Gimp’s Gripes on Mojo Radio Live!

A cynical gimp bitching about disability issues with a hint of hormone and a shot of sarcasm.

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5 June 2007

Why Disability Activists Oppose Jerry Lewis and the Pity Thon

by @ 8:43 PM ET. Filed under Attitudes

Books to read:
Too Late To Die Young by Harriet McBryde Johnson

Disability Rag articles:
“Jerry’s Orphans and the Telethon: Disability Rag Classics”

Crip Commentary by Laura Hershey  — WEBSITE devoted to disability issues, has full section on why so many protest the telethon…

26 May 2007

What was that?!?!?!

by @ 3:07 AM ET. Filed under Attitudes, The Cure
“You don’t want a cure?!?!?!”No, I don’t.

I don’t want a cure for my Cerebral Palsy.

Of course I’d be for prevention - C.P. is mainly caused by dangerous stuff, kids.

But I don’t want to be able bodied. I don’t. I’d be totally different. Where would all my lessons be? Lessons I learned quickly, like:

- It’s OK if you can’t run that fast - everyone has limits
- If you look odd in the eyes of society because of something you can’t control, screw it. Tolerance for other people is important and I can’t control when my clonus happens or where my left eye rolls. If people are actually going to not talk to me just because of that, because of how I look—the ways I can’t control—they aren’t worth conversing with, anyway.
- Acceptance of different methods of communication. Too often, speaking is seen as the only way. There are communication boards, sign language, picture libraries, etc.
- Tolerance of others: economic status, physical abilities, cognitive abilities, etc.

Yes, able bodied people learn this, too, but I learned this pretty fast when I was the object of kid’s jeering or staring. Some people say that a disabled person who wants a cure because people are teasing them is a good idea/justifiable, but I don’t think so. Tolerance is extremely important, and we all have some physical limitation. Without disabled lives, there would be significantly less teaching about tolerance for those with different abilities. Oh, and by the way, anyone that teases someone should be made to read Moby Dick in one sitting.

While on the other hand, I do support research for a cure and stem cells.

For people with Usher Syndrome, they are born deaf and eventually become blind due to retinitis pigmentosa. They almost always want their vision back; I want the vision I lost back as well. However, I know what it’s like to see out of two eyes.

To equate the same conundrum of a person previously able bodied getting a disability, and a disabled person since birth, is not fair. This is all I know. I don’t understand able bodied quirks and I have alternatives for everything. This is all I know. It’s futile trying to make me understand that I would be better without C.P., because I don’t know. Nor can you make a judgment because you don’t have C.P. This is where the tolerance thing comes in.

A doctor is not necessarily a disabled person. They have studied it, but not lived it (you get my idea, I know disabled doctors—my favourite rehab doctor has C.P.). Don’t run to a doctor that’s able bodied and expect to get an accurate assessment of quality of life of a disabled individual, because they’re able bodied and don’t know.

That’s OK. I just expect them, and the rest of the able bodied community, to accept my own assessment of my quality of life and provide treatment for everything.

But wait - what if someone doesn’t think their quality of life is good?

Then they’re probably depressed. Under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, disabled people are entitled to the same treatment—and the same right to refuse it—for depression.
If not, it’s worth asking if all symptoms are being controlled properly. I have a nerve injury that’s extremely painful. But, with pain management medications (all of which are over 500 dollars a month combined), I have a good quality of life.

And for G-d’s sakes, don’t piss on medical weed. If it helps manage the symptom, let them use it.

Rarely, when a person feels their quality of life is low, is it actually about the disability itself—but more about social factors. Teasing, feeling like you’re the only one, feeling a burden, etc.—those are disability issues and many can be resolved by becoming actively involved with other disabled people.

This is why I don’t support the MDA (Muscular Dystrophy Association), and do support United Cerebral Palsy. UCP aims more to help make sure that proper access is ensured, that tools and things manage the symptoms, etc.—rather than “fixing” it. Because a large portion of people in UCP have C.P., so they know life as a person with C.P. isn’t bad.

Not like I’m saying ditch cures—but it’s worth examining what’s the real problem. Spasms? Muscle relaxants, botox, baclofen pump. Teasing? The attitudes of the kids. Muscular Dystrophy is eventually fatal and at that point, can’t be managed—that’s why I support cures for people who want them.

Because remember, I’m going to get my vision back. Legally blind now, but with a way…I will get it back. But for now, let’s talk about my main fears of going blind: being locked in the dark with no support. Well, duh, there’s a rehab centre for the blind in Cincinnati. Driving? Public transportation (and if you wouldn’t ride it, improve it). Not looking “normal…” just an attitude all teenagers have.

So remember - think positively about disabled people’s quality of life. Because really, it’s not all that bad.

2 May 2007

What is the problem here?

by @ 8:04 PM ET. Filed under Attitudes, The Cure

Many, many people have debated and debated on what is wrong with disability. Yet the disability community is not given equal time in public discussions nor is the advice of disabled people on quality of life with a disability or the problems with being disabled is actually respected and considered.
[more]

28 April 2007

The language we use to describe disability.

by @ 9:51 PM ET. Filed under Attitudes, Discrimination

I find the word “handicapped” offensive. The crip sitting across from me finds the word “disabled” offensive. The able bodied person is confused.

Too many people place too much of an emphasis on words to describe disability, but the real problem, in my eyes, is attitudes. We’ll get to the actual disability later.

For example, someone could be the nicest, most politically correct person in the world, who uses the term “handicapped.” When a wheelchair user comes up asking for a job, this person, in this hypothetical case, might refuse because they don’t have an elevator, or because they don’t have ramps. “Oh, I’m sorry, I can’t accept you - our building isn’t wheelchair/handicapped friendly.”

Too often, the “I’m sorry” excuse is given. Why is this a reason why someone can’t get a job? If someone is qualified, then they should be given the same opportunities. The “I’m sorry” people are the disabled community’s oppressors. Or handicapped people. Pick your favourite word.

On the other hand, someone could use the word “wheelchair bound” (a word that makes me and other wheelchair users cringe), and make their building completely accessible, and to really get favourable treatment from the disability community, include us in discussions on disability issues.

I want to go to Holland. Never mind that they have legalised medical killing. I find the culture fascinating, I’m curious to see another perspective on issues other than the American culture. But oops, I’ll have to be fully ambulatory to be able to enjoy Holland.

This is offensive to me, more so than someone using “handicapped,” “wheelchair bound,” “special,” and “brave.” OK, maybe not brave. The disability rights movement, from its beginnings in the 1970s to the present, hasn’t made any huge progress by leaps and bounds. Yes, we have the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which mandates that all places receiving federal tax dollars must make accommodations for the disabled; yes, we have section 508 of the same act, which mandates all Federal websites be accessible; yes, we have the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, which mandates all places make a reasonable accommodation for the disabled.

Yet still, we hear “I’m sorry.” We hear, “I can’t help you, I can’t listen right now.”

This is bullshit. This is discrimination. It’s even more sickening than “wheelchair bound.”

What’s even more offensive is that there are actual disabled people doing this. There are crips who won’t listen to someone with a developmental disability (due to lack of patience) and won’t bother learning how to use a communication board.

And — what’s worse is that we are still bitching about words. Words shouldn’t mean anything. In fact, that’s why we use crip, cripple, gimp, etc. It’s self-empowerment. Maybe if we all - the disability community, I mean - uses these words, we might actually focus on important issues like independent living, the right to health care, and the right to be able to make a contribution to the community and world at large. Maybe if we stop bitching about who’s really disabled, maybe if we start working together, using all methods of communication, if we listen, we can and will make a difference.

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