d. I've tried, because some of you get SO upset but I don't hear much difference between "woman with a disability" and "disabled woman". Maybe more between "woman with cerebral palsy" and "cerebral palsied woman" but as far as I know people don't say that, which is probably a good thing.
I know that a lot of autistic people strongly prefer "autistic person" to "person with autism." I haven't heard the identity-first preference as much from people with other disabilities. I generally default to person-first for most disabilities, and identity-first for autism, but if the person I'm talking about has expressed a preference that I know about, then I'll use that. (I've seen, several times, an autistic person writing an article using identity-first language, and then, in the comments, there will be someone with, "I'm studying to be a social worker/special ed teacher, and my professors taught me to always use person-first language. This article is offensive! You should rewrite it using the right language!")
It sometimes seems advantageous for some entities that groups get caught up in nomenclature debates to the detriment of other issues. But that presumes a higher level of organizational chicanery than I think most of the world is capable of.
I appreciate this discussion because part of the training I give to our new volunteers is discussing language. We encourage person first language, but I will add a reminder that each person is an individual and if someone makes the effort to ask for different language, then of course that should be used for that person.
Our riders range from people with traumatic brain injuries, autism, ADHD, and so on. The vast majority of the time, the instructors don't know the diagnosis that brought them to our program. They just know what abilities the person has and what is being worked on through therapeutic horsemanship.
I feel like I should know something about this subject, but I'm so disconnected from the disabled community that I don't have a clue.
I have another stupid question. I have a TJ's cornbread mix with a best by date of several months ago. It's not an expiration date. Is it still safe to use.
I think some of them may be a lot younger than me and not really understand why widespread acceptance of "people first" feels like a huge victory after growing up reading "The plucky teen, who sports a nearly constant smile despite suffering from..."
- I'd* almost rather eat a bug than do that interview.
I have a TJ's cornbread mix with a best by date of several months ago. It's not an expiration date. Is it still safe to use.
The worst that might happen is that the leavening in it might not work as well as super-fresh ingredients. But I think several months is okay wiggle room for a dry baking mix.
Basically, what I'm saying is, I would totally make it. It won't harm you, and the worst that might happen (and honestly I think there's like a 5% chance of this happening) is that the bread will be more dense than usual.
Agree. You might throw a tsp of baking powder in if you think it warranted. But probably not even necessary.
Great. It's in the oven. So, we'll see.
Ow. Icy sidewalks and unstable joints are a really bad combination. I didn't fall, but my ankles and knees are seriously not happy with me.