The best constructive criticism I ever received

neurodiversitysci:

My graduate adviser gave me the best, least painful, constructive criticism I have ever received. Whenever she needed to tell me to do something differently, she would start by saying, “a lot of grad students have problems with this…” 

That calmed me and helped me fully process what she was about to say. It normalized whatever mistake I was making. It helped me realize that it wasn’t going to jeopardize my acceptance in the lab, my university, or academia. 

Most of all, I think it was her way of telling me, “I don’t want you to think of this as a disability thing that makes you different and less than everyone else. I don’t want you to spiral into feeling like you’re not good enough and you don’t belong here. I want you to learn from the mistake without feeling bad about yourself.” That was probably what helped most–knowing she cared enough, and understood me well enough, to say that.

This was the first time anyone had actually responded in a helpful way to my deep spirals of self-hatred and frustration in response to criticism. I still don’t understand how she knew. She’d known me for less than a year when she started communicating this way, and had never actually seen most of the symptoms.  Yet she intuited a way to help me get past what people now call “rejection sensitive dysphoria” or “RSD.” And I will never forget it.

I hope someday to offer similarly sensitive constructive criticism to other people. 

In the meantime, I try to say it to myself. When I drop a plate or glass and spill the contents all over the floor. When I say the wrong word in a sentence, or can’t remember the right one. When I show up late. Whenever I do some annoying disability-related thing. 

Maybe saying it to yourself will help you, too: “Remember, you’re not the only one. A lot of people are working on this.”

8/16/18

jelloapocalypse:

The Pokemon English Dub is good and here is my evidence

I don’t even need to turn on the sound, I know it’s the Frozen One joke…

Ash (upon being told he needs to go to the three islands to get three sacred stones while going through what is essentially a Legendary battlefield): Yeah, you’re right, I can do it! I’m the chosen one! 

[five seconds later] 

Ash: Aack! R-r-r-right now, I feel more like the frozen one! Wuaaaaaaaaagh! 

PSA to all now that is is Pumpkin Spice Season

red–thedragon:

thatwitchrevan:

ma-je-s-capharnaum:

renstability:

From someone who worked at starbucks. If you have a milk/dairy allergy AT ALL. DO NOT. I repeat. DO NOT. Drink Pumpkin Spice.

It contains dairy IN the syrup that is used to make the drink. Even if you get it made with soy, you will still be getting doses of dairy in there. 

Depending on the severity and intolerance it can and will cause reactions. I found that as a barista I was constantly warning people about the dairy in the product. No one ever seemed to tell them that there was dairy in the mix. More times than I can count I heard people realize that’s why they kept having reactions, or that’s why it made them sick.

People legitimately do not know that pumpkin spice no matter what you do will always contain some amount of dairy.

…oh. 

red–thedragon:

gemmaroses:

burnt-confetti:

emphatically-enthusiastic:

we-dont-sell-papes:

intpvstheworld:

mbtipical:

intp-dork:

I was honestly expecting a smaller number.

Take the quiz here.

Tag your MBTI type and how much shit you have together.

INTP- 44% of my shit is together.

INTP- 51% fuck yeah

INTP, 49% whoop whoop

ENFP, 46%

ENFP – 50% I’ll take it

INFJ – 78%. Fuck yeah.

INxP – 66%. I expected worse tbh?

ENTP – 49%

I think my habit of getting up at four am to make sure i can fond my homework made my qcore better

INFJ/INTJ – 71% 

nice