Join me, be a whiney, whinging moaner!
- 10 Sep 07, 12:23 AM
I sat locked into the wheelchair space on the public bus while a small but determined older woman was trying to jam her walker in the small space between me and her seat. The walker wasn’t going all the way in. So she just kept reversing it and lunging forward: bam, bam, bam. I was about to give her points for determination when I leaned forward to look down at what she was trying to smash out of her way: my feet.
Never try to educate an obsessed woman smashing one of your body parts with a walker, that’s my policy. I pulled my legs further back and reminded myself to check for toe breaks later (how many places is a toe supposed to bend? Four?). Having someone treat my body parts the same as fallen tree branches is depressing. Which is pretty much what this post is about: that while people with disabilities don’t like to be seen as “heroic”, “Inspirational” or “plucky” they aren’t too keen at talking about being depressed, lonely, and morose.
Being disabled sucks! (It does, for at least most of the people some of the time)
Big news flash, huh? Oops, I think I was supposed to say “I am a person with a mobility issue who recognizes my equality but is hindered by the social model of disability” My retort: Stairs.
I’m not saying I’m not an equal person. I’m just saying that whether you believe in God or plate tectonics things like beaches and mountains didn’t have “accessibility” in mind. And society? My friend in high school was born with one arm and he thought two arms brought about a sluggish stupidity. That might have been the amount of times he was flipped over the front of his bicycle by people swerving, opening doors in front of him and other related “double armed” behavior. Or as he said when they cancelled a class trip after he had been found climbing up between floors on the outside of hotel with water balloons held in his teeth, “Other people were doing it.” Guess leaping around four floors up with one arm isn’t either “equal” or “plucky.”
If I am a person with a disability, that still means I am a person right? I still get to be unhappy, upset and realizing that, truth be told; I liked life a lot better as an able bodied person. Whoops, that was another phrase I’m never supposed to say. I know I am supposed to move on, thank whomever for each day and always look on the bright side. That just requires a few more times passing out and a bit more brain damage since up till now I’ve always been sarcastic, with a biting tongue which didn’t suffer fools gladly. I’m the girl confronted because people had the impression I liked torturing children when I was only reading out Edward Gorey’s
Comments
Re, crowds of people who won't get out of the way even after repeated polite requests, I did my own rant on that particular subject at my blog entitled When this happened to me, I thought perhaps it happened because I was on crutches and assumed that, if I had been in a wheelchair, it would have been more obvious to people that, hey, I needed more *room* to get by. But then I talked with someone I know who was able to set me straight on that score: able-bodied people seem equally clueless either way, at least in the opinion of the person i talked with. You?
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I think you actually meant the Medical Model, not the Social Model - the Social Model hinders no-one other than those who discriminate against us. Being Disabled does suck, but living with an impairment needn't, providing we are getting what we need to enjoy an acceptable quality of life.
i think its so considerate that the bbc have a handy whinge section.
today i mostly hate and despise cab drivers. i would give more examples, but i'm not sure the beeb's comments section has enough space.
Andrea: I'm not so keen on crowds either, particularly ones which expect people in wheelchairs to be able to move sideways at a moments notice (which is currently prohibited by the laws of phyics)
Chris Page: Thanks but I actually did mean Socal Model, including the self regulating one in our own heads, but perhaps I should have phrased it: "I am a person with a mobility issue who recognizes my equality but is hindered by society's lack of the social model's acceptance of my different ableness" (or 'special ableness' or 'person of special ability') - but that just seemed a bit too long and obsessed with pedantry.
Boris: tell me more, I dislike many cab drivers too - particularly when you tell them you are in a wheelchair and the company sends over a car the size of a Yugo.
Elizabeth- thanks for the whinge invite ... it's a perfect day for it.
Fatigue. Crushing fatigue. Life altering, life squelching fatigue. It sucks.
I can't push and fight despite my disability. I can't be courageous and determined in a way that is instantly recognisable to most people. Mine is such a quiet fight.
I don't even know if I'm accepted as disabled when lack of energy is my main disability (even though it often renders me less able than a lot of people). Who decides?
Elizabeth McClung:
If TAB (temporarily able-bodied) folk would just think things through they would realize that even if a wheelchair COULD move sideways it wouldn't really take that much less space (would it?) than a chair moving forward, so how would that help, really? But, oh dear, that would require them to perform the difficult task of *thinking*.
I guess that's part of why I once assumed people would "get it" more easily with a wheelchair user because it just seemed so glaringly obvious to ME ... but given that both you and others I know run into the same problem I guess it's not so obvious to everyone. (Okay, I admit, I think I once upon a time assumed sideways mobility too. Silly me. But I'm pretty sure I did *also* see there wouldn't be a real advantage to it in terms of space requirement.)
Whereas a person on crutches (which I have been at times) CAN move sideways. In theory. The question then being, "Ah, but can I move sideways SAFELY?" And, at the times when I have been sufficiently unstable on my feet to require crutches in the first place, the answer has generally been "no." But people don't seem to think that one through either.
But I'll spare you the rest because anyone who wants to see the long version of my rant can do so by following the link I provide in my first comment up above.
Trying to get a job sucks. Everything looks great on the vita, and then they see you in person...Suddenly, you're a totally incompetent child who shouldn't even be allowed out at night.
Ah yes, the curse of no longer being able to do six things at once. I am currently torn between whether to give in and buy a cup-holder - looking very uncool in the process - or just carry on dropping things. And how do you carry a bag with shoulder and back pain? And how do you transport a whole class's worth of textbooks on crutches without dropping them all over the corridor? I think I need a newly-disabled person's guide to getting things done...
You know what sucks about having a disability? All the wrong people want to strike up conversations with you. Like they've found someone they figure is so desperate for 'contact' that they'll want to tell me about the time Aunt Elly was in a wheelchair and didn't make it to the ... um ... toilet. I see them heading for me, their loneliness flapping like a cape behind them, seeing me as someone who can't or won't escape their attentions. They get to relieve their loneliness and feel good about it at the same time. And, and, and, God save me from another person who wants God to save me. This, I know, is a tad unkind but ... you asked.
What confuses me is; people can see my daughters (who accompany me on trips outside the home) but they cannot see me. Now when people walk towards me I just stop, they either see me and move to the side or bump into me and 'apologise'. As they say; such is life. This is not a whine, just an observation.
My main winge is the same as the above - people trying to cure me. 'Laying on hands' always makes me think of being touched up. Never quite sure how to dodge out the way fast enough. I'm a partial deafy and have to say there are considerable advantages too - not hearing my husband snore, not being the one who wakes up when one of the kids can't sleep... almost worth missing the dawn chorus (almost)...
If ever I'm waiting for a friend in town and I'm a bit early, I can guarantee someone will come up to me and ask if I'm okay and do I want help. Or, like the other day, ask me if I want help crossing the road. Seeing as the crossing was quite a way from where I was sitting and I wasn't sitting anywhere near the road it was obvious to anyone with half a brain cell that I didn't want to cross the road. I hate to be rude to people but I really felt like saying 'Of course I don't want to cross the road you blithering idiot' but I didn't.
And I also hate it when I'm stuck behind what I call a 'crab person' - ie a pedestrian that walks sideways while I'm trying to overtake them so I can never get infront of them. Also couples that hold hands in front of you so that they take up the whole pavement. Plus many other pedestrians who amble along without any awareness of who is behind them while they slowly meander about.
Also I hate it when I stop to let people go past me and they don't say 'thank you' - infact they don't even look at me at all!
Aaaargh I'm in full whinge mode now!
Totally agree about bathrooms - and probably so do a lot of other people as is one of the most popular posts on my blog.
But, while I'd give up pain/fatigue/etc in an instant, and while my pre-illness life was very enjoyable... I'm getting to a point where I am enjoying my with-illness life too. It's a long, long, LONG way from perfect, but there's still a lot that's good in it - some of it stuff I didn't have before because I was too busy or whatever.
Rachelcreative: I think fatigue is one of the least understood debilitating conditions - I definately think it is a disability, particularly as it seem to bestow invisability upon you; like drowning, often a person just sinks out of sight.
Andrea: I liked the rant, and I agree, people don't seem to understand the implication of things - even that if you are on crutches, maybe taking all that extra effort to get through might be painful or taxing upon you?
Bookwormjoanne: Oh, that's what I have to look forward to? Thanks, I get enough of this if I go out in the chair at night. People speak slowly and ask if I am lost - they are probably looking for the name and address that should be pinned on me somewhere.
Lilwatcherguide: So true, I want that guide - what happened to our wonderous future where robots would carry all our stuff for us? If you get a wheelchair ask for an underneath mesh sling - good for 2 oxygen bottles or about 4 textbooks.
Wow, I am so glad I am not alone in whinging!
Dave Hingsburger: Well, I had a great story about projectile vomiting but after that comment....
Seriously, the ones which bother me a bit on the bus are the ones which turn and just say things like you are in the middle of a conversation - did they perhaps begin this conversation with another person in a wheelchair and think we all have telepathy?
Sue R: Okay, that kinda sucks (they just walk into you?), but on the other hand, does this mean you have a superpower? You could be the greatest burglar of all time?
Jo Verrent: Yes, I've been "cured" more times than I want to remember - never seemed to take - I have to wonder how many times a day these people do this - does hand laying count as OCD?
Liz Baker: You comments all made me laugh in agreement - but on the bright side, when I sit and wait for someone, people throw down money - someone throwing down a few pence/pennies is insulting cause a) I'm not begging, I'm WAITING and b) Hey, aren't I worth more than that you cheap jerk!
Mary: I don't know yet how I feel about my 'being-ill' life, but I have met a ton of great people (mostly online) who can be funny, compassionate, considerate and passionate - which I never would have if I continued on in my AB obliviousness.