lifestyle

This is what disability looks like (gallery)

A message from people living with disabilities to the able bodied population: We are not your inspiration.

The next time you walk past someone with a disability and think to yourself  “That’s so sad…..”

STOP. And then remember the images we’re about to show you.

Thanks to the ‘This is What Disability Looks Like’ Facebook Page for these images. You can (and should) check out the rest here.

These photos come from a Facebook page called This Is What Disability Looks Like. The page includes a series of pictures created by people living with disability to show the rest of the world what being disabled is really like.

They don’t want to be seen as tragic. They don’t want pity. They’re not here to make you feel warm and fuzzy and amazed at how they get through everyday life.

They want to be seen like all the rest of us do: For the people they are.

The page was started by a woman named Bethany Stevens (she is the woman in the wheelchair in pic #1) and it aims to send a powerful message.  People living with disabilities send in photos. Bethany adds the text. And then posts them to Facebook where they are then shared by hundreds of people.

In this interview, Bethany says the page started almost as an accident.

“It was truly spurred by my wife adding text to a photo that was taken of a krip friend and I. It was well received by folks in disability communities, so I thought I should explore what the idea could do in a broader format. I started a Facebook page, sent a call out for photos, and encouraged people to spread the word.” she says.

And then photos poured in.

One of those photos was from the phenomenal disability advocate and Mamamia contributor Stella Young.

Earlier this year, Stella wrote a post for Mamamia titled: “I’m not here for your inspiration.”

In it, she talked about what she refers to as inspiration porn; when images people with a disability are captioned with quotes like  “your excuse is invalid” or “the only disability in life is a bad attitude” and used as  “inspiration” for non-disabled people.

A way to put their problems into perspective, if you will.

But, as Stella writes, the pictures objectify those they claim to represent and assumes disabled people people live terrible lives.

Their lives are just like everyone else’s.

Stella Young

When I was 15, a member of my local community approached my parents and told them she wanted to nominate me for some kind of community achievement award. My parents said, “Thanks, but there’s one glaring problem with that… she hasn’t actually achieved anything out of the ordinary.”

They were right. I went to school, I got good marks, I had a very low key after-school job, and I spent a lot of time watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Dawson’s Creek. I wasn’t feeding orphaned Chlamydia-infected baby koalas before school, or setting up a soup kitchen in the main street, or reading newspapers to the elderly at the local hospital. I was doing exactly the same things as my non-disabled friends. When my parents explained all this to the well-meaning nominator, they said “yes, but she’s just such an inspiration”.

And there’s the rub. My everyday life in which I do exactly the same things as everyone else should not inspire people, and yet I am constantly congratulated by strangers for simply existing. It happened twice last week.

I was on a train with my earphones shoved in my ears completely ignoring my fellow commuters (as is my want early in the morning) while reading inane things on twitter. A woman on her way to getting off at her stop patted me on the arm and said “I see you on the train every morning and I just wanted to say it’s great. You’re an inspiration to me.”

Should I have said “you too”? Because we were doing exactly the same thing; catching public transport to our respective places of employment. I was just doing it sitting down. Should I have pointed out that, in many ways, that requires less effort, not more?

That’s the thing about those kids in the inspiration porn pictures too – they’re not doing anything their peers don’t do. We all learn how to use the bodies we’re born with, or learn to use them in an adjusted state, whether those bodies are considered disabled or not. So that image of the kid drawing a picture with the pencil held in her mouth instead of her hand? That’s just the best way for her, in her body, to do it. For her, it’s normal.

You can (and you should) like the This is What Disabilities Look Like page here.

Top Comments

Cecilia Terrones 11 years ago

I work with people with Intellectual disability and I feel I am so blessed. They are amazing and have a lot to give. I learned a lot from them and it is true they don't want your compassion, they want you to see them as normal as we are because they can do the same things we can. Sometimes people use the word retard or retarded to name them, but that hurt me and hurt them because the word retarded is offensive, they have names as you or me and they have the right to be called by their names. thanks for showing the world this.


support worker 11 years ago

I am a disability support worker who does a lot of community access hours and I find that no matter where I go we receive so many almost reproachful looks. Have you never seen a wheelchair before or better yet a person pushing/operating said wheelchair.

It really grates on my nerves when i take one of my clients out to lunch and we are getting table service. Her speaking capabilities are not the best but sometimes she just wants to give it a go and yet the server more often than not alway defers to myself. Sometimes I want to take their menus and smack them in the face.

I love my job not because of the money or hours but because I have built amazing relationships with these people. They do not care for games or pretending to be something their not.

Yes! 11 years ago

Exactly why I am a support worker too. I get looks of "oh, you're so good to be around him" and "gee, it must be so hard doing your job".
Yeah, it would be hard, if it was just 'doing my job', but I'm not, I'm hanging out with my friend, and it's awesome.
We joke a lot about being "inspirational", the Kath & Kim voice certainly helps in seeing the lighter side of life, and help us to understand that sometimes it's just the way that the condescending person knows how to cope with someone different to themselves.
If it is a genuinely mean spirited person, we get on the soap box. We fight back, but I think it is better to demonstrate that you don't need society's approval or championing to be a member of it.

Check out Foundations Forum, specifically 'person centeredness' and values info. Very rewarding insights to take with you every day, with all of your interactions (and for your own values). I'm only 24, am almost finished a speech path degree, so was stuck in the medical model (limitations based rather than valuing strengths) so it was very helpful in developing my ability to provide a warm, rewarding and reciprocal relationship with the dude that I support, as well as everyone else in my life and myself.
High fives to all the other support workers out there!