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Sunday, April 21st, 2013 06:25 am
Articles like ReWalk: A Plea for Common Sense remind me how little ablebodied people understand the sheer joy a good wheelchair can bring. Mostly because the alternative for someone like me is not being able to move, but there are some advantages even over being an able bodied person.

A lot of this would apply to manual wheelchairs too but I've never used one myself.

  • Crush the feet of your enemies. Or don't, and feel magnanimous in your mercy.
  • "Run" with the wind in your hair, or for a bus, without breaking a sweat or getting tired.
  • Unsettle "more radical than thou" able bodied activists with your very presence.
  • Be an unsettling centre of attention in general. Works well with goth/macabre/alternative clothing choices.
  • Never bump your head on low ceilings (admittedly this has never been an issue for me)
  • Have a comfy chair wherever you go. Fantastic for queues.
  • Put heavy loads on the back or next to you and not have to carry the weight yourself.
  • Wear gorgeous but impractical shoes you can't walk in.
  • Work to fight against stereotypes about disabled people and poor awareness of accessibility simply by going out in public and doing your thing.


Any others, fellow wheelies?
Sunday, April 21st, 2013 02:42 am (UTC)
That article is awesome; thanks for linking it!

On a selfish note, I'm still attempting to get all the angles I can on some worldbuilding that involves a culture clash between two civilizations with advanced medical technology: one that believes that everyone naturally wants to look and be "fit" all the time and utilizes surgery for everyone who can afford it, and one that believes in using as much adaptive technology as possible and saving the surgery for when you feel, y'know, sick or pain. Admittedly the hardest thing is not just going "YOU ARE WRONG ABOUT EVERYTHING" at the first civ and setting up the second as Most Enlightened And Perfect...
Tuesday, April 23rd, 2013 06:28 am (UTC)
*nod* I mean, just in the context of trans characters, where this is coming up, the second society is really cool with people deciding what gender they are, but don't really consider surgery or any kind of HRT necessary--which is nice, but less cool for people with dysphoria.

Paaart of the problem is that the second society is an AU Native American culture, which means that I'm really trying to avoid the over-the-top "Pure and in Harmony with Nature!" thing that white Americans... do. These people are technologically advanced, their tech just doesn't always look like the Europeans because they have different priorities! Man, stereotypes are annoying.