I hope everyone has a good day today
I was actually able to pet a cheetah and they actually purr just like house cats. I love felines so much
I haven't posted here in a while, was convinced that place died last year. It's nice to see it active again.
Good morning to you /pt/ anons!
It would be nice if this place was a little more active. Guess I'll have to start contributing.
Forgive me bringing the Daily Topic Slop in here, but
Tourette's is a neurological disorder, not a personality disorder or a mental illness. Yet, all three deal with the brain, and when you get down to it, the boundaries between neurology and personality are not just blurry, they are twisted and parabolic. I also have a neurological issue (epilepsy) with similar "involuntary tics" and it's an issue that really leaves you confused as to what is voluntary and what isn't. People with neurological issues, myself included, are extremely defensive about the fact that neurological diseases are physiological and out of our individual control outside of medical therapy. However, I have been able to "will" myself in certain extreme situations to not seize up (an exceptionally difficult thing to do, which will never be seen or heard or understood or acknowledged by anyone). This is basically a taboo concept in disability circles because it has the potential to qualify all the skepticism and accusations from outsiders that we're "just faking it" or can "just get over it". Certain psychiatric disorders like depression have also been roped into the same dynamic in the past decade or so with the discourse focus morphing into "brain chemical imbalance", and they also get very thorny at the idea of the potential of willpower if not eliminating the issue, at least softening or mitigating it a little. Of course Western/American thinking is so entirely calcified around this dynamic that I doubt I'll see any inquiries in the opposite direction in my lifetime if it ever happens at all.
When I watched an older video featuring the Tourette's guy, there was a very slight element of knowingness/intention that came through to me. Not enough to invalidate the disorder, not enough to throw him in a dungeon because it makes people uncomfortable (just like seizing on the floor makes people uncomfortable, and I know I myself would have been thrown in the dungeon even 60 years ago), but it's there. This is just the human condition, no more, no less.
I say this not to give credence to any overreacting culture warriors online (I moved around the hot button topic itself, and I hope the more smooth-brained posters here follow suit), simply putting it out there for any calmer, more curious minds here.
Also, it's really rich to see arr ess pee sentimental about disabilities now when three years ago Hork was routinely shitting on and mocking epileptics and Cumtown riffs about people with Downs were commonplace
I hope I have a nice day too ;^)