
| Roni | any pronouns | 19 | Photos taken by me, most of the time. You're gonna see a lot of sunsets bc those are the only things that I take pictures of, but I’m proud of them so it’s fine. Submissions welcome (SFW only pls!).
221 posts
The Water Sure Was Falling




The water sure was falling
More Posts from Shutter-bugger
IF YOUR
CRAYONS
DO NOT SMELL LIKE
crayons
DO NOT EAT IT
It’s not a crayon
My sort of maybe embarrassing “late to the game” thing I’m learning now is how to tell if oil has gone bad.
I feel like most other foods have obvious visual tells like mold or they end up smelling foul and obviously bad. But I was googling about oil and the internet says “if it smells like crayons, it’s bad” which would not have been my first guess. And I tested it out on my somewhat old sesame oil and was like “by god, I would describe this as smelling like crayons”
Anyway protip if your old oil smells kinda like crayons it’s probably no good 🖍️


NEW YEAR’S MY DUDES!!!!!! I AM SO DRUNK OMG WHOOOOO!!!!!!!
Bad picture is from the day before New Year’s Eve, soup picture is from New Year’s Eve! So good!
These are basically bad insta pictures but wanted to post smth so here ya go! It snowed for the first time in week’s! Yay! F El Niño!
Can you believe all the McDonald’s were closed? Bogus… I want McNuggies :(((
By the way, you can improve your executive function. You can literally build it like a muscle.
Yes, even if you're neurodivergent. I don't have ADHD, but it is allegedly a thing with ADHD as well. And I am autistic, and after a bunch of nerve damage (severe enough that I was basically housebound for 6 months), I had to completely rebuild my ability to get my brain to Do Things from what felt like nearly scratch.
This is specifically from ADDitude magazine, so written specifically for ADHD (and while focused in large part on kids, also definitely includes adults and adult activities):

Here's a link on this for autism (though as an editor wow did that title need an editor lol):

Resources on this aren't great because they're mainly aimed at neurotypical therapists or parents of neurdivergent children. There's worksheets you can do that help a lot too or thought work you can do to sort of build the neuro-infrastructure for tasks.
But a lot of the stuff is just like. fun. Pulling from both the first article and my own experience:
Play games or video games where you have to make a lot of decisions. Literally go make a ton of picrews or do online dress-up dolls if you like. It helped me.
Art, especially forms of art that require patience, planning ahead, or in contrast improvisation
Listening to longform storytelling without visuals, e.g. just listening regularly to audiobooks or narrative podcasts, etc.
Meditation
Martial arts
Sports in general
Board games like chess or Catan (I actually found a big list of what board games are good for building what executive functioning skills here)
Woodworking
Cooking
If you're bad at time management play games or video games with a bunch of timers
Things can be easier. You do not have to be stuck forever.
Ya know... this was funnier in my head.





I'm not proud of myself for how Finn turned out, but in my defense I was working without a reference, like I literally have no idea what he's supposed to look like now other than that he's buff and has a beard.