Category: entrepreneurs with disabilities

Ask Gerianne – An Update


 
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Ask Gerianne has faced a few roadblocks but is still in the works! Please be patient and keep your questions coming!

Ask Gerianne

Ask Gerianne, an Update

 

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Hi folks, we just wanted to pop on for a minute to say that we’ve been getting questions for Ask Gerianne and we’re working on putting videos together. We hope we’ll have, hopefully in the next couple of weeks we’ll start answering questions. So far, I’m really happy with the questions we have gotten and I look forward to answering them on video. So, stay tuned and we’ll be seeing you.

International Day of People with Disabilities – Fighting for Rights in the Post-Covid Era

International Day of People with Disabilities Logo

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In the “After Covid” world everyone has now experienced some type of isolation or barrier to participating in activities. These barriers have always been a daily reality for disabled people but each of us now have a personal understanding of what that means and what it feels like to be unable to do the things that we considered “normal.” We need to take this new understanding and use it to inspire each other to build a world where isolation does not exist and inclusion is second nature.

The fact that the Covid-19 pandemic has had a disproportionate effect on disabled people has been well-documented and frequently discussed. There are numerous statistics about how having a disability resulted in a significantly higher risk of death from a Covid-19 infection and a wide variety of reasons about why that is the case.

An important part of the discussion that I haven’t seen addressed very often outside of disability-centered community conversations is the small ways that disabled people have had to fight for their right to inclusion to be recognized and respected. Changes to make something accessible to everyone are frequently so small they are completely over-looked.

There are so many spaces that are not physically accessible to people with mobility issues, hearing impairment and vision problems. Disabled folks who don’t have mobility issues still encounter non-physical barriers. When most people hear about “accessibility” they almost always assume it’s about the physical world, specifically about doors that open automatically, ramps for mobility issues and bigger toilet stalls.

With the pandemic increasing the need for everyone to be able to access work and community while maintaining physical distance, online spaces have become an integral part of our daily activities. This has allowed for people, including disabled people, to remotely participate in things they may not have otherwise had access to with gathering restrictions and lockdowns in effect.

It has also presented challenges to disabled people who find parts of online life often inaccessible. Accessibility continues to be elusive in a world that is not designed with everyone in mind.

During the pandemic, it has become increasingly clear that the fight for disability rights is more than just ensuring spaces are physically accessible. We have all become intimately familiar with how isolating and damaging it can be to be unable to participate in things we think of as part of daily life. We need to consider that this is how people with disabilities feel on an almost daily basis. Both the physical world and the virtual world have been created in a way the takes a “one-size-fits-all” approach to accessibility but with the vast diversity of bodies “one-size-fits-all” is simply just not true.

When we look at how inaccessible the world can be, it gets overwhelming but if we consider the small changes we can make online and off, the world will become more accessible. It’s important to include a wide variety of people in our accessibility plans for both physical and non-physical spaces. Disabled people continue to fight for the very basic right of being included in society. Accommodation and accessibility are a key factor in inclusion.

How can we start making small changes to make the world, both physical and virtual, more accessible and inclusive? The easiest place to start is to simply observe. Being aware of the world around us, speaking to the people around us, noticing how we and other people interact with the life are an invaluable starting place. This can be difficult online, as the only thing we can “observe” is an inanimate screen most of the time but the online communities we already interact with still function similarly to the offline world. There is almost always a person behind that screen on the other end and if we remember that we will be able to start thinking about how they interact with their online environment. That will lead us to thinking and talking about to make those interactions accessible for and inclusive to everyone.

Disability Pride Store Announcement!

Purchasing from the DisabilityPride.store is an excellent way to help support the work we do here at DisabilityPride.net. We are very fortunate to have an amazing community here and love seeing people show their Disability Pride with our merchandise.

Every purchase made from our store goes to help fund mundane things like website hosting costs and keeping the lights on, all the way to amazing events like our Disability Pride Parade (also, reminder! Get your images and videos submitted!) and Gerianne’s upcoming autobiography. We take great PRIDE in sharing these with you and if you have any DisabilityPride.net merchandise, share that with us for the Disability Pride Parade!

If you use a wheelchair or powerchair, we even offer customized bags that fit over the back! If there is anything you would like to see in our store, let us know! We want you to show your Disability Pride and if we can make something cool at the same time, everybody wins.

DisabilityPride.net Announces…

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By Mary Wilson

Two white women are smiling at the camera for a selfie. The woman on the left has blonde hair and is wearing a pink sweater. The woman on the right has brown and grey hair and is wearing a red sweater and a necklace.

After years of pestering from friends, family, and readers of this blog, after starting to plan it at 12 years old, after numerous false starts, Gerianne is FINALY writing her autobiography.

To facilitate writing, to ensure she has the time and energy to focus on her storied life, Gerianne has asked me to take over most of the responsibilities for writing and maintaining DisabilityPride.net’s blog. I humbly accepted the opportunity she presented to me, to maintain part of her life’s work and help keep her on track to complete her biggest piece of writing ever.

I hope I am able to bring joy and entertainment to every reader! I am excited to build on Gerianne’s legacy of disability pride and to flex my writing muscles again. I am also eager to see what Gerianne’s autobiography will be! She has led an interesting, exciting, and inspiring life. I have heard many of her stories but I know there are many more that will surprise me.

If you have any ideas for content you would like to see here or in our First Voice newsletter, contact us! We accept submissions at firstvoice@disabilitypride.net and we love hearing from you on our Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/DisabilityPride.net)! We want to see your art and photography, read your stories and learn about issues and ideas that matter to you.

DisabilityPride.net is a community. We are here to bring pride to everyone and the best way to do that is with your inspiration and input.