#t-mobile park
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greendayauthority · 6 months ago
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T-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA, 23 September 2024
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mikeywayarchive · 4 months ago
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officialviolentfemmes: We're happy to announce that we'll be opening for @mychemicalromance on July 11, 2025 at T-Mobile Park in Seattle, WA. Tickets for this show go on sale this Friday at 10am local time. Find the ticket link at VFemmes.com/tour
[Nov 12, 2024]
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chaptertwo-thepacnw · 7 months ago
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hempler's hot dogs from heaven |2024|
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keiteay · 2 years ago
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⚡🏭
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miketownsends · 1 year ago
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i’m home 💙🔱
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jdmara · 4 months ago
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mcr seattle i WILL be in you
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phantom-wolf · 7 months ago
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@hetalia-rarepairweek
Day 6: Based on a Movie
Title: Trapped in Amber
Ship: Arthur Kirkland x Elizabeth I // Arthur Kirkland x Elizabeth I x Alfred F. Jones
Warnings: There will be eventual violence since it is Jurassic Park, but it's not featured in the first chapter. There are also jokes of a sexual nature so be warned
Co-authored with: @the-engdyssey
Summary: “Oh for God's sake,” Arthur murmured irritatedly as the phone rang. It never ended, but such was his job as the head of the department. “Dr. Kirkland,” he answered the phone. An unfamiliar voice greeted him. After asking who the caller was, Arthur remained mostly silent except for a few utterances of acknowledgement. The more Arthur listened, the more silent he became. Elizabeth paused as she noticed Arthur's brows drew together. “I'm sorry,” he interrupted finally, “you're saying you have a what??”
Based off the Jurasic Park book and movie!
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dinosaurwithablog · 6 months ago
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A great photo of T Mobile Park. You can see the giant ferris wheel and Lumen Field in the background. As far as cities go, Seattle is a very beautiful city. It's, definitely, a city where the people love sports, as you can see by the fact that they have a baseball stadium and a football stadium. I like that.
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queer-whatchamacallit · 1 year ago
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Alphabet Character Art Challenge
D - Donna Meagle from Parks and Recreation :]
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greendayauthority · 6 months ago
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T-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA, 23 September 2024
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mikeywayarchive · 4 months ago
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tmobilepark and mariners: 🖤 Welcome to The Black Parade 🖤    @mychemicalromance is coming to the ballpark next summer to play their iconic The Black Parade album in its entirety on Friday, July 11 with special guests @officialviolentfemmes. Tickets go on sale this Friday at 10 a.m.     🔗 Mariners.com/MCR
[Nov 12, 2024]
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chaptertwo-thepacnw · 10 months ago
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tridents up |2024|
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rabbitcruiser · 2 years ago
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The Park Vegas was opened on April 4, 2016.
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ichirosuzuki · 11 months ago
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ARE YOY FUCKING KIDDING ME AJDJAJDJSJXHSHSHHDHSHDJSJDJDJDJ BABYYYYYYYYYYY
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release-th-kraken · 6 months ago
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one of the last mariners games of the season ohughhhh I'm SICK
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wheelie-sick · 3 months ago
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people way underestimate the needs of wheelchair users.
there's a lot of what I'll call walkism (bias towards pedestrians and against wheelchair users) among disabled pedestrians (people who primarily walk, assisted or not, as their means of mobility)
diminishing our needs is walkism.
people within the community see us as ableds minus legs. they see our disabilities as simple- just can't walk, it's that easy. they see us as having low accommodation needs and as having the accommodations that we do need met. they see our access barriers as being as simple as ramps and curb cuts.
we are frequently compared to low support needs (LSN) non-physically disabled people by ablebodied disabled people and physically disabled people alike. we are compared to people who walk through life (literally) with little to no support, who make it through school with minimal accommodations, who have access to the whole world.
people are so incredibly out of touch with what wheelchair use actually looks like. people don't personally know wheelchair users, often don't even follow them on social media. people assume they can understand our entire lives by looking at our wheels and imagining. that doesn't work.
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this belief that our disabilities are simple especially goes for paraplegic wheelchair users who are so often used as the "closest to abled" examples. they don't consider how many paraplegic wheelchair users experience things like spasms, chronic pain, bladder spasms specifically, both urinary and fecal incontinence, among much else that I'm sure I'm not aware of as I am not paraplegic. they especially don't consider that fact that wheelchair use is absolutely not close to abled.
they don't consider the extent of needs that full time and near full time wheelchair users experience. have you ever had to wait in the grocery store parking lot for 30+ minutes so an accessible spot with an access aisle could open up? how deep is the washing machine in your apartment? how large is the room it's in? is your sink too tall? what about the cabinets? how high is your bed? how low is your dining table? how easy would it be to fit a wheelchair in your car? how reliable is your bus? how reliable are the people on it to not put their groceries in the wheelchair spot? does your workplace have a ramp?
when people become wheelchair users they often have to uproot their entire lives to rebuild in a way that allows them to access things as vital as their home and workplace. when people already are wheelchair users they experience shortages of everything- jobs with accessible buildings, apartments they can get into and use, cars they can put their wheelchairs in easily.
this isn't even getting into things like access to businesses and other locations wheelchair users may want to go.
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wheelchair users always have significant disabilities. yes, always. yes, even that disability you think is mild. people don't end up as wheelchair users because they have mild chronic pain or lose balance occasionally. people end up as wheelchair users because they have significant mobility disabilities. significant mobility disabilities rarely act alone. I cannot name a wheelchair user who only experiences mobility disability. everything, yes, everything comes with other effects.
while I've spent a lot of time talking about the comparatively low support needs wheelchair users there are high support needs wheelchair users as well. people only look at those of us who have ability to do all or most ADLs with our wheelchairs, this is not the case for every wheelchair user. there are wheelchair users who use group 3 powerchairs. there are wheelchair users who transfer via hoist. there are wheelchair users who need to control their wheelchair with their breath. there are wheelchair users who can't move their wheelchair independently at all and rely on someone else to push them. there are wheelchair users whose disabilities cause significant disability in areas other than mobility meaning they have feeding tubes, ostomies, suprapubic catheters, and ventilators. these presentations of disability are not even uncommon.
true high support needs wheelchair users are so often erased from every conversation (including conversations among wheelchair users) but I have not once seen a pedestrian mention quadriplegia & tetraplegia or muscular dystrophy or spinal muscular atrophy or any other number of conditions that leave someone needing both a wheelchair and very high support. I never see mentions of intellectually disabled people who use wheelchairs for conditions connected to their intellectual disability and I never see mentions of conditions like sanfilippo syndrome.
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ultimately though, wheelchair users are just not a monolith. I will stand by the fact that, while some wheelchair users may have low support needs compared to other wheelchair users and high support needs neurodevelopmentally disabled people, none of our support needs are so low that they are at all comparable to those of low support needs non-physically disabled people. it's erasure of our disability to suggest there is no difference in support required between a low support needs autistic person and a wheelchair user on the low support needs end of the wheelchair support needs spectrum.
it is especially erasure to collapse all wheelchair users down to the lowest level of support needs a wheelchair user can have. it pretends that our higher support needs siblings don't exist.
the community does not understand us or our struggles. it won't understand us or our struggles until we are included, until people stop seeing us as the most privileged part of the community and until people stop minimizing our struggles. walkism is the reason wheelchair users have built our own communities separate from the rest of the disabled community. it is made clear time and time again that we are not welcome and we will not be understood.
A note: by wheelchair user I am specifically referring to people who use a wheelchair on a regular basis for day-to-day tasks. for the sake of this post I am not including people who only use wheelchairs at the mall/Disney/theme parks/other long distances.
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