Many people who are disabled have to walk a fine line controlling
other people’s perception of them: the line between looking
vulnerable and not yourself and appearing “not disabled enough”.
The way our society
treats disable people erases their identity and turns individuals
into a single homogeneous being of “The Disabled”. We are
stripped of what makes us us and instead represented by walking
sticks blue badges wheelchair pictographs and infernal aluminium and
grey plastic.
“You don’t look
disabled!” and “But you don’t look sick!” are stock phrases
that every disabled person will be tired of hearing. The phrase is
usually offered one of two ways: disbelief and judgement or an
attempt at a compliment.
When offered as a
compliment it is to say “you don’t look how I think a disabled
person looks” or “you don’t look pathetic or weak”. This is
part of erasing our identity and assuming that all disabled and
chronically ill people fit into a single mould. It also assumes that
the goal and the ideal is for the person to not be disabled and so be
successfully looking “not disabled” we are achieving success. It
also ignores the fact that regardless of how we look we are still
disabled, we have gone to great effort to look our best but that
doesn’t mean we negate our disability.
When the phrases are
said with animosity or judgement they fuel discrimination. The
implication is usually that in claiming disability status, and
especially in making use of any support or assistance, we are lying,
faking or acting fraudulently. Again this comes from a place of not
conforming to views of what a disabled person should look like or how
they should act. It also ignores the fact that you are often only
seeing disabled or chronically ill people on good days, not on the
bad days or at times when their disability limits interaction: if a
disabled person can’t every make it into a pub with poor
accessibility some people may draw the conclusion that disabled
people don’t go to the pub. That is to say, enjoying a pint with
their friends doesn’t fit the picture of disability which has been
created in their minds.
photograph showing a person from the waist up wearing dungarees and a black t-shirt, they have grey lipstick, glasses and green hair. They have tube bandages on both elbows. credit Chiara MacCall |
The impact of this
can be devastating from verbal and physical discrimination and abuse,
an unwillingness to improve accessibility to place out of a belief
that disabled people won’t use certain facilities, to privation
when benefits aren’t awarded or long term health issues and even
fatality if medical treatment is denied.
One of the often
unspoken casualties of this attack on how disabled people should look
and behave is the mental health and well-being of a disabled person.
When you are reduced only to one aspect of your life, and that aspect
is often difficult and unpleasant or comes with negative
associations, it can wear away at a person’s sense of self, their
confidence and self worth. Additionally being constantly questioned
and doubted as to the validity of their experience can cause guilt,
confusion, stress and paranoia. The mental health cost of the
general public not really seeing disabled people as people is
massive.
However there is a
balance to be struck. If we see only the individual and erase their
disability, we may create more inequality by not addressing the
access and care needs of disabled people. If we see only the
disability we erase their identity along with any other
characteristics and difficulties they may face (because a disabled
person may also be a black person, a Muslim, gay, trans, poor or
other minority characteristics).
I have writtenpreviously about being seen as a vulnerable adult. This continues to
be an issue especially following a recent burglary that has left me
very aware that I am to many people who see me a vulnerable person.
To those who only see the disability I am an easy target (if their
minds lead to nefarious activity any way). That’s a very difficult
position to find yourself in. I don’t want to be viewed as nothing
more than an equation that disabled = vulnerable yet I must face the
fact that not only are there people who view me this way but that
they aren’t entirely incorrect.
What could I do
really if there was an intruder in my house, especially on a bad day
where I was struggling with fatigue or pain. Could I fight back if
attacked? Could I defend myself and my house. The answer is, probably
no. Despite the fact that I have, prior to my disability, years of
martial arts training is inconsequential. It doesn’t matter that
for somebody with my health conditions I am relatively strong. The
majority of time I am a vulnerable adult and I know that anybody
seeing me in the street or, gods forbid watching me exit and enter my
house with my walking stick, could conclude that I am an easy target.
Understandably this
is a very difficult concept to deal with. Nobody likes to think of
themselves as a target or feel unsafe in their own home. But worse
than that it strips me of my identity and personality. It reduces me
to that concept of disabled and nothing more.
photograph that is blurred showing motion. A person is walking away from the camera wearing a backpack and using their walking stick. Credit Chiara MacCall |
But I am more than
that. And I want non-disabled people to know that. I want
non-disabled people to start to look beyond the sticks and chairs and
hearing aids and to see real people and to understand that if
somebody saying they are disabled even if you can’t see any obvious
indicators, even if they don’t fit the traditional narrative of
what disability looks like, that maybe they are disabled and maybe
there is more to them than that disability. Being disabled does not
erase my gender or my sexuality. It does not erase that I like heavy
and eclectic music. It does not erase the fact that I love art and
books and food. It doesn’t erase that I enjoy being active and
singing and horses. It doesn’t erase my political opinions or
activism.
More than that those
many things and more that make up who I am do not in any way make me
less disabled, cure my disability, make me a liar, make me a faker,
erase my disability or my experience as a disabled person.
That’s what the
photographs illustrating this article are all about. They are a
collaboration with documentary photographer Chiara MacCall who uses
her lens to show who people really are and who has a great talent for
showing what is beneath the surface of her subjects. I spent a day in
London with Chiara being disabled and being me. We ate good food,
talked politics and social justice, looked at art both in galleries
and on the street and talked about what it was that made us who we
are. I was not “born disabled”. I gained my disability in my late
20s. It has taken a long time for me to accept that this is a part of
who I am, that it can be a part of who I am without erasing my
personality, identity and the sum of the experiences I had had up
until that point. Just as taking a dance class when I was 7 shaped
who I am today, so did becoming disabled when I was 27.
My self identity
does not invalidate my disability and my disability does not
invalidate me.