I keep seeing things about how people think the way the core six reacted was ooc, but I honestly think their reactions couldn’t have been more true to the characters.
One of the central theme’s for the core six once they started having kids was that they didn’t want their children to be “damaged like them”. On the logic side of things, from their perspective, the only info they had to go off was that Moffy was clearly seeing someone, he was no longer having one night stands, and the person he was seeing was someone his parents wouldn’t approve of. That honestly leaves so few people it could possibly be, given the fact that the addicted kids literally have no friends other than each other. Now if we toss in the sheer panic clouding their vision, i.e. that their children might be heading down a path of destruction akin to the paths that the core six went down, I think their reactions are spot on. None of the core six are rational when it comes to their children and I feel like Krista and Becca did a really good job of show casing how the core six’s volatile past shapes their perspectives of their children and how to parent, for better (which we saw a ton of in skop) or for worse (which we saw at the end of dlu).
All in all I just really fucking loved this book ya’ll
Rules: Copy this post into a new text post, remove my answers and put in your own. when you are done tag up to 10 people….most importantly, have fun!
a / age: 14 b / biggest fear: Dying c / current time: 10:16 AM d / drink you had last: an up & go e / everyday starts with: an up & go and brushing my hair (nothing else most of the time) f / favourite song: A remix of ‘Say It’ by Flume and Tove Lo g / ghosts are real?: I do believe they’re real. Never seen one though.. h / hometown: Brisbane i / in love with: Nobody j / jealous of: Not really anything or anyone. k / killed someone: I haven’t ... yet l / last time you cried: This morning (bad dream) n / number of siblings: One younger sister o / one wish: To go to Berlin p / person you last called/texted: Probably the group chat I have with my friends on Instagram q / questions you’re always asked: Are you crying? (No, it’s just allergies) (No, my eyes tend to have a layer of saline just like yours) (No, I just have sweat glands on my eyeballs) s / song last sang: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ u / underwear colour: White with gosh darn butterflies v / vacation destination: Berlin w / worst habit: “¯\_(ツ)_/¯ “ x / xrays you have had: lungs and spine y / your favourite food: I don’t really have a favourite food ... z / zodiac sign: Virgo
That’s pretty epic
My plane flew over another plane
Child: Mom... I think it's time I tell you something.
Mom: Go ahead sweetie, you can tell me anything.
Child: I'm bipolar and schizophrenic...
Mom: How did you find this out, who took you to a psychologist?
Child: I self diagnosed it mom, tumblr taught me not to be ashamed of my mental illnesses.
Mom: Stacy you're twelve shut the fuck up
Child: IM SO OPPRESSED *violently blogs about being triggered by her mother
me: *never studies my target languages* my language abilities: *dont get better* me:
coco chanel was a nazi
i say this with no hyperbole whatsoever
she literally worked for the nazis and benefitted from jewish shareholders in chanel being sent off to concentration camps when their share came into her possession
parisian consumers actually refused to buy a lot from her own ranges after 1940 because she was an infamous collaborator but british and american consumers kept on buying them and continue to glorify her
that’s nice
English: I’m pregnant.
French: Oh mon Dieu, congratulations!
German: I am schwanger too!
Finnish: I’m pregánte! And pregananant! And pregonate! And pregnart! And pragnet! *whispers darkly* I’m pregnant with all the babies.
English, French and German: Cool beans, Finnish.
On May 28th, my sister, Edna, turned 31.
Her mental age is about three years old. She loves Winnie the Pooh, Beauty & the Beast, and Sesame Street. Even though the below picture is unconvincing.
Edna and “Cookie.” I think she was trying to play it cool.
My name is Jeanie. I’m Edna’s younger sister. I’m also her guardian and caregiver.
That’s me on the left. (Hey, you never know. After a year of writing a blog about online dating - Jeanie Does the Internet - I’ve come to learn that there are A LOT of fools on the internet.)
ANYWAY, I’m not “doing the internet” anymore. I’m taking care of Edna full-time, after completing my MFA in Writing for Screen & Television at USC.
May 16, 2014. I wanted a picture. Edna wanted breakfast.
In case you’re wondering where our parents are, they’re dead. Our mom died of breast cancer when she was just 33.
Us with mom before she died. (Obviously.)
As for our dad, he peaced-out around the time my mom got sick. His loss - we’re awesome.
Here we are being awesome at the beach. Pushing a wheelchair in the sand? Not so awesome.
In case you’re wondering “What’s wrong?” with my sister - as a stranger once asked me on the street - NOTHING. Yes, Edna has a rare form of epilepsy - Lennox-Gastaut syndrome - but I don’t know if that’s anymore “wrong” than people who don’t have manners.
Basically, Edna was born “normal,” and started having seizures as a baby. They eventually got so bad that they cut off the oxygen to her brain, causing her to be mentally disabled. Or impaired. Or intellectually disabled. Or whatever you want to call it - except “retarded,” because in 2010, President Obama signed Rosa’s Law into effect, replacing that word with “intellectually impaired.”
Which is cool and all, but services for the disabled and the people who care for them are SEVERELY LACKING. Also, there’s a bunch of people working in taxpayer-funded positions who are supposed to help families like us, but don’t. (Big surprise, I know.) They just fill out paperwork (whenever they feel like it) with asinine statements like this:
YUP. I transport my sister down the stairs in her wheelchair, because that is not only safe, but TOTALLY PRACTICAL. Why doesn’t everyone in a wheelchair just take the stairs, for God’s sake? Stop being so lazy, PEOPLE WITHOUT WORKING LEGS!
But, as it says above, Edna’s legs do work. Whether or not she wants them to, is another story.
Edna refusing to go inside.
These are the stairs that I have to carry her up - by myself - on a daily basis. That is, until one of my legs break and both of us are just sitting at the bottom of the stairs, helpless.
For six months, I have begged - BEGGED - the State of California to help my sister, which they are required by law - The Lanterman Act specifically - to do so. But they’ve told me “these things take time” and that I “need to amend my expectations.” (That was said to me when I refused to place Edna at AN ALL-MALE CARE FACILITY. Because yes, that was an “option” that was offered to me.)
Prior to Edna moving in with me in my one-bedroom apartment, she was living with her amazing caregiver, Gaby, back in Tucson, where we went to high school and I did my undergrad. Edna’s reppin’ the Wildcats below.
But back in November, Gaby also died from breast cancer. (FUCK YOU, BREAST CANCER!) This picture was taken a month before she died. She never even told me she was sick because she didn’t want me to worry.
By the way, we were raised by our grandma. Edna and her were very close.
She’s dead, too. Surprise.
She died when I was 20 and Edna was 21. That’s when I became Edna’s legal guardian and Gaby stepped into the picture to help me out with Edna.
So, six months ago, after Gaby died, I moved Edna to California, where I tried to get the folks over at The Frank D. Lanterman Regional Center to help me. I’ve told them I’m worried about our safety - that one of us could get hurt on the stairs - I’ve told them I can’t afford to pay the private babysitters $15/hour because the ones social services sent me who make $9/hour were unreliable (they didn’t show up on time or at all so I could get to school and work), untrustworthy (one of them let Edna go to the bathroom in the kitchen and then took her into the bathroom because “that what I thought I was supposed to do.”)
But the people over at the FLRC don’t return my calls, they don’t file the paperwork on time - and the first caseworker that was assigned to us actually LAUGHED AT my sister when he came to our home to evaluate her. When I reported him to his supervisor, she told me, “That’s just [insert name of said jackass].”
He was one of the two caseworkers that contributed to the report I mentioned above, which also included this:
So let me get this straight - I have to feed, bathe, dress and help Edna in the bathroom and you can’t deduce whether or not she is able to vote? What in the fuck?!
Now I realize I seem angry. And you can bet your balls I am. I’m also sad. Sad for those who don’t have family to stick up from them and who waste away God knows where, monitored by no one. Or monitored by people who physically and sexually assault them.
I’m also sad for the caregivers who are SO EXHAUSTED - trying to take care of their loved ones - while also trying to take care of themselves and battling a system that is supposed to help, but does nothing of the sort. And I know a lot of people give up. They let their dreams, their marriages, their friendships slide. All while trying not to resent the very person you’re doing it all for.
Edna wanted to sit next to me the other day while I was writing. Clearly, she’s not impressed.
Here’s the thing: I REFUSE TO GIVE UP. I’M NOT GIVING UP ON HER OR MYSELF. I’m going to pursue my dreams while taking care of her, AND while ensuring that the people paid to do their jobs ACTUALLY do them.
That’s where you come in. I need you to help me get my story out there. Because I know I’m not alone in this. I want to connect with families who are in similar situations and also show people who have no idea what it’s like to care for someone with a disability (or even a loved one who is sick) that it can be rewarding. Super fucking hard. Exhausting. Painful. Isolating. But, rewarding.
I’m going to get help for my sister - and others. My hope is that by sharing our story, I can bring awareness to the lack of services and help for the disabled.
Thank you,
Jeanie
Facebook: facebook.com/eisforedna
Twitter: @EisforEdna