If you can’t be at marches in person due to your health, work, or care taker obligations, if you’re able you can browse misspelling of the March tags and retweet them with the proper tags.
You can create a collection of speeches, signs, videos, official statements.
You can gather others who couldn’t attend and have an impromptu Twitter chat in the hashtag.
You can choose a free conference calling service and organize other people who can’t attend by action item on the phone.
You can find & distribute all the ways people can assist the affected population.
When marchers get home, you can contact them to document their experiences. Record them on the phone or on Skype.
There are many ways to #resist and we need everyone.
Organizers: it would be really great if you’d make marches more accessible. We are many, and we can make your events better, larger, more successful.
Friends, Romans, Country ass folks? This week all #myspoons threads will be cross-postedto @WeAreDisabled.
It's a cool project you can learn more about at weatedisabled.wordoress.com -a snapshot of @disabled people's lives & experiences, hosted for a week at a time by various disabled people.
I'm also going to be re-postimg some of my old cancer posts from tinustuff.com.
Damn if coffee doesn’t help me more than hurt. #myspoons
I wonder if getting out of the habit of drinking coffee was a daft choice as a #spoonie with multiple fatigue conditions.
Once my body let me get out of bed today, I figured, let me get coffee while I'm up. And wow.
It didn't fix everything (I’m definitely depressed and need a therapist) but damned if I'm not actually getting things done for the first time in 3 weeks.