I wish Cawthorn used his platform to undermine ableism by showing his political party that not everyone can stand, and that is okay. I wish he showed the GOP that it is okay to be Disabled. I wish he acted as a role model to Disabled children, showing that he doesn’t have to perform able-bodiedness in order to be a leader. He can lead just as efficiently from a chair. There is enough pressure on Disabled children without having someone like Cawthorn standing and catering to able-bodied norms.
Tag: Disability
In Defense of Sitting
Yesterday, I saw a video of a disabled man standing up from his wheelchair to dance with his bride at … More
Disability and Loneliness
I sit here writing this as a twenty-one-year-old disabled woman, yet I feel like a twelve-year-old girl. Today, like many … More
Some Other Time: on Dismissing the Disabled Community in Spaces of “Justice”
When I enter spaces of social justice, I am often greeted with “We’ll talk about disability later.” Disability is a … More
The Escalator: The Costs of Inaccessibility
Last week, a man in a power wheelchair died from falling down an escalator at a train station in Columbia … More
The Oxymoron of Being Disabled and Twenty-one
Being twenty-one and disabled often feels like an oxymoron. My college apartment has makeup and textbooks, but also … More
Hollywood Still Excludes Disability
I was fourteen the first time I saw disability portrayed fairly accurately on television. Switched at Birth was … More
My first kiss was in an elevator: on dating with a disability
My first kiss was in an elavator. When I read that statement I know I sound like a stereotypical disabled … More
My Community
I’ve always been told that college is a place for free-thinkers. It is. Loyola was the first place … More
The Able-bodied Struggle
I attended public school for twelve years. The high school I graduated from was majorly overrun by able-bodies. … More