly and irrationally peeved about this, but bully for you if you donât experience this as part of your ADHD, but over 70% of us do and saying weâre making excuses or not trying hard enough is the exact same shit neurotypicals say to invalidate us, and causes us real harm. Please donât do the same thing. Trauma inflicted by neurotypicals is a huge part of why living with ADHD is so difficult. We donât need it from within our own community too.
We all experience this shit show disorder differently. Itâs a spectrum of one size fits no one, not a cookie cutter mold to fit into.
And yeah, you know what, this shit isnât an excuse to behave badly, but you know what, knowing emotional dysregulation is a symptom of ADHD helps you to treat it and work on getting a handle on it. Knowing the reason it feels like the world is ending in your chest because something bad happened, and knowing itâs because your gremlin brain is perpetually starved for dopamine so thereâs no cushion for the raw emotional feedback currently happening can help you, with practice, to curb the impulsive desire to do something rash or harmful.
I mean, fuck, thereâs a reason for why suicide is so prevalent in ADHD, and Iâm going to go out on a limb and say that impulsivity and severe emotional dysregulation is a part of that.
Knowing that the feeling will end and isnât an accurate reflection of the situation, overwhelmingly painful as it is in the moment, can help. It does help. So denying this aspect as part of ADHD? Not helpful, and you need to take some time to sit with your thoughts and see why you want to distance yourself so much from this to the point of invalidating others.
I have trouble taking care of my teeth because everything that involves doing that is a sensory nightmare. I decide to do some research to see if there's anything I can do about this. The results?
"How to make your autistic child brush their teeth"
"Autistic Children and Sensory issues relating to tooth brushing"
"How to get your little shit to brush his fucking teeth"
Like, yeah Google, thanks, that really helps. And like, even if I was a child, some of the advice seemed... unhelpful. Like, doing a dance and singing a song while brushing your teeth? Even for a kid, I don't think that would help distract from a sensory experience as intense as brushing your teeth. Like, the extremely intense and unpleasant flavor, the intense feeling of the brush against your teeth scraping across it, even mouthwash has such an intense and disgusting flavor that I have difficulty keeping it in my mouth for more than a few seconds. I wish there was SOMETHING that could be done.
Not the âoh Einstein was probably autisticâ or the sanitized Helen Keller story. but this history disabled people have made and has been made for us.
Teach them about Carrie Buck, who was sterilized against her will, sued in 1927, and lost because âThree generations of imbeciles [were] enough.â
Teach them about Judith Heumann and her associates, who in 1977, held the longest sit in a government building for the enactment of 504 protection passed three years earlier.
Teach them about all the Baby Does, newborns in 1980s who were born disabled and who doctors left to die without treatment, whoâs deaths lead to the passing of The Baby Doe amendment to the child abuse law in 1984.
Teach them about the deaf students at Gallaudet University, a liberal arts school for the deaf, who in 1988, protested the appointment of yet another hearing president and successfully elected I. King Jordan as their first deaf president.
Teach them about Jim Sinclair, who at the 1993 international Autism Conference stood and said âdonât mourn for us. We are alive. We are real. And weâre here waiting for you.â
Teach about the disability activists who laid down in front of buses for accessible transit in 1978, crawled up the steps of congress in 1990 for the ADA, and fight against police brutality, poverty, restricted access to medical care, and abuse today.
Teach about us.
if youâre a mentally ill adult, especially if youâre psychotic or have bipolar, i highly recommend you look into getting a psychiatric advance directive. basically theyâre a form you can fill out where you can specify what kind of treatment you want and donât want in the case that you ever get legally declared incompetent. normally, getting declared incompetent means that psychiatrists take away your right to make decisions about your mental health care. for example, they can force you to take medications you donât want or institutionalize you longterm without your consent. also the state appoints someone they choose to legally âconsentâ in your place.
what a psychiatric advance directive does is put limits on what the psychiatrists assigned to you can do. you can appoint your own person to be your legal representative, someone you trust who knows you and cares about you. you can also specify what hospitals you donât want to be sent to or what doctors you donât want to see or medications you donât want to take or whether or not you consent to electroconvulsive treatment. you can also say what you do want, like i put down that they decided to institutionalize me, i wanted it to be at a specific psych ward iâd already been to and had a not terrible time at. and now, if i ever get declared incompetent, psychiatrists are legally not allowed to put me back on the meds that gave me a seizure.Â
nobody wants to be legally declared incompetent. itâs really scary to think about, but it does happen, especially to people with psychosis or bipolar disorder. itâs better to have legal safeguards in place ahead of time and not need them than to get declared incompetent and not have an advance directive
Simone Biles saying âMental health is more important than sportsâ on the biggest platform she could have possibly done it from is why sheâs incredible, actually