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</html><description>I am disabled. I was born with Cerebral Palsy and for most of my life I was an ableist. Don&#x2019;t get me wrong, I never actively discriminated against other disabled people, but I believed that the discrimination we face in our day-to-day life was just part of how the world is. Of course, things are inaccessible because most people do not need accessibility. Never mind, I will just find something else to do. Of course, I shouldn&#x2019;t wear dresses or go dancing because then other people will see that I am disabled. Of course, I shouldn&#x2019;t try things that able-bodied people can do quickly because I am wasting everyone&#x2019;s time. I should be grateful when people offer to do things for me or carry me up the stairs. It doesn&#x2019;t matter that it makes me uncomfortable, or that it isn&#x2019;t safe, they are being nice, and I should appreciate it. I should be grateful for an accessible toilet or a chance to take an exam on a computer. I should say thank you and be proud when someone calls me an inspiration. And I should never let my disability affect anything that I do. If I am not able to keep up with my classmates or my colleagues, I should just try harder and stay in the office for longer. I would never guess that you are disabled is the highest compliment anyone could give, right? &nbsp; For the longest time I believed those things about myself and my place in society. It took meeting one awesome disabled woman that I am proud to call a friend to snap me out of my own internalised ableism. I have a right to expect accessibility everywhere, I have a right to adjustments that make it easier for me to do my best job at work, I have a right to wear dresses, I can ride a horse even if I need help to get into the saddle. Calling me inspirational isn&#x2019;t a compliment and saying you didn&#x2019;t notice I am disabled means that you haven&#x2019;t been paying attention to me. I realized all those things, but I still believed that I am not the right person to talk about them, to go out into the world and demand accessibility, to call out ableism, because what if I will get it wrong? What if I make a mistake and all the disabled people will get judged for it? But my friend made me realize one more thing. I don&#x2019;t have to be perfect to deserve rights. And if I won&#x2019;t ask for them no one else will. So, I am starting this blog to write up an accessible world for myself and for my community.</description><thumbnail_url>https://www.theonceandfuturecripple.com/en/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2021/10/fb-link.png</thumbnail_url><thumbnail_width>953</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_height>500</thumbnail_height></oembed>
