I’m Disabled--It Doesn’t Mean I’m Dead
It falls again. It's been a while since I've written because
I'm back in school, and that comes with the Fall and along with another great
American past time, that being NFL. The National Football League is one of the
most talked-about things in American life. Sports, in general, play a significant
role in American culture. The sports phenomena units people that frequently
have very little in common. There is a spirit about competition in the sports
arena that is hard to find anywhere else. However, usually, one group of
individuals who are not associated with sports or at least disability in sports
doesn't come to mind simultaneously in most people's minds. The disabled are
not that different from anyone else, though, when it comes to their love of
sports.
Anyone who knows me will tell you
that I am an avid New York Giants fan, and I often yell at the T.V. when they
screw up (which happens to be a lot this season). I am also a die-hard New York
Yankees fan, and I love hockey in general and college basketball. I am often asked,
"How can you be that into sports if you can't play them?" And yes, I
can't play them, but I can still feel the drive and adrenaline from a game. It's
hard to explain. Disabled people don't only sit and watch. We also compete just
as hard, if not harder, than regular athletes. There are misconceptions when it
comes to disability and sports. Through an interview I recently conducted, I
hope to dispel some of these misconceptions.
As
I have said in previous blogs, I go to a University in North Western
Pennsylvania. The University prides itself on being an "inclusive"
campus for people with disabilities. As a part of that effort, they have a
wheelchair basketball team. I was recently fortunate enough to be able to
interview a senior on that team. Kate Chaser was kind enough to discuss
basketball sports for people with disabilities and disability awareness in
general. Before I get into the interview, here's a little bit of Kate's bio.
Kate is a senior Public Relations major with plans of going to Grad school. She
has not yet been accepted, but she is still hopeful. She is also a part of the
University's sizeable student-athlete population. She plays point guard on the
wheelchair basketball team.
To
give an unfamiliar reader a little insight into wheelchair basketball, I asked
Kate to explain it a little. She explained that she first started playing when
her mom was suggested for Kate to play at a function for the Philadelphia
chapter of the spina bifida association. Spina Bifida is a disability that has
made Kate a person with paraplegia. It caused her to be born with a hole in her
spinal cord. As far as basketball, Kate started playing around the age of 10.
This opened many doors for her. As Kate put it, "It gave me many
opportunities that I would not have had if it wasn't for sports." She went
on to further explain that not every state has a wheelchair basketball program.
Thus, the competitive pool is small, but although the pool is small, the
sport's competitive nature is anything but small. These athletes are some of
the most intense athletes you will ever meet. The only way that the game
differs from regular basketball is in a little technical fashion. Athletes are
allowed to dribble the ball once and then push their wheels twice before
dribbling again. Apart from that, the physicality of the game is the same as
its "able-bodied" counterpart.
Now that you understand a bit about
wheelchair basketball, I can get further into an exciting point that Kate made.
"Even though we are athletes, we don't get the same respect as other
athletes," said the senior. When I asked her what she meant by that, she
displayed tremendous insight. She pointed out that people with disabilities
have often been relegated to in a power chair needing full assistance or not
disabled. Many times people don't see the varying degrees of disability. They
lump disability altogether. This goes back to the societal habit of seeing the
disability before they see the person. To make this point clearer, it is like
comparing the Special Olympics to the athletic contests that Chasar and her
teammates engage in every season. Both involve disabilities, but they are
remarkably different.
Why is it that when it comes to
disability that the disabled are seen as quiet, timid, or sideline sitters most
of the time? People often think that just because people have a physical
obstacle that they must overcome, they do not have a competitive spirit. Kate
has a concrete example of the idea that this is an outdated thought. She gets
up nearly seven days a week at 7 a.m. and practices for three hours, then takes
on a full college schedule (much like any other athlete would do). Aside from
that, she also has to deal with obstacles in her everyday life that not every
person has to deal with. As she notes, her obstacles are less severe than
others, but it still has presented challenges in her life.
"Sports have allowed me to
develop "normally," and I don't know what I would do without sports."
You might ask what she means by this statement. Usually, people with
disabilities sit on the sidelines and don't engage the outside world. Even
though I have a disability myself, I haven't figured out why this disturbingly
more common than you think phenomena. Being involved in sports or other "normal"
social activities allows people (disabled or not) to develop a sense of
community and commodity necessary for human existence—the story of Kate and
others like her highlight an interesting point.
No matter our obstacles, whether
physical or mental, we all have a spirit that is dying to be expressed in one
form or another. Some use writing, music, violence, and video games, while
others use sports. Disabled people and the disabled community are no different.
What is different is our society's perception of us expressing our spirit
normally. We are often seen as "inspirations" or "amazing"
when we engage in everyday activities that no one expects us to get into. This
blog is not designed to get rid of all the "you are amazing" comments
but shows that people like Kate Chasar and I are not unique. Disabled people,
in general, have passion, and we are just like the rest of society. Sports are only
one way that we express our love for life. That being said, there is one other
point worth mentioning.
At the University, which I currently
attend, disability is supposedly one of their calling cards. One of their
badges of honor. Not to downplay a great University for the few things they do
well, but as a person who has attended the University for several years now, I
feel like I have the right to say if you are going to champion the disabled
population as one of your cornerstone attractions, and push disabled athletics
(as far as wheelchair basketball is concerned) you might want to give them
equal time as other programs. I am not an athlete as I am down to a power chair,
but I know this is not just a sentiment, which I hold. Others have said that
the wheelchair basketball program (of which Ms. Chasar is a part of) is treated
as a second-class athletic program. Their games are never promoted on equal
footing with other events; they have often pushed aside other schools and
organizations to use our facilities. Yet, one wonders why disabled sports, in
particular at this University, are not well known. As Ms. Chasar's interview
and the above indicate, people with disabilities have a spirit that loves competition,
loves self-expression, and loves adrenaline despite our obstacles. Now it is
time for society to appreciate who we are and what we can do.
Along with not
treating us as abnormal or "amazing" when we express the same
emotions that everyone else does and enjoy the same things daily. This is my
motto, but hopefully, it will be a motto associated with all people with
disabilities. Despite our obstacles, fear nothing and regret less.
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