Disabled pride vs. awareness

Photo by Scott Graham from Unsplash 

On July 26th, 1990, George H. W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities  Act.

The ADA is a law that gives people with disabilities protection against  discrimination in the workplace, public transportation, restaurants, schools, and much more.

 In addition, the law mandates accommodations that provide access  and independence to people with disabilities to live their lives. 

That’s why July is disability pride month. It is a celebration of the diversity within the disabled community. 

The law prevents discrimination against all types of disability; mental illness, cognitive, intellectual, sensory, and physical. Each type is represented in  the disability pride flag.

Pride

Why is it pride month and not awareness month? Awareness is acknowledging a  diagnosis, and pride is a celebration.

You might donate money to foundations  during awareness months, but in pride months, you march and find community.  

July is a month to recognize all the feelings of people with disabilities. You don’t  have to be proud of your disability to be included. July raises up voices of  disabled people to tell their stories.

For me, people have always been “aware” of my disability. Because they can see my mobility aids. 

The questions like “What happened?” or “what’s wrong  with your legs?” gets old quickly. 

Those situations made me resent my mobility aids for “outing” me as disabled. 

I learned over time that not using them made  me slower and maybe look more “special” because of how I naturally walk. 

In the end, mobility aids provide more independence than unwanted questions.

Personal Awareness

My work around for hiding my orthotics was 

to never under any circumstance wear shorts to school as a child.

That and to pick skin tone colors  to make them blend in. 

(Although this usually made people think I had  prosthetics versus leg braces, and having to explain that is awkward). 

In most  pictures, I color-coded my crutches to my outfit. This was to minimize my  mobility aids and disability as much as possible. 

My internal ableism grew out of  assumptions others had about my disability. Awareness diminished the amount  of pride I had.