This is all new to me. Over the last few months I've been getting requests for people who want to write guest posts on Chewint the Fat. One was a student who wanted to increase her writing skills and exposure. By the time I thought it through and was about to say 'yes' ... he letter to me was lost in a backlog of hundreds of emails. But then this guy 'Gary Presley' who has just written a new book called 'Seven Wheelchairs' wrote and wanted to put a post up that would both be engaging put also provide information about purchasing the book.
I did take the opportuntity to check the book out on other sites (sorry Gary, but I felt I had to) and I liked what I saw. I also felt that this was a good use of Chewing the Fat. So... for only the second time in over 800 posts, we have a guest blogger ...
Here you go, Dave. Try this one on for size. It focuses on the issue of happiness, at least as it relates to disability.
My book (Seven Wheelchairs: A Life beyond Polio) was published this year, but I refuse to accept responsibility for current the state of publishing in this let's-call-it-what-it-is recession. The only responsibility I have, according to the publisher (The University of Iowa Press), is to toot my own horn. Why not? After all, who better to report on the world of disability than someone who has been a citizen for close to fifty years.
If you've been riding a wheelchair as long as I have, you realize attitudes toward disability have changed over the years. Even so, I still get the occasional "Oh, I could never live like that" comment, which implies I should be sitting in a corner somewhere crying.
How can a crip reply? I suppose "You never know till you try" is the only rational response.
I was reminded of another aspect of this victim attitude a few days ago when I was interviewed by the host of a syndicated radio show. It seemed to me that he constantly wanted to bring the conversation back to the issue of anger. When I returned home, I looked up the passage in the book that had sparked his interest. It relates to my perception of the transaction between me and attendants I've had over the years.
"And so I have always been openly grateful to everyone who assists me in accomplishing that which my body cannot do for me. "You're so polite," more than one attendant has said. At first, I was polite, biting down and swallowing anger, because it was in the power of the caregiver to neglect me. And neglecting me would kill me.
"Now I believe I am polite and grateful because I better understand the nature of the transaction. Such weak terms – politeness and gratitude – for what I strive to express, which is a potent cocktail of reciprocal love, embarrassment, guilt, gratitude, resentment, appreciation, anger, and bemusement, all blended to please the palate and poured out as a pretty peace-offering, something to swallow so that we each understand you feel both good and bad about helping me, and I feel bad and good about needing help."
But here's another of those dirty little secrets: Writhing beneath the pleasant exterior facing the world, running like a stream of molten lava, is rage.
I suppose we all rage, including also those who presently journey through the world not yet disabled, saints excepted. But I didn't begin the book to vent. I wanted to illustrate the reality of disability, but to do that, I wanted to write so that people with disabilities would be seen as ... well, real, for lack of a better word. We human creatures are a gloriously messy mixture of good and bad, strong and weak, happy and sad. The reverse of that coin is that no one with a disability should be assigned to play the role of "inspiration" or a "hero."
And from the feedback I'm receiving, I'm pleased that many readers have seen me as a whole person, one in whom disability is present but not dominant, And one who realizes anger, like disability, can define character but is wise enough to understand that there are other psychological, intellectual, and emotional elements that also shape character.
And happiness.
Life is a grand thing, and it's all we know this side of Infinity, and all of us should be prepared to squeeze it dry. How? Seven Wheelchairs offers the opinion that we should greet each day with curiosity, with optimism, with passion, and then head out to release a little good karma in the world.
Gary Presley
Thanks for the guest slot, Dave. Here is the link to the Amazon page for SEVEN WHEELCHAIRS:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.amazon.com/Seven-Wheelchairs-Life-beyond-Polio/dp/1587296934/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1229180454&sr=8-1
And here is a link to a review in The New York Times. It's the second book mentioned.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/25/health/25book.html
I appreciate your support.
Gary www.garypresley.com
Gary,
ReplyDelete"Such weak terms – politeness and gratitude – for what I strive to express, which is a potent cocktail of reciprocal love, embarrassment, guilt, gratitude, resentment, appreciation, anger, and bemusement, all blended to please the palate and poured out as a pretty peace-offering, something to swallow so that we each understand you feel both good and bad about helping me, and I feel bad and good about needing help."
This is a beautiful passage! You captured the conflict well - of needing help but not wanting to be defined by it, of the beautiful struggle of being someone who needs it but doesn't want to need it, and getting help from people who want to give it but (sometimes) need it to define you.
This passage convinced me - I'll be happy to review your book for my blog. Thanks for your earlier comment!
Jocelyn
www.disadventure.com
Thanks, Jocelyn. I appreciate your comment. I think of my "disability personality" as a layer cake, made up of irony, sarcastic humor, and puzzlement. Somewhere the crip-me split off from the real-me, but we seem to get along generally.
ReplyDeleteGary www.garypresley.com
Hi Gary, are you writing and sharing your story over at Disaboom as well? Looks like an interesting book-- will add that to my "must read" pile.
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The secret of happiness is acceptance!
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