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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!isc-br!bunker!wtm
- From: weave@bach.udel.edu (Ken Weaverling)
- Newsgroups: misc.handicap
- Subject: Re: Wheelchair
- Message-ID: <23948@handicap.news>
- Date: 19 Aug 92 04:28:21 GMT
- References: <23673@handicap.news>
- Sender: wtm@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
- Reply-To: weave@bach.udel.edu (Ken Weaverling)
- Organization: University of Delaware
- Lines: 48
- Approved: wtm@hnews.fidonet.org
-
- Index Number: 23948
-
- This is a bit off the topic of the current thread, but still
- related to wheelchair use.
-
- My girl friend is a C5 quad with a motorised chair. Sometimes it
- is a bit of a pain when we go to places like museums, etc, to
- constantly bend down or squat to talk to her. In order to be more
- at eye-level with her, I came up with the idea that I'd just use
- her manual chair sometimes.
-
- I had some serious discusion with her before doing this. I didn't
- want to make a mockery of using a wheelchair. There are also other
- weird considerations to think about. For example, at the Inner
- Harbor Science Museum in Baltimore, there is a small stair lift for
- chairs. Should I just stand up and walk the chair up the stairs,
- or consume an employee's time as he has to operate the lift for me
- as well as her. (I decided to stay in the chair, since observers
- might not understand.)
-
- I enjoy it because I can be next to her at eye level, and it gives
- my arms a good workout, which I constantly need, since I carry my
- girl friend and transfer her quite a lot (I want to get good enough
- so I can take her to a dance club, pick her up, cradle her in my
- arms, and dance a slow dance with her and last the entire dance!)
-
- One funny note. Once we went to a store with a downstairs section
- that was innaccessible to wheelchairs (no elevator, etc). After
- bitching to store personnel, who offered to bring us up anything we
- wanted, a small crowd developed. I said "Forget it, I guess I'll
- just have to carry her down there." I then leaped out of the
- manual chair, carried it down the stairs, came back up, and carried
- my girl friend down the stairs and deposited her in the manual
- chair.
-
- The onlookers freaked out. One woman kept screaming "Oh my gawd, oh
- ma gawd" It was great! :-)
-
- (Of course, we knew the store's downstairs was not accesible before
- we went in and I discussed the "scene" we would make beforehand.
- I'd never just do something like that and 'manipulate' her body
- like that without her permission...)
-
- --
- Ken Weaverling (Delaware Tech College) weave@dtcc.edu -or- weave@bach.udel.edu
-
- "Is it too late to change the way we're bound to go? Surely one of us must know"
- -- Sandy Denny, 1948-1978
-