Strength Ability

An Image of clear glass light bulbs with light. The text says Strength Ability The Living With Disabilities Advocacy Website
  
First, welcome to the Living With Disabilities Advocacy Website. It's run by none other than Katrina Smith, a person with a learning disability. Her mission behind Living With Disabilities is to bring awareness to all people with disabilities.

Today, Living With Disabilities wants to talk about strength in having a disability. The question of whether persons with disabilities have strength is sometimes overlooked when discussing how to manage a disability or even a condition.

What does strength with a disability look like and how can individuals with disabilities find strength? This question will be answered in a lecture format and is quite simple.

 Society examines the strength and gives it a Merriam-Webster definition word for word. Why not put down the dictionary and watch a disability documentary to hear from someone who has a disability? You will comprehend things much better if you watch a documentary in which a person with a disability is acting out their part. You ought to see a quick documentary. "Disability on the Spectrum" is what DIYabled came up with. It can be found on YouTube.

Some people might disagree with the claim made by people with disabilities that they are acting independently. That is perfectly acceptable. Here's why, though, and it makes perfect sense. When a person with a disability wakes up every day and lives with their condition from sunrise to sunset, why should an actor study that person to be a role they are not? They are aware of their obstacles and how they plan to get through them. Are you able to see where this is going? That person determines their concept of strength in their ability using logical thinking, which is thinking outside the binder that keeps the pages of the Merriam-Webster dictionary together.

What is the ability now that strength has been discussed? If you must, what exactly is ability? It is as easy to get as slicing a piece of cake, and we all have it.

  Even if they use their abilities differently, people with disabilities also have abilities. Here's another illustration: The phrase "broken crayons still color the same" is one that we have all heard. A broken crayon doesn't need to be unable to color in a picture only because there is a distinction between a broken and an unbroken crayon. That crayon can still function in the same manner. The same applies to someone with a disability.


Let's Here your thoughts


Let's have a conversation about how you see your disability as a sign of strength. Let's connect and discuss your disability on The Living With Disabilities Online Talk Show. Schedule a meeting with the host, Katrina Smith.

https://anchor.fm/livingwithdisabilites/episodes/Strength-Ability-e1monra

 

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