On a royal blue background, white text reads “Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown (they/them/theirs/themself).” Above is a circle picture of Ly Xīnzhèn, an East Asian person in their thirties, wearing a dark suit, knitted necktie, and glasses. They also have a small tie clip, a silver magen david necklace, and a ceramic watermelon brooch. On either side of the picture are light blue framing sections. Below is Ly Xînzhèn’s bio in white text that reads “Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown is an internationally recognized advocate, organizer, attorney, strategist, policy expert, and writer focused on interpersonal and state violence against disabled people at the intersections of race, class, gender, sexuality, faith, language, and nation. They are the Founding Executive Director of The Autistic People of Color Fund, a project of collective care, redistributive justice, and mutual aid.” Below is the Disability Culture Lab logo in white. At the top, in the middle, is a white square made of circles in lines. On either side are two light pink arrows pointing out. In the bottom right corner is the page number “1.”
On a royal blue background is a circle picture of Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown (they/them/theirs/themself), an East Asian person in their thirties, wearing a dark suit, knitted necktie, and glasses. They also have a small tie clip, a silver magen david necklace, and a ceramic watermelon brooch. To the right is text reading “Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown (they/them/theirs/themself)” and “Q: In the midst of all we are facing, where do you find disabled Trans joy right now?” Below is the first part of Ly Xīnzhèn’s answer in white text that reads “I find Trans disabled joy when sharing food. Folding dumplings, eating injera, steaming rice, simmering rajma and doro wot, grinding Sichuan peppercorn, sipping coffee, piling kitfo and ayib on qocho, slicing mushrooms, tossing noodles, and basting salmon. We adapt recipes and techniques for arthritic hands and brain fog and OCD and tactile aversions, and we support each other cooking and cleaning.” Below is the Disability Culture Lab logo in white. At the top, in the middle, is a white square made of circles in lines. On either side are two light pink arrows pointing out. In the bottom right corner is the page number “2.”
On a royal blue background is a circle picture of Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown (they/them/theirs/themself), an East Asian person in their thirties, wearing a dark suit, knitted necktie, and glasses. They also have a small tie clip, a silver magen david necklace, and a ceramic watermelon brooch. To the right is text reading “Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown (they/them/theirs/themself)” and “Q: In the midst of all we are facing, where do you find disabled Trans joy right now?” Below is the second part of Ly Xīnzhèn’s answer in white text that reads “We share gratitude for the labor needed to grow and prepare food and we savor eating together because we believe in a future and present where we all enjoy abundance and plenty and care, and where the food that nourishes us enables us to keep resisting, fighting, dreaming, and building.” Below is the Disability Culture Lab logo in white. At the top, in the middle, is a white square made of circles in lines. On either side are two light pink arrows pointing out. In the bottom right corner is the page number “3.”
For this #TDOV, disabled Trans folks need liberation and joy. Ly Xīnzhèn M. Zhǎngsūn Brown @lydiaxzbrown.com of Autistic People of Color Fund finds disabled Trans joy in food, because gathering to eat reflects abundance, care, and a future where nourishment fuels resisting, dreaming, and building.