Since it's Disability Pride Month, I'd love to address something I see many issues with out in the wild:

Wheelchair etiquette

There are appropriate and inappropriate ways to interact with someone who is in a wheelchair. Knowing them benefits all involved.

A non exhaustive 🧵
1. Outside of emergencies, there is no reason for you to touch someone's wheelchair unless asked. If we're in the way, treat us like you would anyone else and say "excuse me." If it looks like we're stuck, treat us like you would anyone else and ask if we need help. Don't touch.
1. (Cont) I can't emphasize how important this is.

A wheelchair is an extension of our bodies. If you wouldn't lift and move an abled person without asking, don't push a wheelchair.

Grabbing my chair = grabbing me. It's assault.
2. Unless you would otherwise be screaming to be heard, there is no reason to bend down or kneel to speak to someone in a wheelchair.

Think about it. You don't bend to be eye level with abled adults. You do bend down to speak to children, though.

Don't infantalize us.
3. Don't speak over or about us. Meaning, don't look at my husband and ask "do they need help getting in?" when I'm right there. This is another infantilizing move and it's horribly disrespectful.
4. Do not assume that someone in a wheelchair isn't ambulatory (mobile). Sometimes, a person using a wheelchair can walk and will. This should not be a shock and is not an opportunity for questions about our disability.
5. Unless we're in a setting where it would be appropriate (you're our doctor and we're in the office/hospital, or you're paying us at an event to speak about it) there is no opportunity for you to ask questions about our disability. That's just rude.
6. The above goes for your children, too. Disabled people are not a learning opportunity - do not turn us into one by telling kids that staring/pointing is bad but they can ask us questions. No, they cant. It's still rude, and it's not our responsibility to educate your kids.
7. Don't move our wheelchairs after we've transferred out either, not until we say it's okay and know where it's going. If I transfer out of my chair at a restaurant and the waitstaff whisks my chair away, they've effectively taken my legs and hidden them. No, thank you.
8. Don't go out of your way to avoid saying things like "talk a walk." We're pretty likely to express things that way too, and "take a roll" as a cutesy alternative is not as funny as you think.
9. Use the word "disabled." It's not a dirty word. Alternatives like "differently abled" are infantalizing and gross, and terms like "handicapped" and "crippled" are both outdated and (often) offensive. Disabled. Get comfy with it.
10. Don't say things like "wheelchair bound" or "confined to a wheelchair." Mobility aids like wheelchairs give us our freedom; they're a good thing, not a trap.
All of these are general rules of thumb, esp w/ strangers or ppl you don't know well. You may know someone in a wheelchair who is fine answering a kid's questions, you may hear a disabled person using "cripple" for themself. Obviously, that's okay. This is a starting point.
The big takeaway from this should be to treat us like you would anyone else - not as a broken, not as a freak show, not as a child. All it really takes is basic respect and acknowledging that we're people too.

Thanks for trying to do better and Happy Disability Pride Month 💜
Sidenote: I personally am open to questions about this, about disability etiquette here. My DMs are open, comments welcome.

Please do not assume that every disabled person wants to be an advocate or an educator. Someone RTing this thread is not an invitation to ask to them ?s.
Gonna practice what I preach here and remember our emotional labor has value.

Disabilities are expensive! If you learned something here, consider joining my Patreon or donating to my Ko-fi.

Patreon.com/cknightwrites

Ko-fi.com/cknightwrites
Rip my notifications, so I'm going to mute the thread now. I'm loving how positive all the interaction has been though - you all really kicked off Disability Pride Month beautifully.

My DMs are always open for questions!
Part 2 based in large part on questions I've seen repeatedly in my DMs 👇

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More from @CKnightWrites

4 Jul
In yesterday's Wheelchair Etiquette thread for Disability Pride Month, I gave you a lot of "do nots" ... so how about some "do" options today!

Wheelchair etiquette part 2: what you can do

A non-exhaustive 🧵
1. Offer to help just like you would anyone else.

You're going to hold open doors for ppl behind you/with full hands. You'll help get things from a shelf if you can. It's okay to do those same things for us.

Remember not to move us! No touching.
1 (cont) If the disabled person is already in the process of opening the door, gathering the thing, whatever you were going to help with, please ask before just jumping in.

Often, not asking would require you moving us anyway. But also, don't assume we can't do it. Just ask.
Read 13 tweets
2 Jul
Apparently, some folks are angry with me for "canceling" Borbala. 🙃

First of all. This is a public space. What you say in public spaces has consequences. Consequences =/= canceling.

I shared HER words because she's a bully, homophobic, and ableist.
What I did not do was delete her Twitter. That was her choice. Instead of acknowledging the myriad harm she'd done (read that thread and the QRTs, so many examples), instead of accepting accountability and figuring out how she could make it right, she ran.

She did that. Not me.
We don't have to sit back quietly and accept someone doing harm to us, to people around us.

And the fact that people like Borbala will weaponize their mental health to get pity, to excuse what they did, to attack the people calling them out? GROSS. And again, entirely on them.
Read 4 tweets
1 Jul
The utter lack of respect for self-published authors here would piss me off anyway.

But from an editor?? This is a mess.

What if we acknowledged that most editors are unaffordable for most self-pub authors and respect that those authors are doing the best they can as-is? ImageImage
What if we uplift and actually support self published authors instead of calling their work utter garbage and shitty? What if??

And that snarky af follow up when someone called Borbala out for claiming to be "kind and neutral."

An editor. I'm fuming.
And then the LIES. Said that those stories should be rejected from Amazon by those "editors" - not that they should be edited by those editors, not that the writer should get any support. Rejected and removed. Like the garbage Borbala believes those books are. Image
Read 8 tweets
8 Feb
...I'm autistic.
I've 'known' for a while. When the kid was diagnosed, it didn't click, I didn't think of it. But as he started to develop his personality, I saw so much of myself in him - including my mental health struggles, my 'quirks.'

I wondered if he has ADHD. I wondered if Im autistic.
I was officially diagnosed with OCD in the last couple years, still when I was over thirty, and I rejected the idea of being diagnosed with something else too because it made me feel like too much. Like I was too much, that the official bit somehow made me more high maintenance.
Read 10 tweets
5 Sep 20
Definitely just watched my neighbor's teenage son back his mom's car into his dad's truck.

And he knows I saw it.

Mom is home but didn't see/hear it happen, and Dad gets home at 3.

I'm waiting for the silence bribe.
He's circling both cars, examining even the parts of each that weren't hit. He's also frantically looking at me and at the house, trying not to get caught and simultaneously already caught.

I waved, gave him a sing-songy, "Hello, Kyle." I can see him sweating from here.
He just had a lightbulb moment, complete with a ha! finger in the air and ran to the back of the house (basement door?).

Can't wait to see what's up Kyle's sleeve.
Read 47 tweets

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