Ologies with Alie Ward - Disability Sociology (DISABILITY PRIDE) with Guinevere Chambers
Episode Date: July 3, 2024Sexuality and disability! Invisible illnesses! Airline frustrations! How many of us are disabled! July is Disability Pride Month, and professor, researcher, activist, and Disability Sociologist Guinev...ere Chambers joins to bust myths and provide perspective on everything from the history of ableism to sign language to eyeglasses, the criminal justice system, caregiving, how to ask for what you need, handling curious strangers, disclosing disabilities, where ADHD and autism come into play, and how to follow this study path. Follow Guinevere Chambers on LinkedIn and YouTubeA donation was made to HEARD (Helping Educate to Advance the Rights of the Deaf) and The Trevor ProjectMore episode sources and linksSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesOther episodes you may enjoy: Attention-Deficit Neuropsychology (ADHD), LIFE ADVICE: For anyone who is tired & needs some hacks, Traumatology (PTSD), Addictionology (ADDICTION), Fearology (FEAR), Systems Biology (MEDICAL MATHEMATICS), Virology (COVID-19), Carobology (NOT-CHOCOLATE TREES), Dolorology (PAIN)Sponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, stickers, totes!Follow @Ologies on X and InstagramFollow @AlieWard on X and InstagramEditing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio Productions and Jacob ChaffeeManaging Director: Susan HaleScheduling Producer: Noel DilworthTranscripts by Aveline Malek Website by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick Thorburn
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Oh, hey, it is last week's conference lanyard.
I'm at the bottom of your luggage.
Allie Ward, here we are.
It's July in America and in other parts of the world.
Guess what?
It's Pride Month.
It's Disability Pride Month.
Did you know that?
I did, which is why we're doing this episode.
This episode, it's one that was recorded months back, but I've kind of kept it tucked in my
pocket waiting to bust it out on this occasion.
This guest, Simply Wonderful, a professor of sociology
at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs,
and they specialize in applied sociology
and intersectional research in the areas of disability
and gender and pop culture and social constructs
and medicine.
They got a bachelor's in psychology and sociology,
a master's in sociology, and they also conduct research and they do outreach.
They are very smart. They are very cool. And this is a great talk.
But before we get into it, a quick thanks to all the patrons who support the show for a dollar a month and
submit your questions for the ologist via patreon.com slash ologies.
Thank you to everyone who's out there in ologies merch from ologiesmerch.com. We got hats, totes.
We have swim wears for your bod. Also, out there in Ology's merch from ologysmerch.com. We got hats, totes.
We have swim wears for your bod.
Also, thanks to everyone who leaves us reviews.
They help the show reach more people and I read them all.
Even the rare mean ones like this week,
we got a one star review from Van Veltzer
who didn't like that I said the F word in the puffin episode
and said that I have a f-word in the puffin episode and said
that I have a limited vocabulary in my little brain but Van sweet delicate Van
that's exactly why we make Smology's episodes which are kids safe and
available in their own show feed Smology's is its own show now we just
launched it find it wherever you get podcasts you can subscribe at the link
in the show notes it's free also wherever you get podcasts. You can subscribe at the link in the show notes.
It's free.
Also, thank you to everyone else who left nice reviews,
like Alison Eldridge, who wrote, every episode teaches me
something new and in unexpectedly fun ways.
OK, thank you all so much for all your kind words.
I read them all.
And let's get into the celebration and exploration
of a knowledge you may not have known existed.
And I'd like to say, we covered a lot in this episode,
but there's so much more to learn.
It's not even funny.
There are so many individual experiences and disabilities.
So in one episode, we can't touch on every facet.
This is a really, really interesting and broad field.
So instead, I approached this as an overview,
and I tried to address as many questions from y'all
as we could get to that could apply to folks in and not in the disability community.
I really hope that it helps spread the word about Disability Pride Month and about ableism
in general and also sparks some curiosity to go research more in terms of what interests
you.
So do enjoy as we chat about everything from the history of ableism to sign language to
invisible illnesses, eyeglasses, research methodologies, getting it on with a disability,
the criminal justice system, internalized ableism, the intricacies of caregiving, how
to ask for what you need in anything in your life. Handling curious strangers, disclosing disabilities,
how many of us are disabled, where ADHD and autism come into play, how to follow this study path,
language inclusion, finding community, and why Julyologist, Guinevere Chambers.
[♪ music playing throughout video and video clip.
So my name is Guinevere or Gwen Chambers and my pronouns are they them.
Let's dive right in.
How did you get into the sociology of disability?
Did you have to design your own program or are these programs that exist already?
That's a great question.
So I originally started in kind of the social psychology realm and then added sociology in as another interest
kind of during undergrad.
There are disability studies programs out there,
but a lot of the time you're gonna be looking at disability
from like the lens of other fields.
So I kind of got interested in it
through personal experience.
I became disabled or acquired my own disabilities
when I was about 19, 20 years old. So kind of in
the midst of undergrad and that sort of started to shift my perspective and add to my interest in
that part of the field since I was kind of doing a lot of gender and sexuality stuff at that time.
And I still do that too, but I kind of wanted to dive deeper into that topic and was lucky to have
faculty who kind of knew about the topic already so I could go down that avenue.
So is that kind of rare to have that available?
And does the disability sociology community tend to know each other because it's a rather
small field?
It is a pretty small field.
That's why it's pretty hard to find like graduate school programs that focus on disability studies
or disability sociology,
you're really just going to have to find a person who focuses on it and hope that you can work with
them. A lot of the time you're kind of going to be trailblazing a little bit on your own. And yeah,
we do all kind of tend to know of each other. So it's a small world, but a wide range of
specialties. And what would those niche interests be? What are some of the flavors that one could study in this field?
So depending on whether you're looking at sensory disabilities or intellectual and developmental
disabilities, perhaps mobility disabilities or chronic illness, chronic pain, you can
look at all these different kinds of identities and experiences.
And some people will focus more on like those structural things,
like how healthcare systems function.
Some people will look more at that like interpersonal experience
and relationships of disabled people to their loved ones
or within the workplace.
And really you can go kind of anywhere with it,
which is really cool.
It's kind of like a joke in sociology
that if you can think of it, sociologists study it.
So when you get like kind of down that rabbit hole of disability or medical sociology, there's a lot
of different branches you can go down. My interests tend to focus kind of again on that gender and
sexuality stuff in combination with disability. So looking at like queer identities of disabled folks
and that intersection, particularly with sexuality and like interpersonal experiences with partners.
And there's just not a ton of research on that yet.
And you published a paper on this specifically about disability status and getting it on.
Yeah, very recently. Actually, earlier this year, that came out.
And super pumped about it.
That was a big study.
It was actually my master's thesis.
It was looking at a lot of different things,
but how disabled people choose their partners,
how they vet people to be sexual and or romantic partners,
what the kind of daily lived experience looks like
being a sexually active disabled person, the pros and cons and difficulties, challenges
and benefits to having like a disabled sex life and just all the ins and outs of that
topic.
That's something that's really personal to me.
It's really interesting to me.
And for more on this, you can see her paper, Disabled Sexuality and Negotiations with Sexual
Partners, which was published last year in the journal Sexuality and Disability, which
one, exists.
Amazing.
And two, it names itself as a journal devoted to the psychological and medical aspects of
sexuality in rehabilitation and community settings.
But the paper opens, past research, media and pop culture and the medical field have largely overlooked the sexual lives and
stories of disabled adults. This research used a long response survey methodology
to collect the stories of over 300 physically disabled adults regarding the
interaction between their disability and sexuality and their experiences
navigating sexual partnerships.
And it went on to say, data showed that there were a variety of challenges sexually active
disabled adults faced, but numerous benefits were also described. But wait, back to that methodology.
How is it collecting research for that? Because I feel like two things people often don't want to talk about are their disclosing medical conditions
that they might find are stigmatized and also what's going on in the bedroom. So how did
you find sample populations that are like, all right, I got info for you?
Yeah.
Take notes.
So absolutely. It's something that a lot of people struggle to talk about for either the
disability reason or the sexuality reason or both. So I did use like a survey methodology for that research.
I got about 500 responses and I found people through like social media, Reddit, all kinds
of different like online platforms and just distributed that survey as a link and got
people with all kinds of different experiences all over the world
to talk about kind of what their sex lives were like and kind of bust some myths about disability
and sexuality because there are a lot of them out there. It was really, really fascinating to go
through. I still have all that data and I couldn't include everything in that paper, but there were
so many interesting perspectives and people were really, really vulnerable, which was awesome to see. But I don't know if I
would have gotten that if I had interviewed people. I don't think I would have been able
to interview 500 people. And I don't know if people would have been as open to sharing
those like personal details and experiences if they were actually talking to somebody.
And of course, there are like other
kinds of barriers that you might deal with for a variety of reasons in trying to schedule those
interviews. And with like sensory disabilities and like hearing loss and stuff like that,
it could be difficult to have that kind of interaction depending on the population. So
survey methodology kind of gets you that far reaching, sometimes less in depth approach.
But in that case, I think it actually got me a little bit more detail and vulnerability,
which was really cool.
It's so much easier to talk to a cursor than a person sometimes.
Yeah, for sure.
What about some of that, Flynn Pham, what do you think people do not know about that
subject or things that you learned that gobsmacked you?
I think the biggest thing that a lot of people believe, the biggest misconception would be
that disabled people are either not sexually active or not interested in sexual activity
or that they shouldn't be engaging in those kinds of activities or having sexual relationships.
There's this really big
stereotype that just, you know, desexualizes the disabled population, especially people who have
like visible physical disabilities or people with like intellectual and developmental disabilities.
There's a lot of like infantilization of that community. And so all those stereotypes kind
of coming together, what we really do see in reality
is that people with disabilities are having, you know, awesome sex lives and they're engaging
in all these kinds of relationships and experiences.
And it's not like this taboo thing.
It's not something that shouldn't be happening.
It's something that is very much normal.
I think related to that, there's a huge misconception that disability is like this thing that only affects
a very small group of people.
And it's actually about one in five people worldwide.
So like 20% of people have some kind of disability.
And according to the World Health Organization,
in countries with life expectancies over 70 years,
people spend on average eight years, 11 and a half percent of their
lifespan living with disabilities and
80% of people with disabilities live in developing countries according to the UN.
Numbers are going up as well and medical advances
increase lifespans, but there's newsflash and a global pandemic that's also contributing
to those higher numbers, but more on that later.
But yeah, the World Health Organization notes
that people living with disabilities
are the world's largest minority.
It's tricky because when we have that many people
in the community, but a lot of people
have invisible disabilities and a lot of people
are just, you know, have such a variety
of different identities, it's hard to have this clear idea of what the whole community looks
like because it is so diverse. So there's a lot of misconceptions because that diversity
is not really acknowledged. It's just like a very dehumanizing and kind of missing the
details sort of perspective that I think a lot of people are going through the world
with when it comes to their thoughts about disability.
Right.
I think some people have this old stereotype
that if you use a mobility device,
then you have a disability.
If not, you're fine.
Right.
Yeah, the only visible disabilities
count or something.
And yeah, so we can get into that as much as you'd like here but
there's a lot more to it than that. That's a big misconception. Well one thing I wanted to talk
about a little bit first is language. Person first language, old terms that have run their
course and are not preferred or are even seen as a slur or insulting
everything from differently abled to special needs to some people still use
the word handicapped like these are all words that are not looked on favorably
and where do you find that the education lies where are people getting their
information to?
Either whether they're in the community or not to being sensitive to that and also just being accurate
Yeah, so language is huge when we're talking about anything identity related any marginalized community And so coming back to what you mentioned about person first language
An example of that could just be saying like, person with a disability or person with autism.
And on the flip side, we have our identity first language
where we could say like disabled person
or autistic person, for example.
There's a lot of debate about which of those
is correct or right, but kind of depends on who you talk to.
A lot of people will use one or the other
or we'll use them interchangeably.
And my perspective is that it's really kind of whatever is personal preference for someone,
you can always ask them what's okay as far as if they prefer that person first or identity
first language.
A lot of disability rights activists and people who feel that disability is really like central
to their daily experience and their identity, they'll use that identity first language and
they'll say like, I'm disabled instead of I have a disability.
So yes, it's really a personal preference and respecting that once you know,
matters to people.
Coming to those other terms. Yeah. Things like handicapped,
special needs, differently abled, all of those terms.
Some people do use them. Some people are okay with them,
but a lot of people feel that they are kind of like euphemisms.
Like they're sort of filling in for the language of disabled as if disabled is a bad word.
And kind of trying to like skirt around the topic or act like it's
this taboo thing that maybe we shouldn't talk about or we need to kind of
use coded language because it's
uncomfortable. And when we do that, and we use that kind of euphemistic language, we're
perpetuating this idea that disability is something that we should be afraid to talk
about or that it's not something that you should take on as an identity, that it's something
that needs to be kind of like spoken about in code words. And it can also be kind of infantilizing in a lot of
cases as well, like saying that someone has special needs, you know, they might have different needs
than somebody who is not disabled. But, you know, what's really special about that? And we do also
hear things like the word special being used kind of in a derogatory way, like as a slur in some cases. And one of the big things that the field is really passionate about is like getting that
word disabled to not be seen as a bad word, to just be kind of like a matter of fact kind
of term.
It just is what it is.
It's just part of the human condition.
Disability is just disability.
And so whatever somebody wants to use to describe themselves is totally fine.
Like it's not my place to say,
like you cannot call yourself differently abled
if that's a term that's comfortable for you.
But when talking about a community
that you're not a part of,
you are a non-disabled person,
talking about disabled people,
you wanna be careful about why you choose
the language that you choose. And really just think about, you know, you choose the language that you choose and
really just think about you know is this the language that the person or community
that I'm talking about would prefer and if you don't have the opportunity to ask
those individuals you might want to think about okay why am I talking about
this community what is the goal of that conversation and how do I want to frame
disability in this conversation and perhaps avoiding that want to frame disability in this conversation?
And perhaps avoiding that kind of euphemistic language and just using the term disabled
could be a way to start to destigmatize the term a little bit.
And remember, it's a huge and very diverse community.
So even if you're a part of it, you may want to address a different community within it
with respect.
The Americans with Disabilities Act has a language sheet that lays out a lot,
including staying away from terms like wheelchair-bound or confined to a wheelchair, and rather simply
say person who uses a wheelchair. Handicapped parking? It's a bit outdated. Accessible parking
is more accurate. And a person who's, say, had a stroke doesn't need your editorializing
of suffering a stroke or being a victim of a stroke.
Terms like blind or low vision and deaf or hard of hearing are widely preferred in advocacy circles
over visually impaired or hearing impaired. Although you may find that it varies with
individuals. Again, respecting preferences is just the best way to not be a turd.
I think that's really the best way to go is just to listen to disabled people about how
they want to be spoken about, the issues that matter to the community, current events and
stuff like that.
And I think it's really good to have a diverse group of content creators that you're following
as well, not just people who are wheelchair users or just people who are deaf, but having like a good combination of that community to really get a bigger
picture of what those issues look like.
Reddit is also a really good place for community organizing and sometimes on
like a more anonymous level, just supporting each other within a similar
community. If you're saying like a chronic illness or chronic pain, subreddit
kind of finding other people with
similar experiences. And I found those kind of forums to be
really, really useful places like as a disabled person, but
also as a researcher, because people are sharing so much about
what they're going through in those places. It is tough to get
people together, especially when a lot of disabled people are not
able to organize, you know organize in person, perhaps for transportation or financial or mobility reasons.
And so those online spaces are really, really crucial.
I will say that in researching terminology of visually impaired, big air quotes there,
in the subreddit called blind, I happened upon a non-disabled person asking
for advice on phrasing.
And the consensus there was, to quote one user,
for me, you could use shit at seeing, and I would chuckle.
But I'm sure not everyone is quite as live and let
live on this issue as I am, they say.
But I can be pretty certain that people
who would get annoyed by something as well known
as visually impaired are a very small minority. And then another person chimed in saying, over thinking this
shit is how you end up with differently abled or handy capable. Again, others may very much
disagree with those users. But the point is, it can be really individual. And Guinevere
makes the point that disability is such a social construct and that many folks
wearing hearing aids might be considered to have a sensory disability, but all the time
every day so many of us are out wearing glasses for correcting our vision, but it's not received
the same way socially.
So evaluating stigmas and looking at how everything from gender diversity to socioeconomic status, minority status, and access
is essential to the field of disability sociology.
But when it comes to finding communities,
they say that Reddit forums are very robust.
There's 60,000 people in the disability subreddit,
70,000 people in chronic illness.
There's a group called Wheelchairs.
1.9 million folks are in the ADHD subreddit,
there's nearly 10,000 in the amputee subreddit, and another 372,000 on the autism subreddit.
But that might bring up more questions for you.
And I'm wondering too, that stat was really astounding that one in five of us are disabled.
And I'm wondering, what is the scope? And we had so many people,
patrons who wrote in, who wanted to know if they let's say they have ADHD or partial hearing loss.
Where is the line between identifying as disabled and asking for accommodations?
And how is that decided? That is a tough question.
So disability is a lot of different things, right?
It can be like that medical legal definition where perhaps you can get like disability benefits through the government or social security.
But there's also identity aspects to it.
There's also social aspects to it.
And it kind of is a messy category or a messy label. But as far as
you know who can identify as disabled that's going to be on a really person by
person basis. Disability can be defined in a lot of different ways but part of
it can be that lived experience of facing challenges whether they're
related to mental health or bodily functioning or experiences of things
like pain,
all of that could really affect the way
that you show up in the world,
the kinds of things that you're able to do,
those like daily life skills, things like driving,
things like reading, there's so many different things
that all kinds of different disabilities could impact.
And so if someone is having this experience
where they feel like the way that they're able to go about daily life,
you know, the experiences they have as far as completing tasks or they're experiencing a lot of like physical symptoms that are kind of disrupting their day to day experience.
That's definitely somebody who could say that they're disabled, regardless of whether they have like an official piece of paper medical kind of label from a doctor or some kind of specialist, there's a lot of privilege
wrapped up in being able to access those labels and access those diagnoses and so
I think a lot of people feel like self-diagnosis is not as valid but
that's definitely something that we kind of push against from the identity
perspective of saying no you can absolutely take that
label if you feel like that's your reality. People could argue with you about it, but
it's a really fluid identity category and the experience of disability is also pretty
fluid. It can be really kind of an individual decision, sort of what I'm getting at there.
What about historically, how has the outlook on disability changed?
And was there a moment in history, was the ADA a big moment in terms of advocacy and
access?
How far have we come and is it even remotely enough?
We have come far, but it is definitely not enough.
There's a lot of work left to be done.
Yeah, I figured. We have come far, but it is definitely not enough. There's a lot of work left to be done.
Yeah, I figured.
A lot of people don't know about the disability rights
movement, but it happened in the 1960s and 70s,
kind of at the same time as the civil rights movement.
And there were a lot of large-scale sit-ins,
a lot of really intense protest and activism work
happening during that time.
But then it took about another 30 years before the ADA, the Americans with Disabilities Act, was actually passed.
One demonstration that sparked change took place in the 1990s when a group of disability rights activists fighting for accessibility laws. So they gathered at the foot of Washington, DC's capital steps. And they set aside their mobility aids
to make what is now known as the capital crawl.
This was an arduous, exhausting, and in many cases,
impossible journey, scaling all 100 of the steps
to the United States Capitol before cameras and lawmakers.
And this demonstration also featured a then eight-year-old wheelchair user, Jennifer Keelan
Chafins.
And this whole demonstration was so visceral to watch and so impactful to people that it's
been credited with really that final push to pass the Americans with Disabilities Act,
which was passed on July 26, 1990, which further cemented July as Disability Pride
Month and a time for exposure and education and continued advocacy.
And the passing of the ADA prohibits discrimination based on disability, and it mandates reasonable
accommodations to employees and accessibility standards that must be met for public areas.
And I was reading that leading up to the ADA some activists
Calling out the lack of accessible public transportation were arrested, but the cops paddy wagons were not
Accessible for their wheelchairs. So the police had to track down with great frustration
accessible buses in which to toss disabled people advocating for
accessible buses. So the ADA, July, worth celebrating.
That didn't happen until 1990. And so there's been a lot of pushback from so many directions,
but especially within government to actually recognize the disabled community as this identity
community and this marginalized community that does deserve rights and access to opportunities
and protections in a way that a lot of other oppressed groups do have access to through
legislation. We could talk about how the legislation, even from the civil rights movement, how there's still so far to go for so many communities.
But even leading up to the 1960s, there is a really, really dark history of the way that
disability was seen and treated within the Victorian era, like the late 1800s into early
1900s.
All over the US, there were these pieces of legislation that were kind
of nicknamed the ugly laws. Pardon me. And essentially, they were legislation that disallowed
anybody with visible, especially facial differences from participating in like the public sphere.
And it's really horrible, right? And that on top of things like, you know, the institutionalization of people with mental
health struggles into really, really abusive, unsanitary, crowded facilities, like those,
you know, so-called insane asylums, and just, you know, outright torture practices being
used against those communities.
And so we've come pretty far from those kinds of things, but those things are
not completely gone either. And that's the really tricky thing with disability activism
right now is it's kind of in the background for a lot of people, but there are still some
really big abuses happening, just really egregious things, you know, in that realm of literal eugenics that are still happening
today. And it's, it's horrifying. It's really just disheartening to see those things happening,
especially when they don't get very much attention.
I hate to make you talk about them if you don't want to. But given a lot of people probably
are ignorant of that. Do you want to shed some light on that? For sure. So kind of coming back to that eugenics topic, and eugenics for anyone who's not familiar
would be this kind of ideology or practice of kind of trying to shape what the population
of people looks like in a society. So trying to either increase the amount of people with
so-called desirable traits or decrease the number of people with so-called undesirable traits, that perspective is really wrapped up in a lot of problematic things,
right? Classism, racism, queerphobia, ableism, all of these sort of oppressive views. But what we've
seen throughout a lot of history, but even right now, is things like the way that people respond
to prenatal genetic testing and what people choose
to do in the instance that that testing shows um but the possibility of a disability for a fetus.
A lot of the time genetic counselors or people kind of working in those fields especially like
the fertility industry there's a lot of push to terminate pregnancies where there's a possibility that the baby
could be born with a disability. And the tricky thing about that is, you know, what do we
value more in this case? Is it the parental autonomy or is it avoiding what looks like
a eugenics practice? It's like a really tough moral question because a lot of people will
go through that testing and they'll find out that say their baby is going to be born with Down syndrome, there are a lot of very
real concerns that that family or you know the pregnant person or a couple
might be dealing with in that instance because it is just our reality that
there's not a lot of support for disabled children or their families. There
are a lot of reasons that that could be very very difficult and some people some people in the disabled community will say, well, you shouldn't have children,
period, if you couldn't handle having a disabled child.
Some people will say that we should not do any prenatal genetic testing because people
knowing about the possibility of a disability is problematic because if those abortions
occur then that's a eugenics practice.
Other people will say, well, it doesn't matter if it's eugenics because it's more important that people have autonomy over their own lives
and reproduction and family. And so it's a really complicated question.
And I was talking to systems biology guest Dr. Emily Ackerman and a little bit about
the eugenics of gene editing and CRISPR and things like that, and the notion of curing
a disability or preventing it.
This is like something that I try to be a disabled researcher and human and
be exposed to.
There's a lot of assumptions that go into biological work as far as that people with
diseases would not like to be the way that they are. And so it's tough to watch people who do disease research
and have probably not much exposure to those people
who are affected.
It's just such a harmful mentality to think that people
would be better off without their genetic disorders.
And obviously there are things about it that are valid to think about, like life threatening illnesses and things like that.
That's a conversation that should be had by the people with those disorders.
You know, it's great, I love being disabled.
And I know that everyone does,
and then I fully respect anyone's right
to say that they do or don't.
But too often we don't hear the voices of people
who love being disabled.
And so what is the outlook on that within disability communities of stop trying to like
fix us for your convenience or comfort?
Yeah, absolutely.
So that is a big issue.
And it's this perspective that looks at disability as like a pathology or that the primary
issue is like there's something wrong with the person's body or mind and we
need to use medical intervention to fix or cure that person. That perspective
when we kind of look at identity or disability as not an identity but just
like a medical diagnosis then we do come to this place where we're diminishing a
person to
just that so-called pathology. And a lot of people don't feel like their identity or their
experience or their body is pathological. And so that process of medicalization, of
turning human experiences into this issue in need of fixing, can be pretty dangerous
for a lot of reasons reasons because we've seen that
used against people, especially like Black and Indigenous and people of colour. The BIPOC community
has been medicalised and attributed to having disability throughout a lot of American history
and just history in general. And the queer community has had the same thing happen to them as
well. This idea that especially like the trans trans community or gender nonconforming folks have some kind of like mental illness or, you know, psychological pathology at play.
And those ideas, just like any idea about disability, they're all social constructs and we're kind of creating these labels and creating these understandings as a culture. And a lot of people who have what we would understand to be disabilities today would say,
I don't want to be cured and I don't want to be fixed.
And a lot of people will kind of reject that disabled label because they don't want to be seen as something that needs to be cured or fixed.
It's really tricky because if we only see disability as this problem with the person
or this issue with the body or the mind, then if the only solution is to cure it, get rid
of it, erase it, prevent it, then there's not a lot of room to have like pride in one's
identity or to feel happy about being a disabled person in the world when the whole world kind
of sees you
as this pathology or this problem.
That's a really painful place to be
and it makes it really difficult for a lot of people
who acquire disabilities to kind of adjust
to that new life or that new reality
because we only see these very negative ideas
over and over and over.
And how does that intersect with folks who are struggling
and have a different viewpoint of it?
Like my mom has MS, but from a physical standpoint,
she is very frustrated.
So where is the line there?
And how do sociologists sort of approach people
who are saying, this is my identity, I'm proud of it,
and others who are saying, this is really hindering me
and I want some sort of cure for this.
For sure, and a lot of people will feel that way.
I know I felt that way for sure myself.
I deal with pretty severe chronic pain
and that's not something that I dealt with
until I acquired my disability
in about 2018. And so that is very real, right? Like the lived reality of experiencing symptoms
that gets in the way of you being able to do those daily living tasks. That is a really,
really difficult transition that is, in a lot of cases, really traumatic, right? Like
losing some freedom, losing some independence. A lot of people really,
really, really struggle with that. And that's not a bad thing, right? Like that's not something that
we should just expect people to, you know, just like suck it up and move on. Like it is really
difficult. Not everybody has to have that disabled pride, right? Not everyone has to be like, this is
an identity that I'm really happy about. Sometimes it can just be, you
know, it just is, it doesn't have to be a positive thing for everyone. And in
the cases of, you know, those experiences that are very difficult or people who
are living with symptoms that are very, like, life-altering or activity-hindering,
we absolutely do still want to be looking for cures and we want to be looking for ways to make life better and easier and more
fulfilling for people who are in those situations. I think the tricky thing is
when groups like, if we want to talk about like Autism Speaks or you know
groups that are kind of considered like hate groups or eugenicists. Just a side
note, if you are not hip to this info, yes, the organization Autism Speaks
is widely considered by the autistic community to be trash for the way that it seeks to just
eliminate the very things that make autistic people who they are.
Also some of the Autism Speaks officers were making like well over half a million dollars
a year and they were funding vaccines cause autism research
long after that one shitty study had been debunked. But yes, the notion of curing or
eliminating people who don't fit in, let's just say it's chafing.
The issue with that perspective is it takes it all the way to the furthest end of that perspective of like, we need to get rid of disability.
We need to eradicate autism, right?
And that perspective is very problematic.
But then if we take a couple steps down from there, we do have a lot of people that are
in that place where they're like, well, I do really want to cure.
I don't want to experience this.
I don't want to feel this way.
And I think it can coexist when people have disability pride and people also want a
cure or they want things to be alleviated. It can be a spectrum and you
can change the way you feel about your own situation or that identity or that
label like from a day-to-day basis, and that's also totally okay. Speaking of labels, let's talk about emotional support peacocks and the abuse of vests that
you can buy off Etsy that make your dog an emotional support animal.
I feel like, thankfully, this has been cracked down on a little bit, but can we talk a little
bit about accommodations that perhaps abled folks take advantage of?
Yeah, so that is a big problem. Unfortunately, it kind of adds to like adds fuel to the fire of
people thinking that those with invisible disabilities might be faking it or pretending
that they have a disability or that it's not a real disability. Because a lot of people who do
have, you know, service animals or who do use
those kinds of resources and accommodations, they are kind of lumped into that same group
of people who are doing it for clout or for their own personal convenience or for reasons
like that. And it is a big issue. So a good thing for anybody to know if they're working
in retail or food service or anywhere
where you might encounter people who are coming in with service animals, the ADA does protect
the use of service animals and bringing them into spaces where you can't bring pets.
And so you can always ask, is this a service animal?
And then you can ask what the animal is trained to do.
You can't ask somebody for their diagnosis or anything like that, but there are some kind of clues that will key you into whether an animal is
actually a service animal or not. If you're in like a work situation where you might have
to make those kinds of determinations, a lot of the time you'll see those, you know, fake
vests or those fake placards or people trying to park places that they shouldn't be in like
accessible parking.
And before you're like, Ali, stop being a dick.
Maybe that lady who got banned from flying on United for trying to bring a large emotional
support peacock named Dexter actually did need Dexter for support.
Well, hang on and trust me.
All right.
I looked into it and yes, she's a performance artist who adopted the peacock and kept it
after her installation was done.
And at first, she just tried to straight up buy a seated ticket for this large bird.
But United was like, we're not going to sell you a ticket for that large bird.
And she was like, well, he is an emotional support animal, so you must.
And United was like, sweetheart, don't give me that horse shit.
And later, yes, Dexter's owner did say on record that he doesn't even usually go on
public transport because she doesn't want to traumatize him.
So the likelihood that Dexter, the emotional support peacock, was actually emotionally
supporting her and not the other way around is pretty dicey.
Now other non-trained emotional support service animals have included a pig named Hobie who screamed and took
a dump on the plane. Meanwhile, countless wheelchair users will tell you that airline
handlers are not well trained on how to handle their mobility devices. Check Twitter if you
don't believe me. Check TikTok. Countless times breaking really expensive chairs that mean life or death
to the people who own them. So folks, let us not abuse accommodations that others
have spent their life fighting for just so that you don't have to pay a pet fee
or you think you can skip a line.
And I really wish people wouldn't do things like that,
but I understand why people do, you know, they want that convenience or they want
to bring their chihuahua with them to the grocery store. And I get do, you know, they want that convenience or they want to bring
their chihuahua with them to the grocery store.
And I get it, you know,
but I would really encourage anyone who's considering
doing those kinds of things to not do those kinds of things.
And for the people who do have actual service animals
to just, you know, try to tough it out and, you know,
make sure that you're self-advocating
as much as you can if you deal with those situations where people might question if
you do have a service animal or not. Try to keep in mind the way that those laws do protect
those animals or the use of those animals and try not to give into that pressure to
share unless you want to, things like your your diagnosis details or anything like that. Because there is a
lot of pressure, there's a lot of hype, especially on social
media about those instances, where people with genuine
service animals are dealing with discrimination and not being
taken seriously.
There have been instances of people faking their animals
credentials, and then their untrained pet has attacked a service
dog, which can have far reaching consequences for that person's life. So... It's good to be aware of
what service animals really are, what they're for, and who should or should not be engaging
in those conversations or practices. Right. Also, so expensive. Yes. I mean, a service animal is like 20 grand. Like you're talking
20, 30 Gs.
Yeah, there's a lot of training.
You've got to protect them.
Yeah, absolutely. And it's really important that if there are animals who are not service
animals, that we're not bringing them into those spaces because of those kinds of issues.
You mentioned something about disclosing and asking, and I know we have so many listeners
who are really curious and want to do the right thing and also who are disabled who
want advice on this.
When someone asks you out of warmth or genuine curiosity or out of aggression, you really
kind of don't know when someone asks you what happened to you? Why do you use that? What is your invisible illness?
Or if you're asked that and you don't want to disclose it, you don't want to talk about
it, you don't want to re-traumatize yourself if that's the case, that disclosure and that
asking and being asked, what's a sociologist's perspective on that?
Yeah. So that is a big topic.
With the first topic there, kind of asking strangers about their medical history, most
people don't appreciate that.
So even if you're burning with curiosity and you really, really want to know if you see
somebody with a visible disability and you're just like, oh my gosh, I'm so curious what
their story is, it's usually best not to ask. There's not really any good
reason that you need to know why somebody uses a wheelchair or a cane or a walker or anything like
that. If someone has scars or facial differences or anything like that too, if you're not personally
close with that person, you probably don't need to ask. And it's tricky.
I know humans were curious creatures, right?
And what if someone asks and you don't want to tell them?
That is tough, right?
That's kind of a confrontational sort
of interaction, which a lot of people
are not going to be comfortable with.
But you can be respectful about it and just say,
hey, I'm not comfortable sharing my personal details
with a stranger.
If you want to kind of educate the person, you can say something like, Hey,
it's really not cool to ask a disabled person that kind of question.
You can also just make up a story if you'd like.
I know a lot of people who do that.
And especially if you take it to like a really just absurd level and, you know,
make up something that they absolutely know that you're lying.
Make them think about what they asked a little bit.
So make something up. Say you were struck by lightning while writing a hippo. Tell
them it's your fifth life and these are battle scars from a fight in
Mesopotamia. Or some people say that the best response to a thoughtless intrusion
is just to pause and then volley back the question, why do you feel like you
need to know? So I'm trying to kind of prepare those responses ahead of time
can be useful, especially in workplace contexts
where people will feel like they do have some kind of right
to know.
Your coworkers might think that it
is an issue that affects them or that they have some kind
of right to that information.
And it can be challenging to deal with.
It's something that I deal with a lot actually in teaching
because I'll self-disclose that I'm disabled to my students
and all the time they'll ask, well, what is wrong with you?
And I like when they ask that question
because then I can kind of answer why we shouldn't ask
that question.
Yeah.
What is wrong with you is such a, I mean,
you should either ask that to every single person you encounter or absolutely none of them.
Right.
And yeah, you don't ever ask, you know, non-disabled people that kind of question on a day to day
basis, right?
If you see any old person walking at the grocery store, you're not going to go to them and
be like, what's wrong with you?
What happened to you?
You could ask me that any day out of the year and I'd be like, okay, I got a list for you.
I mean, we all do, right?
We all have our list of all the things that are wrong with us.
But that's the interesting issue with that question is that when we're only directing
it towards visibly disabled people most of the time, that's really just kind of rooted
in ableism or rooted in this like objectification
of disabled people, which we see a lot in the medical field, right, turning people into
like these medical marvels or these spectacles to be photographed and poked and prodded.
And that's a really traumatizing position to be in. Definitely, I would recommend avoiding
asking people that question. They'll share with you if they want to. And if you're the one being asked that question,
you know, being prepared to shut it down and say that you're not comfortable answering
or give them some kind of silly answer to kind of get them off your back as well.
I love a silly answer that you can, if you wanted, you could have several of those and
just depending on the day. Just but make sure it's a real fuck you though. Amusing fuck you. There should
be an app for that where you can just generate different responses or at least a Reddit subthread
of your best responses. I have a friend who's great, David Radcliffe. He's the disability
chair for the Writers Guild of America West.
And he is collecting just a list of things people say to him that are absolutely bananas.
He uses a wheelchair, but you know, things where people will pray for him and try to
push him in his chair when he does not want that. He tends to advocate for the thought
that everyone is temporarily abled
and at some point in your life,
especially if you live long enough,
you'll experience disability.
A really common, I guess, motif that we see in the field
is this concept of the anyone, anywhere, anytime threat.
I don't like calling it a threat
because that sounds very negative,
but it's essentially the idea that any person at any time
in any place can become disabled.
Obviously, you can be born with disabilities,
but you can acquire them through injuries or illnesses
or accidents and things like that.
But it can also just happen because of aging
and the passage of time.
And so we kind of have this fear as a society that we think becoming disabled is this really
tragic horrible outcome that we want to avoid at all costs.
And a lot of people who are disabled in the moment right now would say, no, that's not
really the whole story.
Again, becoming disabled and acquiring a disability can be a traumatic and very difficult experience. So not to diminish that, but this idea
that a disabled life is a negative thing
is kind of this fear that's held over us.
And so if you're not disabled, thinking of yourself
as temporarily abled is a way to bridge that distance of, well,
this doesn't apply to me.
But an additional mindset change can
be to move away from catastrophizing disability.
And David, as a co-chair of that Disabled Writers
Committee for the Writers Guild, works with that team
to change the lens that's applied
to disability in entertainment.
For that reason, too, when we see media representation
of disability, if you think about the characters
you've seen in movies and TV shows with disabilities, how many of them are villains? A lot of them, right?
Especially burn injuries, facial differences, amputations, things like that. A lot of that
representation where disabled characters are the bad and evil and one-dimensional characters.
And we don't see a lot of the flip side where disabled characters are the bad and evil and one-dimensional characters.
And we don't see a lot of the flip side where disabled characters are the heroes
or people who have like a good life or good relationships.
It doesn't mean it's the end of the world, right?
It's not a death sentence.
It's something that people do adjust to
and you can still have a kick-ass life
regardless of what your disability looks like. You mentioned representations too, and I'm wondering if there's any current media that
you feel like does a good job of that, that has writers who come from a perspective of
inclusion and understanding. Anything that actually gets it right?
I mean, I've been looking for representation that gets it right for a long time. There
are examples that are very close, but then the caveat that we keep seeing time and time
again is that non-disabled actors are playing disabled characters. And that's kind of a
tricky situation because even if it's a, complex and humanizing representation. If the character being played is not played by someone with that actual disability, some
people within the field will say that that's kind of like the disability version of blackface
where that non-disabled actor is trying to, you know, kind of make a profit, make a living
off of exemplifying an experience that's not their own.
And so we really push for,
you know, hiring disabled actors to portray those characters because that's just going
to get you the best representation. And if for some reason you can't do that, if you
can't hire someone who is say, like actually a wheelchair user for that role, having people
on the writing team, people involved in the creation of that media who do have that experience is really important.
That's at David Radcliffe on Twitter or David.Radcliffe on Instagram.
Emmy nominated TV writer managed by Entertainment 360, just saying.
There is some really great, like very entertaining, very humanizing, very complex representation
out there.
Like there's a movie called Margarita with a Straw, which is about like a young woman kind of, it's like a coming of age story, sort of exploring her like sexuality
and queerness and college as a person with terrible polity.
And there are some other characters with disabilities in that movie as well, but none of the actors
actually had those disabilities.
So that's kind of, you know, a little downside there.
We also have movies like The Theory of Everything.
Obviously Stephen Hawking is like a really big name as far as pop culture and media as
well as in the disability community.
So we have these interesting and entertaining and humanizing representations out there, but
what I tend to gravitate towards even more than those potentially kind of inspiration porn sorts
of stories, we have something called incidental representation, which is my personal favorite
kind. It's where disabled characters or storylines are kind of just there and it's not really meant to be like a plot
point or this inspirational thing. It's just like it just is. And a really good example of that is,
I don't know if you've seen the movie Luca, but it's fairly recent. It's a kids movie that is
about like these young boys who are like mermaids or merpeople. There's a character whose dad is
missing one of his arms. And at one
point in the movie, one of the boys asks him, you know, what happened to you? And he's just like,
The sea monster ate it. What? No, this is how I came into the world.
Oh, a mermaid bit it, you know, and then later he's like, Oh, no, I'm just kidding. Like, I was just
born this way. And that's the only time in no, I'm just kidding. Like, I was just born this way.
And that's the only time in the entire movie it comes up.
Like he makes a little joke about it because he's talking to kids.
And then he's like, no, I was just born this way.
And then they just move on.
And it wasn't like this, you know, big plot point, this big dramatic moment.
It was kind of just, you know, a disabled person being included in that story.
And so that kind of representation is really know, a disabled person being included in that story. And so that kind of
representation is really awesome, but it's also not super common. A lot of the time disability is
used as a plot device. I understand why writers do that, but it can create some issues. So
another one of those big tropes in like representation, we have this kind of trope of a super crip.
That does not sound good, probably.
No, that's yeah.
What we've kind of termed that type of representation, I'm not a fan of the name.
I would not recommend that people really go around repeating it either, but it's essentially
the idea of when a disabled character has superpowers.
There's a trend with blind characters
of this second sight sort of power,
where a lot of superheroes will have super senses
in some place other than where they
have their sensory disability.
So if they're a blind character, they have supersonic hearing,
or they're really blind character, they have like supersonic hearing or they're like really amazing at fighting or they've got, you know, like this earth tremors, or things like that.
And we see just time and time again, these examples of people who are, you know, they can't just be people, they have to be way better than a typical person and have these just superhuman abilities because they have a disability.
And it's really interesting. It could be for some people kind of like fun entertaining
representation. Like obviously if you are growing up as, you know, a blind child and
you see representations of like Daredevil or Toph in Avatar, like that could be positive
for a lot of reasons. But again, it doesn't really paint a real picture of what disability is like in real life. Right, it's like if
you're disabled you better have something cool to make up for. Right. You're like
fuck you man. Yeah, yeah and we'll see like you know representation of like
savants, people with autism who are just like incredibly intelligent, like there's
that show The Good Doctor. Hmm, I mean Rain Man, anyone? Yeah, exactly. Like there's that show, The Good Doctor.
I mean, Rain Man, anyone?
Yeah, exactly.
Like take him to the casino,
you got an ace in your pocket right here.
Like how can you use him to make money?
You're like, jeez Louise, you know.
Yeah, so we see a lot of that.
And then again, like using disability as a plot device
that can work in that space, you know,
as like the super crip
trope, but it can also work with the disabled villains trope where we'll see
characters like Two-Face in Batman, you know, Harvey Dent is like this in-
character Two-Faced person, right? He's like a lawyer who's really kind of shady
with the things that he does and so he's punished with a disability that makes
him literally Two-Faced, like he's burned with a disability that makes him literally two faced. Like he's
burned on half of his face and he becomes, through that experience that disables him,
he becomes a literal villain. And so, you know, it's really on the nose there. They're
like, you know, we're going to call him two faced. He's got these two different sides
to his face. He's got this character trait where he is two faced. And we see a lot of examples of, you know, like Darth Vader is another good example there
of disability as a punishment for being a bad person.
And that was how a lot of humans thought about this.
A lot of societies thought about disability for so long was if a baby was born with a
disability, it was because of something horrible that, you know, their parents had done or that they were being punished for. A lot of the time,
it was like ideas like sin. This would come back to like religious sort of beliefs that disability
was a punishment and it was something that you did wrong or something bad about you or it's,
you know, your bad character as this visible mark of stigma.
And obviously that's really unfair, that's really untrue,
but that same stigma kind of still persists today
and our media really doesn't help too much
in issuing those kinds of ideas.
We're making it worse.
Can I ask you questions from listeners?
For sure.
We have so many good questions,
so many good ones that I sang to you, which is rare.
And you're welcome.
I'm sorry.
But before we get into your questions, we'll toss a little cash to a cause.
And this week, Guinevere asked to split it between HERD, which stands for Helping Educate
to Advance the Rights of the Deaf, which is an organization that fights ableism and racism,
particularly within the criminal justice system.
Some of Guinevere's research focuses on police violence against deaf people and this
overlooked issue is really close to their heart, they say. They'd also like a
donation to go to the Trevor Project, which focuses on preventing suicide
among LGBTQ plus youth and they say that the Trevor Project provides a lot of
mutual aid and mental health resources and those causes will be linked in the
show notes, so thank you to sponsors of the show who make those donations possible. So Amy Martin
asked, please please please discuss invisible disabilities. Linda Geffen said disability and
invisible injuries is an important topic in general for me. Scarlett P asked, do you have
any advice for people with invisible disabilities who struggle with imposter syndrome or gaslighting and other patrons, including Crystal Mendoza, Emily B. Wilson,
Linda Brodsky, Matt Cicato, Amelia Phillips, and SirShakesAlot asked about advice for those
who have them or from people who want to be better allies to those who have invisible
disabilities.
What is invisible illness and how do those with it navigate in a way that they get accommodations again without
having to disclose or having people question them? Yeah, so that is one of those really interesting
things that kind of visible versus invisible. So for people with visible disabilities, there is
usually a lot more experiences of like ableism from strangers because people have all kinds of thoughts and questions when they can see your disability and
they might obviously be like oh that person might need or want accommodations
because they can just see it right then and there. But for people with
invisible disabilities getting accommodations can kind of necessitate
this process of like coming out as disabled and can be up to the
individual how much they want
to disclose depending on the context.
If it's like a workplace situation,
you don't necessarily have to talk to HR
about all the details of your experience.
But some places they might want doctor's notes,
even just in day-to-day life with like friends and family,
if there's something that would make things easier for you,
you might have to share a little bit about what you need or why.
And hopefully people will be accepting and open to that.
But invisible disabilities are kind of a whole unique beast of their own because when people
can't see what's going on, they might have assumptions that there is nothing going on
or that it's something that you're making up
There's a lot of gas lighting that people with invisible disabilities might go through
Even in medical contexts, you know, like medical gas lighting on the part of doctors
There's gendered and race elements to that as well
I know especially like in the dating sphere coming out as disabled over and over and over to
potential partners is something
that a lot of people struggle with because it's again kind of taboo. It's something that if people
can't see it, they don't always believe it. And so it's tricky to navigate, but kind of
thinking to yourself and figuring out for yourself, you know, what you're comfortable sharing and what
you're comfortable asking for what you might need
Having those questions answered for yourself could make those conversations easier
So if you anticipate tough conversations or questions, it may help to ask yourself what you need in advance
So you can better answer the question if it comes up like having a little plan. So you just don't sit there thinking like
And then once you're home, you have a bunch of examples
that you didn't think of in the moment, which happens to me
constantly.
Are there any examples of invisible illness
that people should be aware of if they're
unfamiliar with what that means?
Yeah, so basically that could be any kind of illness, pain,
or disability that's not immediately apparent like upon looking at
somebody. This could be like mental health for one, like all kinds of different mental disorders.
And I don't always love the language mental disorder because I think again, the social
construction of these categories and these labels can be kind of messy and tricky and problematic.
But if someone's dealing with say, you know, depression, anxiety, ADHD,
bipolar, schizophrenia, like any of these kinds of mental health diagnoses, things like
chronic pain or chronic illness, like if someone has say chronic back pain, you might not be
able to tell just by looking at them. If somebody is dealing with maybe chronic migraines, that
could also be chronic pain and that would also be what we would call a dynamic disability. These are things that'll look different from one day to another.
And that can be tricky too, because sometimes people will think, well, I, one, can't see
your disability, and two, sometimes you look fine. And so is it really there? And so those
dynamic disabilities, those ones that really fluctuate, that are also invisible, can kind
of be their own sort of experience and category too. But across the board, to really simplify it, if
it's not visible right when you look at that person, we could consider it an invisible
disability.
So we have some episodes that have addressed these before, like the fearology episode about
stress and anxiety, the traumatology episode about PTSD, we have an episode on addictionology,
dolerology is about pain, and then of course the attention deficit neuropsychology three-part
episode about ADHD.
In the case of this next question asked by Lil MC, Shar Harrison, Olivia Parkinson, Alana
Wood, Ava, Nar, Alyssa Simmons, first time question asker, Lindsay Burke, Teddy Egelhoff,
and Emily.
We had a lot of folks ask about their ADHD
and whether or not that includes them
in the disability community, to what extent accommodations
are to be expected, things like that.
So I think a lot of folks are curious about that.
Like, am I in or am I a charlatan?
Yeah, I mean, I think a lot of people see it as like the secret club that you have to
be like disabled enough to get in.
And again, like it can be just that self chosen identity if you feel like your ADHD or whatever
it is that you're dealing with affects your day to day life or your relationships or your
experiences of the world and of your body and of your mind.
If you feel like you're experiencing challenges or barriers or this fluctuating nature of
my needs are higher on some days and lower on others, or if accommodations would benefit
you, then you can absolutely take that label.
You can absolutely say that you're disabled.
You also don't have to.
A lot of people who have various mental health diagnoses or this is a big thing within the
deaf community, a lot of people will say, no, I'm not disabled.
And again, that's totally up to the individual person.
But you can get accommodations for ADHD as well as a lot of other diagnoses, whether
that's in the workplace or at school or wherever you might be. There are a lot of things that can help
people with ADHD, things like having like clear directions
written down instead of just verbal directions can make a big
difference. Having you know, flexible deadlines sometimes can
be really useful for people, extended periods of time to work
on something perhaps. This is really broad because I'm trying
to talk like in general, like workplace school everywhere. But you know in relationships
to like people being patient and comfortable and flexible with communication, not always
being perhaps consistent, you know, just give some grace to their friends and loved ones
with ADHD and say like, hey, not a big deal that you didn't text me back for a couple
weeks like I know you got stuff going on. I'm sure like you got your reasons
and not taking that kind of stuff super personally,
that can go really far.
So if you're in that situation
where you're kind of self-advocating as a person with ADHD
or really any other kind of situation or diagnosis,
even if you're self-diagnosed,
it doesn't really matter either way.
Having those conversations can be hard,
but it can go a really, really long way.
And I think a lot of people get so used to kind of like playing the game of life on hard
mode and then when you get those accommodations, it's like, okay, maybe now it's on like medium
difficulty.
And that can make a huge difference, but it's also hard to ask for it.
One patron, Charlie, asked about deaf communities and the learning of sign language as being
deaf or hard of hearing can be an invisible disability that can easily lead to unintentional
social exclusion.
And Maria Schoner, Skella Borealis, and Alex Joseph also asked about deaf culture.
And I wanted to share here a recent chat that I had with Oligite Quinn, who wanted us to
mention the century-long battle about teaching deaf children sign
language, especially wherein cochlear implant technology has
created this ableist assumption that there
is no need for sign language and that families and hard-of-hearing
or deaf adults would no longer need it.
And Quinn told me that without signed language,
deaf kids often suffer language deprivation,
including myself, they say.
There's a lot of research currently in the psychological field on the adverse effects
of language deprivation, such as mood disorders, sequencing and memory impairments, delayed
cognitive function, and so much more, they say.
And they continue, this topic is one that my community continues to bring awareness
to. We have a lot of issues we fight for, but this one is the most prevalent and long-lasting
one. And Quinn said that though deaf researchers have been pointing out the benefits of sign
language for decades, this is only now gaining traction after hearing scientists have conducted
studies. And Quinn told me, I'm just hoping this won't be another case of my community
being left behind and forgotten. And Guinevere also recently
published an article titled, Police Interactions with the Deaf and Hard of
Hearing Community, Abuse, Autism, and Accessibility, which opens acknowledging
that police brutality is a salient issue in recent years, especially in the United
States, and that Black, Indigenous, and people of color, as well as disabled people,
experience higher rates of police violence than white and non-disabled individuals.
And research findings indicate that the deaf and hard of hearing community faces unique challenges when interacting with police, they write.
And these include difficulties communicating, hearing status,
misinterpretation of communication, the intersection
of race and disability and accessibility concerns.
And they write that the consequences of these issues can be dire, often deadly, and police
need thorough intersectional training on how to work with disabled people and there need
to be standardized, effective means for communication with disabled people.
And that police must be held accountable for establishing this communication.
The use of force should be avoided at all cost and punished if used inappropriately.
And I think another great point in their paper they mention is that a critical issue to consider
is the role of police officers and that often police are dispatched when other social services
are more appropriate or beneficial to the
situation.
So, Guinevere's research papers talk about so many different facets of disability sociology
that we couldn't tackle it all in one interview, but they have a really great YouTube channel
with their different lectures that cover more on disability and the criminal justice system,
pandemics, inequality in the distribution of illness and disability, dilemmas of medical
technology. There's another lecture called Health and Political Economy, and a full lecture
on sexual health and sexuality. And on that note, you mentioned relationships, you mentioned
dating earlier, and Molly Rupp wrote in saying, dating with disability, is there a trick to
navigating it without feeling shitty about myself or too needy right now it's a great barometer to weed out the terrible people
but as a fat woman dating can already be a nightmare adding on and needing some accommodations and
generally constantly navigating rocky health things is daunting to trying to find a partner
help she says yeah i know this is maybe going to sound a little bit funny, but when I was doing my
research on disabled sexuality, a lot of people saw that exact experience as kind of one of
the positives, because you can sort of weed out the people who are not going to be a good
partner by how they treat you with that initial information.
So if someone is really dismissive right off the bat about your disability or they think that you're clingy or needy or they want to write you off because of
something like that very early on, that's probably not a good person for you. And it sucks because
if it happens over and over and over and over and that absolutely can, that's really tricky to
navigate and it sucks.
But sometimes what it tells you is like you kind of just have to keep trying,
keep waiting till you find those people who are willing to be flexible,
who are willing to accommodate and be respectful of those things and try to learn about you instead of putting you down for those things.
Because that's what a good partner should do is support you through that stuff,
even if it is difficult because if someone cares about you, they will.
Right. Even if you're visibly disabled, a lot of people are just so unfamiliar with disability that they might this person's caretaker? Or just, you know,
this whole messy storm cloud of questions and assumptions that can kind of really get in the
way of getting to know somebody. And so if you can tough it out and, you know, have those hard
conversations, that can be really, really helpful and that can go a long way. But I think we also
have to realize that not everyone will be open to learning
and being accommodating and being respectful. But yeah, dating can be really, really hard
as a disabled person because of all that, you know, ableism and assumptions and just
people's fears and worries and misunderstandings. And having to be an educator about those things
all the time is also exhausting.
Right.
Some people will kind of deal with those challenges by looking for other disabled people.
That was a pretty common trend amongst a lot of people that I talked to or that I surveyed was, you know, finding people with similar experiences.
That can be a really, really good way to go.
But you absolutely don't have to do that, right?
That can be a personal choice, but I think it's really comes back to, you know,
like finding people who treat you
the way that you want to be treated
and the way that you deserve to be treated.
And if you're somebody with marginalized identities,
whether it's disability or any other marginalized identity,
finding people who are gonna be accepting
is really, really crucial.
If you're like, why isn't there a dating app
just full of people who get it?
And there is one and it's called Datability, which as far as we could find, it's the only
dating app for disabled and chronically ill communities.
And it was founded by a disabled woman to create a safe space and an accepting space
to create good connections for people with physical, intellectual, and psychiatric disabilities.
And I checked into the reviews of this Datability app and a few folks said that they wish more
people were on it and knew about it.
So the Datability app is free.
So feel free to spread the word.
Speaking of costs, patron Concetta Gibson shared, can we talk about the additional social
expenses and complications that come with being disabled?
The extra time, appointments, phone calls, et cetera.
And Concetta writes,
I've been dealing with chronic disease
and brain fog my whole life.
And suddenly when quote, healthy people experience it
from long COVID, it's now a national conversation
and a thing worth researching.
I'm glad it has attention, Concetta writes,
but it's absolutely not a new phenomenon.
So yes, folks who have lived with disabilities for years and years have paid these longstanding
prices socially, financially, effort-wise to navigate a society that was not built with
them in mind.
And on that note, you know, a lot of folks asked about newly acquired disabilities.
Lena Brodsky, Max Gutman B., and first time question asker Lindsay Burke all asked about newly acquired disabilities, Lena Brodsky, Max Guttman B., and first-time
question asker Lindsay Burke all asked about COVID. Max asked, what have you seen about
how COVID is influencing the sphere of disability sociology, both as a mass disabling event
and an airborne illness that has been downplayed by those in power, they ask.
Yeah. So COVID has been a really, really
interesting example of a lot of the things that the field was already looking at. Of course,
we've seen a lot of people acquire disabilities or things like long COVID or post-viral illnesses.
And I would have loved to see a lot more of those accommodations stick around,
a lot more support for the people going through that. But unfortunately,
we're not seeing too much of that happening. We are seeing a lot of people kind of getting back to
business as usual, which puts a lot of people in a very difficult situation, especially like our
immunocompromised folks. There are a lot of people that are still living in isolation, and that's just
kind of their reality right now, because the rest of society is
you know, like no more masks, no more social distancing, people aren't really keeping up
with their boosters all the time. And that creates a really difficult situation. But yeah, we saw a
lot of issues, especially at the beginning of the pandemic, you know, as it started where very
eugenicist attitudes of like, oh, well, it's only like old and sick people who are
going to die, so I'm not worried. And, you know, just very problematic ideas about, you
know, okay, do we just not value the lives of people who are older adults or people with
pre-existing conditions? Like, are they just collateral damage and that's fine? And obviously,
that's, you know, really hard to deal with if you are in that community and you see
society at large kind of having this attitude of like, well, those lives don't matter.
And what we did see also with medical triaging practices in ICUs and stuff, a lot of people with
visible disabilities were being kind of turned away or shunned by those institutions, those
healthcare institutions, because their lives were seen as less valuable.
And so a lot of the time, people who were prioritized
in those triage situations are going to be
like younger individuals,
people without visible disabilities.
And so a lot of people, especially like wheelchair users,
were really scared, you know, at the beginning of COVID,
people with chronic illnesses and preexisting conditions
and older adults were really scared of, you know, what does this mean, what's going to
happen, and unfortunately we did see kind of what we expected, kind of that worst
case scenario where a lot of people did die and a lot of people were permanently
disabled and are permanently disabled because of the pandemic, and it's
really tragic to see that with that outcome,
a lot of people's lives are changed in a way that
is very difficult to deal with.
And then the support is still kind of not there.
And accommodations are still kind of not there.
We're kind of back to normal, back to business as usual.
And a lot of people are still struggling.
People are still getting
COVID.
You know, the pandemic is not over.
Just a heads up, the so-called flirt strains of COVID very much want to be intimate with
you.
And they have fun little features that help them evade antibodies and become more resistant
to existing vaccines.
But for the fall wave of booster shots, vaccine experts are recommending tailoring them to
these new variants for some extra protection.
Now, how many people have COVID?
I don't know.
It's a great guess.
The CDC no longer bothers tracking infections anymore.
What we don't know can't not kill us.
But there are wastewater epidemiologists who are testing for spikes in the poop in the
sewers.
And yes, we have a really great episode
with Dr. Amy Kirby, who heads that program
of environmental microbiology at the CDC.
And we'll link in the show notes.
Meanwhile, if you don't want to risk an infection
or the chance that you might develop lasting or long COVID
symptoms or giving them to others or killing others,
you can still mask up.
Oh, wait, actually, no, wait.
Shoot, you can't, okay.
According to this recent Forbes article titled
From Mask Mandates to Bans,
Some Jurisdictions in the US are Doing a 180,
there is a movement to ban face masks
in an ongoing pandemic because the Forbes article says
that advocates for bans say face coverings
make it impossible for law enforcement to identify people who break the law and that supporters of the ban
say that it would help law enforcement crack down on pro-Palestine protesters who wear
masks.
For more on Palestine and Gaza, you can see our recent Genocidology episode with the world's
leading expert on genocide, Dr. Dirk Moses.
But yes, roughly 5.3% of people are estimated in the US to have long COVID symptoms, which occurs
more often in people assigned female at birth, people of color, folks over 65, or people with
underlying health conditions. Okay, what is long COVID, right? The CDC says the most common
symptoms of long COVID are fatigue, brain fog, and something called post-exertional
malaise. But there are over 200 other symptoms and associated conditions like myalgic encephalomyelitis
or chronic fatigue syndrome. And that's abbreviated to ME slash CFS, which can be absolutely debilitating. And if you're
familiar with other psychomers, physics girl whose name is
Diana Cowan, she contracted COVID right after her honeymoon
in the summer of 2022. And she has scarcely left her bed since
if you've been following her story. And actually,
coincidentally, or not coincidentally,
because it is Disability Pride Month, this Saturday, July 6,
Diana is doing a live stream.
She probably will not be talking.
It's sort of a day in the life of what her life with this
condition is like.
Our friends Simone Yetch and Vanessa Hill and Derek Muller
of Erratacium, as well as Diana's husband Kyle and Ian
Hecocs are raising awareness and funds
for long COVID research and ME-CFS.
So you can look for Diana's handles at the physics girl for more on that type of disability
and you can join the live stream.
And as someone who is immunocompromised myself, I do hope that we all just try to mask up
and get vaccinations and try to keep ourselves and others safer.
Now many people wanted to know about allyship, but on a more personal basis.
Andrew Stone had a question.
How do you keep a relationship healthy when you're a caregiver?
Talking boundaries, not forgetting about oneself and the things that you want to do, but also
being available for them.
If someone's found themselves in a situation where they are now disabled, or they have a partner.
Did any of your work look at that aspect in relationships?
Yeah, and I also, I have a little bit of personal
experience with that kind of thing as well.
That is a really challenging situation,
especially if it's like a transition or a change
that you go through with your loved ones,
where you become a caregiver
when you previously were not one. It's really important to prioritize your self-care and to make sure that
you're still taking care of your own needs and you know not sacrificing too much or taking on
too much in that situation, which is obviously easier said than done, but using as many resources
as you can. So you'll last longer and be better at caregiving
if you make sure to get the sleep you need,
the help you need, and to do things
for your own mental health to prevent a burnout.
But what are those resources to help out?
Like, there are a lot of government resources,
a lot of mutual aid and community care resources
that people can make use of.
And it's kind of like the idea of how every therapist has
a therapist, and that therapist has a therapist,
like it goes up the chain.
You absolutely need to rely on other people for social support
to step in and provide care and resources to the person
that you're doing caretaking for,
and try not to be everything for that other person all
the time. Obviously, there are a lot of reasons why it's not always possible to have other support
or other people in that situation. And so in that kind of situation, if you're the sole caregiver
for someone and you don't really have any other help and you don't really have access to that
mutual aid or community resources or government resources,
if you're kind of running like a one-person show, trying to take that time to do self-care and take
care of your own needs and not neglect those needs is really, really important. Again, easier said
than done, but depending on what works for you, you can do journaling to deal with if you've got
difficult thoughts and feelings to work through, you know, do some stretches,
like move your body if that's something
that helps you feel good.
You can take a bubble bath, like read a book that you like,
watch a show, like whatever it is that makes you feel
like yourself and to take care of yourself.
There's only so much time in the day.
And so whatever you can do to kind of band-aid,
deal with those individual instances of hurt or
stress or frustration, and then having those bigger moments to decompress as well. Time block,
like three hours on Saturday, I'm going to do absolutely nothing or whatever it needs to look
like for you. And then also having those conversations if you're able to with the person
that you're a caretaker for. I think it's really good to be open and say like,
hey, you know, like, I'm really struggling right now with the amount of things that are on my
plate. Is there anything that we could do to kind of compromise a little bit here? Like, is there
anything that maybe I can take a break from doing for a little while? And it'll depend on kind of
what the person's needs are. But if they're able to kind of take care of some of those daily living
tasks themselves once in a while, and you can kind of step in here and there, perhaps that's a possibility.
If it's kind of round the clock, like complete total care, then in that case, I think it's really important to have other people to step in as well.
So you're not doing absolutely everything for yourself and another person.
for yourself and another person. But even in that case, again, like trying
to prioritize self-care wherever you can
can make a really big difference.
But it is a tricky situation to be in,
and it's OK to just acknowledge that sometimes too.
And on the topic of what to acknowledge,
Megan Lynch, our guest for the caribology episode
about not chocolate trees, wrote in,
I think disability is just a regular part of being human.
But because systemic oppressions create a category Trees wrote in, I think disability is just a regular part of being human, but because
systemic oppressions create a category and they other you, you identify by the category
imposed by the oppressor, even when you're trying to dismantle the systemic oppression,
in this case, ableism. So, Megan writes, we want to dismantle ableism, and I'd like it if disability
were eventually just seen as part of being human.
Like some folks have brown hair, some don't.
Not othered, not punished, not stigmatized.
And Megan's episode on eating your local street trees is amazing.
We're going to link that to the show notes.
We talk about ableism and disability in that episode as well.
Now in terms of identity, Addie McBaddy asked, how do we work through internalized ableism?
And Addy writes, I have chronic pain from hypermobility EDS
and occasionally it's bad enough that I need a cane,
but most days I look fine on the outside.
So I have a hard time claiming I'm disabled.
Kyle Christensen wrote in and said,
I live with type one diabetes.
I try to live my life in a way that makes people think
I have no extra limitations, which I obviously do have.
In our society, Kyle writes, should I get over it and admit when I'm not functioning
at 100% or keep pushing through it so no one thinks I'm less capable than others?
And other folks, Alana Wood, First Time Question-Escar, Katie D., Ashley Oakey, Kelly B., Shar Harrison,
Olivia Parkinson, and Joe Ferrantino also asked about owning a disabled
identity when, in Joe's case, their partial hearing loss doesn't feel central to who they
are.
Bea Wilson and first-time question asker Ellie Drys also asked about living with chronic
illness and disabilities here in our society.
And any advice for disabled people about making sure their needs are met or dealing with just
the sort of day-to-day crush of ableism or anything that you wish you knew?
Yeah.
I mean, again, the lived reality of being a disabled person can be really, really tricky.
There are a lot of challenges that non-disabled people
might not understand and that, especially like a person who's just acquired a disability,
might still be working through and discovering. And so trying to take care of your needs,
obviously first you need to kind of know what they are. That can be a really great thing
to work through in therapy or through journaling or meditation or whatever it is that kind
of helps you process your own thoughts and feelings. If you're going through
something difficult or what you know life practices make you feel fulfilled.
So for a lot of people that could be things that they do work wise, that could
be spending time with loved ones, it could be hobbies and just trying to you
know really lean into those things that make your life feel worth living.
Because if you don't have those things, then you're going to end up in a really difficult
situation.
That's great advice.
I have a lot more advice for people with acquired disabilities.
I think when people are born with disabilities, that can be a whole other kind of experience.
And I actually don't personally have that experience.
So I've learned a lot from other people who have gone through that and a lot of the advice that individuals in that
situation might give would also be useful to people with acquired
disabilities. But I think another really crucial thing beyond that stuff that you
can do for yourself is surrounding yourself with people who not only
encourage you to do self-care but who also participate in your well-being.
So people who you know listen to you and try to understand
you and your disability and whatever it is that you're facing, that support and that understanding
and empathy and sympathy can go a really, really long way. Because if you're kind of dealing with
it all on your own, that can be really isolating. They say that keeping the good people in your life
and meeting new ones in places like support
groups and online forums can help so much.
Really just leaning into that support and cultivating healthy relationships with yourself
and with others is kind of at the core of well-being in general.
And especially as a disabled person, it's really, really important to take the time
and the space that you need, even if it's more than you think that you should need. We like to
shit ourselves all the time in the disability community. So, you know, trying to avoid doing
that if and when you can, you know, just giving yourself grace and being like, hey, this is
actually really hard and that's okay. I'm going to deal with it. I'm going to, you know, ask for help. I'm
going to do things that make me feel good. And sometimes, kind of
letting go of responsibilities and saying no to things, even if
you might not want to, can also be really good for your
well-being. You know, we're all living in this late stage
capitalist hellscape together. So we know it's hard.
It's easier said than done to do things
like take time off work.
We can't always do that.
But looking for those opportunities anywhere
and everywhere that you can find them
to increase your wellbeing
is really the best thing that you can do.
This is good advice for literally every person.
So every person listen to that. Last listener
question, I feel like on a lot of people's minds, only a brave one person asked, Becky,
this essay, Seeger, a scientist wants to know, okay, to use the big bathroom stalls,
I'm overcome with guilt and decision every time. What's the word on this?
Also a very good question. So in general, I would say, if it's not for you, then you probably shouldn't use it.
Just on the chance that somebody does come into that bathroom and they do need that stall,
and there are, you know, three, four, five other stalls that you could have been in instead.
It's a little cramped and like bathrooms are kind of gross in public. But, you know, the harm that
it does to someone who tries to go to the restroom, and then they can't use that stall, the one stall that is for them.
You know they're in convenience, they have to wait and depending on what their disabilities
look like that might actually be a medical issue for them as well to have to wait, especially
for like an extended period of time.
So it's a little bit more respectful to leave those things for the people that they're designed
for.
Smart.
I'm sure there's a lot of other people who are like, oh, good
to know.
I wasn't sure.
Yeah.
What about the hardest thing about what you do?
I imagine ableism, ignorance, funding, so many challenges.
Yeah.
Definitely just dealing with fighting
against those misconceptions and educating people
on the reality of disability.
There is a lot of pushback on a lot of these topics.
There's such a huge diverse variety of perspectives and experiences within the disability community.
So that can be challenging.
I think a lot of the time when I'm teaching, people have so many misconceptions that they
come in with.
So it can be kind of an uphill battle to get to that point where we're on the same page now, we're not using words that are slurs
anymore. We've kind of gotten rid of some of those misconceptions that we're getting
a little bit more open minded about these topics. But interestingly, that same challenge
is the reason why I like this kind of work. When we get to that point where people kind
of see that it's not that way and
that they don't have to think about it in this very black and white like
disability is bad, non-disability is good kind of way, that is really
fulfilling. So it's challenging to work through those conversations but
it's also what I'm really passionate about. So kind of a mix for sure.
Is that your favorite thing about the work?
That kind of intrinsic fulfillment?
I think it's a big one.
Another one would also just be understanding myself better.
That's a big reason why I kind of went into the field.
And I think learning about all these things,
it's made it a lot easier for me to advocate for myself
and to help other people in my life advocate
for themselves too.
Being able to support people
and understand these experiences better
and understand myself better
has made my own life a lot better.
And so I think that ties in with, you know,
being a sociologist and doing work within the field,
but it always spills over into like every other part
of life too, which is, it's really cool. But it also makes me really annoying.
Um, because I can't watch movies or TV shows or anything without just, it's like always
in the back of your mind.
So, um, yeah, you're always thinking about it.
It's wonderful that you can highlight these things and have other people look for them.
For sure. Yeah, it's really everywhere. So once you start seeing it, you really can't
stop seeing it. It's everywhere. And that's true for everything in sociology. Sociologists,
we're some of the most annoying scientists for sure, because we're living in society
all the time. We're studying society. And so it's kind of like if you talk to a fish that's like a little too aware of the
water.
So it's definitely interesting, but that can be like a challenge and kind of a bonus all
in one.
Well, thank you for educating me and us so much.
This has been great.
Thank you for answering some of the questions that are hard to ask, but the more we learn,
the better.
You know?
Absolutely.
Yeah, I'm happy to be here.
So ask expert people earnest questions, but not strangers, the intrusive ones.
So follow Gwen on social media at the links in the show notes.
Definitely check out their lectures and slides on YouTube, which we'll link right in the show notes. Definitely check out their lectures and slides on YouTube,
which we'll link right in the show notes.
There's so much more to cover,
and consider this an intro to the topic
or kind of a free Costco sample into their work.
Much more inventory online.
Their YouTube channel's awesome.
You can find us at Ologies on X and Instagram.
I'm Allie Ward on both.
Smology's are their own show now.
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Maitland Audio is our lead editor.
Nick Thorburn of the band Islands made the theme music.
And if you wait it out until the very end of the whole episode, I tell you a secret.
And this week, I was walking Grameena Park near where I'm staying and I looked up and
there was a mulberry tree, full fruitingness, right above my head.
So many mulberries and I quickly Googled, do mulberries grow in Chicago? Are there any
poisonous berries that appear to be like mulberries? No, good to go. So I just started picking
these mulberries and eating them as the sun was going down. It was me and Grammy in the
park and then I saw a couple fireflies and I was like heaven
Heaven sometimes everything around you sucks
And then sometimes you go well look at that. There's a mulberry tree. That's pretty good. Okay. Bye What is this?
This is public access.