SonyaX
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2011
- Messages
- 29
I'm headed to Universal next week. I'm quite nervous about how I will be received.
I have an arthritic ankle that sometimes just gives out on me. I also have trouble getting up and down from chairs or sitting positions, even when my ankle is totally functional. On some days I use a cane. This means on days when I look like a completely able-bodied person with no cane, I still need to use the handicapped restroom. Sometimes I get glares when I come out of them. If I have my cane with me, oddly enough, I don't have to use the handicapped restroom (because the cane is my support for getting up and down), but nobody ever glares at me for using a regular restroom with a cane.
I have never needed a wheelchair for everyday stuff. I know there's a lot of walking involved at theme parks. So I tried to get ready for the parks and start a walking regimen a few months ago. I pushed myself hard and my asthma worsened and I got pneumonia, which I am still recovering from. The exercise seems to have also made my ankle worse not better.
In panic mode, I bought a nice (but previously used) wheelchair for $50 locally. I am now concerned about how people are going to treat me. Who tend to be the gatekeepers of disabilities? My plan is to walk as much as I can and only use the wheelchair as needed. I'm full of excuses and explanations and feel like a fraud. I am not doing this because I'm lazy (does anyone think that?), I'm doing this because I want to be able to enjoy the parks with my kids and simply can't do as much walking as would be needed. I am obese. Not morbidly obese, but just under 200 lbs on a 5'4" frame.
Are other people with disabilities judging me and thinking "She doesn't need that! Get up and walk you lazy woman!"? Should I just avoid theme parks if I can't walk that much? Is it OK if I use a wheelchair even though I'm not doctor-certified disabled? Am I a self-hating ableist or a an attention-seeking melodramatic loser? Are people with real and serious disabilities going to be angry with me?
I have an arthritic ankle that sometimes just gives out on me. I also have trouble getting up and down from chairs or sitting positions, even when my ankle is totally functional. On some days I use a cane. This means on days when I look like a completely able-bodied person with no cane, I still need to use the handicapped restroom. Sometimes I get glares when I come out of them. If I have my cane with me, oddly enough, I don't have to use the handicapped restroom (because the cane is my support for getting up and down), but nobody ever glares at me for using a regular restroom with a cane.
I have never needed a wheelchair for everyday stuff. I know there's a lot of walking involved at theme parks. So I tried to get ready for the parks and start a walking regimen a few months ago. I pushed myself hard and my asthma worsened and I got pneumonia, which I am still recovering from. The exercise seems to have also made my ankle worse not better.
In panic mode, I bought a nice (but previously used) wheelchair for $50 locally. I am now concerned about how people are going to treat me. Who tend to be the gatekeepers of disabilities? My plan is to walk as much as I can and only use the wheelchair as needed. I'm full of excuses and explanations and feel like a fraud. I am not doing this because I'm lazy (does anyone think that?), I'm doing this because I want to be able to enjoy the parks with my kids and simply can't do as much walking as would be needed. I am obese. Not morbidly obese, but just under 200 lbs on a 5'4" frame.
Are other people with disabilities judging me and thinking "She doesn't need that! Get up and walk you lazy woman!"? Should I just avoid theme parks if I can't walk that much? Is it OK if I use a wheelchair even though I'm not doctor-certified disabled? Am I a self-hating ableist or a an attention-seeking melodramatic loser? Are people with real and serious disabilities going to be angry with me?