Every time I see this post, I remember briefly after I came out to my mother, I had to calmly and rationally explain βWomen can like video games and computers tooβ
me, someone with critical thinking skills: using slurs to attack people is bad, even if you do misspell them.
yβall, demons: hmm, that sounds pretty βkweerβ of you to say.
aang when he wakes up on the lion turtle: Iβve a feeling weβre not in kansas anymore, momo
toph might not actually know zuko has a scar, or where itβs from. itβs never specifically mentioned when sheβs around, except i guess during the Ember Island play when a kid says βyour scar is on the wrong sideβ
able-bodied people donβt seem to realise the nuances of disability, they look at it as such a black and white issue when itβs really not. like, i donβt need a wheelchair in the sense that i canβt physically use my legs and i donβt need a walking stick in the sense that i would fall over without one. but i do need a wheelchair in the sense that it could make the difference between my being bed-bound for a day and being bed-bound for a week and i do need a walking stick in the sense that using one today might enable me to do more tomorrow. disability and chronic illness arenβt black and white; using things out of necessity can mean a lot of different things for a lot of different people.