Friday, February 22, 2013

Accommodations, Italy, and “Becoming My Disability”


(Just a disclaimer: this is a bit rambling.)

Sometimes when people ask me what accommodations I need, I find it difficult to answer. Depending on the situation, my only accommodation may need to be an understanding that I’m going to be tired sometimes and that I might have to miss activities/classes on occasion. That’s basically asking for flexibility, and while you can do that officially (it’s in my accommodations plan at school), people can have issues with the lack of specificity, both in agreeing to grant the accommodations and in actually following them (“But I am being flexible,” says the professor who gives you two extra days on a paper when you’ve been out of class for a week and still have the book to read.)

Some of my accommodations, however, are more concrete: a single room at school so I can rest, for example, and not having to stand for long periods of time. That last one presented me with a problem recently.

On the busses in Parma, I’ve been fine, because there are usually seat available, and when there aren’t I am standing for maybe seven minutes, maximum, which I can handle (I should note before I go on that walking is usually better for me than standing, because walking at least gets my blood flowing while standing allows it to pool and exacerbates my symptoms).

A few weeks ago, though, when I went to Carnivale, we got on the connecting train from Bologna to Venice and discovered that there were no seats available. The entire train, in fact, from the carriages themselves to the outer spaces near the bathrooms, was packed. The train ride was two hours. While I am sometimes able to stand for that long, it’s very unpleasant, and I knew that I had a lot of walking ahead of me in Venice. I considered trying to ask someone to give up their seat, but I figured the odds of someone giving up their seat to a visibly able-bodied American speaking poor Italian and claiming to have a disability on a two hour train ride were slim. I face enough skepticism in my native country, speaking my native language. I really didn’t want to have to deal with doubting faces and a language barrier. It also occurred to me that I didn’t even know if there’s a culture of giving up seats in Italy, and furthermore, while I probably could have strung some sentences together, I wasn’t 100% how to explain the situation in Italian. I suppose basic language skills in a foreign country go beyond ordering in a restaurant when you’re disabled – you also have to know how to explain your disability.

Ultimately, I ended up sitting on the floor of an outer train compartment, squished in a corner, having to readjust anytime someone passed through the area. The other students on the program were really great about it, checking in with me regularly, but I was still fairly uncomfortable. After about 45 minutes, though, the little girl who was perched on a pull-down seat left the train with her mother, leaving it free for me to claim. But that was just luck – I had fully expected to sit on the floor for the entire ride.

I asked an Italian friend afterwards if she thought someone would have given up their seat, and she said she didn’t think so. They might not have believed me, she said, and even if they did believe me, they probably wouldn’t have wanted to stand for two hours, regardless of whether I needed the seat more than they did. They would have looked at me and seen a healthy-looking young person, and their gut would have told them that I was fine without a seat.

There are certainly privileges invisibly disabled people have over visibly disabled people (and of course there is not always a clear divide between the two) – we often get to choose who knows we’re disabled, and have more control over how they find out. We don’t get stares. But there are downsides, chief among them being the recipients of a tremendous amount of skepticism and constantly having to assert our identities as disabled people. I’ve had so many people tell me they forget I have a chronic illness and expect me to take that as a compliment. Just the other day, I was on a bus with a girl from my program when two women came on. The elderly one sat down, and the middle-aged one stood by her. The girl on my program mouthed for me to get up, but I didn’t, because I was tired and the middle-aged woman did not indicate that she wanted the seat (if I’m feeling ok to stand, I give up my seat to those who ask because I figure if they ask they probably need it more than I do in that moment). I told the girl that I wasn’t going to get up, that I sit when I can because of my illness and she laughed and said that she had forgotten about my illness because I didn’t allow it to consume my life. I didn’t have the spoons to explain to her why the situation upset me, but it did.

I’ve talked before about the whole “don’t become your disability” and “I’m glad you’re not letting it take over your life” thing, but I just want to mention again how much it bothers me. For three years in high school, I woke up in the morning, went to the basement, watched tv all day, maybe went to a doctor’s appointment, maybe had an hour of class with a tutor who came to my house if I was feeling up to it, and went to bed. Was I becoming my disability because my health was so poor that I didn’t leave the house for weeks at a time? Am I becoming my disability now because I spend so much of my time thinking and talking and writing about disability? In case it’s not clear, the answer to both of those questions is no, but as I’ve said before, they’re the wrong questions. Why are we so worried about people “becoming” their disabilities)? Is it because we’re scared of disability? Is it because we want disabled people to try to pass, to try to be “normal,” to make life easier for those who are able-bodied?

 If I claim my disability identity and call you out on your ableism, does that make you uncomfortable? 

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Venice


I was in Venice last weekend for Carnevale (which, oh my god), and I snapped this photo:



[Image description: A sticker on a ramp fills most of the frame and reads “Città Di Venezia" in smaller white letters and "Accessible Venice” in large yellow print.]

Walking around the city, Venice sure didn’t seem very accessible – so many bridges with stairs, a few streets so narrow that a wheelchair definitely wouldn’t fit – but apparently the city has been doing a lot to increase its accessibility. The water taxis are accessible, and of course the lack of cars helps with safety. I took the above picture on a ramp along the main promenade. The Italian girl I was with told me they installed the raised ramps in case of flooding, but of course they also help make a major thoroughfare accessible.

Travel, part 2: Advice for flying with Dysautonomia


Flying with a chronic illness is one of my very least favorite things, but going to school 3,000 from home and a general inclination towards seeing new places makes it an inevitability for me. Having flown to and from school so many times now, I have my routine down to a science. You’ll obviously have your own preferences, but here is what works for me.

  • Eat something and take your meds as soon as you wake up, even if it’s four in the morning. I once neglected to take my medicine until after I was up in the air, and that was a very unpleasant experience. If you’re switching time zones your medicine schedule will be thrown a little off any way, so you might as well get your Florinef or Midodrine or what-have-you in your system as soon as you can.


  • Drink water constantly. This seems like such a no-brainer, but it’s easy to get distracted and forget. I bring two empty water bottles in my carry-on and fill them up from a water fountain once I get through security.




  • Bring snacks (snacks on snacks on snacks). I’m a fan of sandwiches, but fruit is also good, especially when there’s turbulence. And bring hand sanitizer! Plane germs + weak immune systems does not a good match make.


  • If there is turbulence and your symptoms start flaring, the best thing you can do is to breathe deeply and sip water. I also order a sprite from the flight attendants in an effort to preemptively settle my stomach, but I’m honestly not sure about the efficacy of that approach.


Once you’ve landed, give yourself time to recuperate before you dive into a mess of activity. And after you’ve rested up, enjoy your vacation! 

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Update from Italy


Hello, hello! I’ve been in Italy for the two weeks – I’m studying abroad this semester! – and haven’t been interneting much, but I wanted to share this photo. It says “Lift for Disabled” and I took it at a medieval castle. The castle also had wooden ramps over the stairs in each room. And again, this was at a medieval castle. A medieval castle on a hill. So when restaurants say that they can’t renovate to provide access because it would “ruin the spirit of the place” or when a hair salon refuses to provide disabled parking because “no one with a disability ever comes here,” I have think that maybe they just don’t care about disabled people, hmm?

There is no excuse for inaccessibility. 

[Image description: Two white signs are posted on orange construction fencing. One reads "vietato l'accesso, lavori in corso," which means "no entry, work in progress," and the other reads "ascensore per disabili," which means "lift for disabled."]