Thursday, January 8, 2015

Motivation

What is the premise behind “motivational speaking”? I ask because I see a lot of disabled people online who identify themselves, in part, as a “Motivational Speaker”.

I have a basic idea of what that might mean in practice. I picture a disabled person who speaks to groups about living with a disability, in a positive way, in order to energize their audience into making their own lives better. But that would seem to presume certain things, that are often unstated.

Is it that disabled people who are happy and successful have some universal secrets of happiness and success that others crave?

Is it that tons of people of all kinds live lackluster, messed-up, sad and unproductive lives that need some sort of attitudinal improvement?

I feel like there may be some truth in both of these ideas. However, I also get the sense that it’s a mistake to accept the truth of these premises wholesale, without critical thought. I certainly don’t believe that disability automatically brings great insights into how to live. Nor do I subscribe to the rather popular notion that vast swathes of modern humanity have somehow forgotten to live.

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Work In Progress - Disability Simulations

After exchanging Facebook comments on the latest dubious example of raising “disability awareness” through disability simulations, I’ve started working on a post about alternatives to disability simulations. If we want people to stop these “wheelchair for a day” type events, which are almost always well-intended, what can we suggest instead? Any ideas?

Here are a couple of good blog posts on the subject:

Emily Ladau, Huffington Post - March 11, 2014

Jeffrey Preston - September 1, 2014

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