What is it to be disabled? Where does the term "disability" come from?
People are a mixture of thrownness (Heidegger’s description
of the state in which we exist), self-determination and circumstances sometimes
outside of our control. Within this mix, no person alone can be described as
being disabled; they are just being themselves. The term “disabled” arises only
when people are compared to each other (including your past self compared to
your present self).
Physical and mental disability
is considered a lack of ability only because another person happens to have
that ability. We live in a wonderfully complex world full of individuals with
unique skills and abilities. If disability arises from an act of comparing,
then everyone is potentially disabled depending on whom they are compared to. For example, the athlete Usain
Bolt is disabled compared to the swimmer Michael Phelps because he physically
can’t swim as well as Phelps (and Phelps is disabled when compared to Bolt).
Whether it is Parkinson’s disease, an inability to run 100
metres in under 10 seconds or millions of other reasons, everyone can be
considered disabled. Therefore, the
division between able and disabled people, which the word “disability”
signifies, is a false division. Disability is always a relative term. For example, we all
have the "disability" of only seeing light in the visual spectrum but
since we can't be compared to someone who can see more of the spectrum its not
considered a disability.
Thank you for sharing your thought. That's so fresh to me as a person living with PD. We are all diferently abled.
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