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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Lyrosel@lemmy.world to c/showerthoughts@lemmy.world

... but when humans do it, it's automatically NSFW.

I'm not encouraging people to go outside like that, to be clear. I'm just curious. Back before clothes were invented, humans must've walked around naked before covering up for some period of time, right?

Somewhere in between that and now, covering up became the norm, and now our brains are wired to complain about how naked we feel if we try to not wear clothes. When did the shift happen?

(Edit: fixed typo)

[-] Lyrosel@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago

Windows 11 user here too. I just install WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) as an alternative as I'm too used to the Windows interface. Maybe one day I'll fully switch.

[-] Lyrosel@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Much like i woudln’t expect the r/autsim_parenting sub to have a level 3 mod.

Good point, that. Regarding your last point, however, not every parent will be "nasty"—that was one person. Just something to keep in mind if you reconsider this.

Honestly, what you've said here is pretty reasonable, and it's nice that the two communities are partnered. You seem really passionate about this. ^-^

[-] Lyrosel@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

I have seen the blog post that you linked in the other comment!

we might be abl to maek a post with defintions and pin it.

This was closer to what I meant, though. There was a lot of discourse surrounding what exactly terms like "nonspeaking" meant.

As for the mod team, it seems like it's only you so far—perhaps bringing in another higher support needs autistic or a parent who takes care of a higher support needs autistic would help with that (similar to what SpicyAutism did). I don't know the full story behind the SpicyAutism banning, however, so I can't say much about that.

[-] Lyrosel@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I am not the target audience, as I am a level 1. I was mostly a lurker in r/SpicyAutism, as I was curious about how autism affected higher support needs people. I honestly plan to use this community for similar purposes (as a medium for learning authentic first-hand experiences).

Something I never really saw on SpicyAutism, however, were links to helpful posts. There is a lot of misinformation about autism online, and having an easily accessible repository of anecdotes from higher support needs autistics would help combat that. It could also avoid infighting concerning terminology (which I'd observed as SpicyAutism started to grow).

I also noticed that a lot of people in SpicyAutism seemed to be slightly confused about the level system or support needs system—perhaps there could be an article on that as well.

Lyrosel

joined 1 year ago