Saturday, February 05, 2011

Fabulous (Dave's Outing, the final part)

There’s really nothing that can be done about it. Really. I feel guilty every single time, I know that guilt is almost always a useless emotion and this truly is, but I’m human – sue me. The thing is that when I’m out, in winter, in the power chair – the roads are slushy and dirty and full of muck, grime and salt. Whenever I roll into a mall the floor gets sloppy wet and I leave a muddy trail behind me.

We had just met with a young woman, a journalism student from Ryerson, who was going to do an interview with me and were heading off to our favourite tea shop, when I noticed a man standing looking at my trail behind me. He had a mop in his hand and I realized suddenly that I had just run over his nice, freshly cleaned floor. I felt mortified. All those years, through childhood, being yelled at for tracking in dirt came back in a flash. Guilt flooded me.

I decided to face him head on and apologize. Just as we were getting on the elevator I waved to him and he looked towards me. He didn’t need my wave to find me, he just had to follow my mucky track marks along the floor to my chair. I called out to him, ‘Sorry.’

Then the oddest thing happened. Instead of the grim face of an angry and frustrated mother, I got a big smile. He called back to me, ‘Not a problem, you keep me in a job.’ With that he took the mop and began to clean away any evidence that I’d been there and been messy. He absolutely lifted my spirits.

As we went off to do the interview I commented that he had the attitude that we need from everyone who works with and for people with disabilities. 'Hey, thanks for needing me!' It's a terrific attitude that makes work less like work somehow.

I saw the guy again in the mall a couple days later and, again, I was leaving tracks. He remembered me and gave me a big thumbs up!

Gotta love the guy.

6 comments:

  1. Could be that your "sorry" was what caused him to react that way. Often people don't mind doing something more, as long as you are willing to recognize that they ARE doing more....

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  2. Nothing sadder than a floor that never gets dirty enough to need mopping... especially for a business that depends on people to earn a living.

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  3. Hey Dave, shoes leave muddy footprints too, you aren't making the floor dirty all on your own!

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  4. Dear Dave:

    How do you get staff to remember that? The support that people with disabilities need - keeps them employed. I think sometimes that we (staff) see our job as keeping the floor clean and not as dealing with the messiness that comes our way. There is a difference!

    Colleen

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  5. A great post again. What a friendly guy, and what a useful reminder!

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  6. People like that renew my spirit.

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