Sunday, April 15, 2007

Stair Master

I have been climbing stairs.

Me.

Having guests for the weekend should not be difficult in a three bedroom house. When we bought this place we were looking for an accessible home. It would be a few years before I would be in a wheelchair but we determined from the get go that we'd be able to have any visitors we wanted. So a house with everything on one level and a ramp into the place was put high on the priority list.

This was fortunate for when I became disabled there were no modifications that needed made to the place.

Perfect.

Divine re-gifting.

Something we bought for someone else was given to me instead.

Cool.

But upstairs we have one bedroom and two offices. The other bedroom is downstairs. We'd had Joe's office downstairs but, though he's not disabled, carrying boxes of books up and down stairs wasn't fun. Besides we didn't often have people stay. So the office moved upstairs and the guest room downstairs.

So when we had guests this weekend we could move the bed upstairs or we could stay downstairs. I decided, against Joe's protests, that I would do stairs this weekend and we would give our guests our room. I have been having trouble walking recently and decided that this would be a challenge for me. Joe was clearly worried about this ... probably the vision of him ending up carrying my, um, plump body up the stairs frightened the hell out of him.

Yesterday I made it down the stairs - but coming up was touch and go. I felt weak in my legs, I felt like toppling over. But I made it. I had to sit down and regain my breath from the climb but I did it. I felt like an inspirational cripple suddenly. Alert the press! Against All Odds, Dave Climbed Stairs.

I'm clearly sitting at the computer writing this so it goes without saying that I climbed the stairs again today. This time though, it was easier because I had confidence. Without fear gripping my throat I could breathe. I'm feeling quite smug. Impressed with myself. I am my own disabled hero. How convienient is that?

I know it doesn't change things in any real way, I know that I'm still going to need the wheelchair when out and I'm still gonna have the problems with my feet. And, in my heart I know that I'm never ever going to do that again.

But I climbed stairs.

Today.

When it mattered, I could.

And I did.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Victory. :)

Friend of mine does it on hands and knees - says it's less tiring.

All 4 My Gals said...

Giving you a standing ovation!

And all your fans are happy that you were able to blog this morning. :)

Nicole

lina said...

Congratulations on your many accomplishments!

Anonymous said...

It's sad how the "inspirational cripple" tendencies live on in us even after we realize how deeply wrong and harmful they are. I have to fight mine sometimes, since having had them powerfully reinforced the first 24 years of my life left quite a mark.

But refraining from giving in is the only way to keep from reinforcing the idea that appearing or being non-disabled is superior to accommodating differences. It's the only way to combat the idea that hiding disability is a matter of being proud/brave/strong while admitting we're different is lazy/fearful/weak. It's a sad stereotype, because admitting perceived "weakness" and standing up for the right to have our differences accommodated tends to require a lot more courage, self-respect, and inner strength.

Anonymous said...

Way to go! I think that there is a spark in all of us that gives us the courage and will to come through "in the clutch". It's interesting that climbing the stairs was easier for you the second time. We see that all the time with people we work with. With accomlishment comes confidence and pride.

Good on ya!

By the way - I am really looking forward to your workshop in St. Louis next week. Thanks for coming to my part of the world!

Anonymous said...

I'm glad for you that you were able to manage the stairs when you needed to -- it's always nice to know that certain potentially helpful skills are still there if and when you really need them to be.

But I also agree with moggy the autie above. The "inspirational cripple" image, in which the "poor cripple" "overcomes" his/her disability to behave LIKE a non-disabled person is a very damaging image -- it reinforces the idea that disabilities are INHERENTLY bad, or INHERENTLY imply weakness of character or laziness ("If you just tried harder, or weren't such a coward, or had more 'moxie,' then you, too, would be climbing stairs just like Dave Hingsburger who has the exact same disability you do")

Thank you, moggy, for raising this important point here.