Yeah, in the united states there has always been some amount of bias against disabled... My step father is a disabled veteran that was beat to death by muggers and ended up getting massive brain damage. The military wanted to treat my mother like a widow and let him die in a VA hospital. She had to fight for his right to live. I've known him my entire life, so I'll admit I judge people a certain way. If they can't 'see' his adultness and personality and only see the disability, part of me inside just goes '**** them'. My mother takes care of him every day. She has dyslexia at such a severe level that its so rare that only 10 people in the entire world had it around her level when she was a kid. I remember the stories she used to tell me of how schools assumed she was an idiot because she couldn't read, how at one point she was allowed into a special program to help her in part because of her high rated intelligence. That program helped her learn how to better function while having dyslexia, as its not something she could get rid of.
When I showed signs of having a lesser form of dyslexia, my mom ignored it. She has admitted it these days, but even when I was in high school she refused to admit it was even a possibility. Back than she was so scared for me that she thought that if she ignored it, that it didn't exist. Maybe she would have reacted better if the school system had done something to actually earn her trust. What do I mean? From Kindergarten to 6th grade I went to the same school for all but one and a half school years. They tried to teach me how to read and write in a way that is now illegal- memorization. What do I mean? They didn't teach me how to put sounds together, they just taught kids to memorize the sounds, than memorize the words. For some reason that way of teaching was just zero present effective, only learning to read in second grade when I was transferred in the middle of a school year. Whenever I asked for help in understanding school work, the teacher would say I didn't know because I hadn't been paying attention, or I wasn't trying hard enough. From Kindergarten up to my first year of high school, I was tested to see if I was insane, then tested again to see if I was below average intelligence. They would do at least a few tests every school year, never finding any issues with my intelligence or my sanity. When all this first started, I was too young to realize what was going on. By the time it was near its end, they had given me loads of feeling jaded about the world, about people in general, and an anxiety that hindered my memory. They tried to force my mom to put me on medication, but since they couldn't prove their case they never took her to court.
It was only after I entered high school that they realized the obvious, I probably inherited a form of dyslexia, I was the only one of my siblings that had shown signs of it, but... now I think its pretty obvious how they burned away any possible trust my mom may have had in them in the slightest. They had given her no reasons to trust them to treat me any better than she had been when she was a child. I wasn't banished to a corner of the room with a cone on my head like she had been... but, with all the tests and how much they wanted to drug me without any proof... than after YEARS of that, they try to take it back and pretend it never happened and it was all good? It felt like all my high school years was the school program scrambling to try to cover up all their mistakes. By the time I was old enough to realize the information should be grabbed and saved, the schools had already gotten rid of. I still wonder how many kids try their best like I did, get told they aren't trying hard enough or not paying attention, when in reality they are trying their hardest. In college I found out I needed a lot of tests for a few things, one of those things being my eyes.
I was mocked for my eyes while growing up, most assumed I was 'glaring', or it was bad attitude, a social problem, or if they found out I was part black for they would say they saw it in my eyes. I only ever had someone make that kind of connection but mean it in a positive way, but by then all the crap people had said before had ruined the compliment for me. The issue with my eyes was and is photophobia. I was born with pupils that don't react properly to light, making them sensitive to light. They basically always look dilated, causing light to be horribly painful. It had nothing to do with attitude, or how 'social' I was, but a lot of people made it out to be. I was even blamed a few times for not being able to do something because of my attitude. I thought that would end in high school, but I knew it hadn't as soon as a counselor that had me in a group rejected what I said about my eyes right in my face in front of others. According to her, I felt no horrible horrible pains, it was a lie to cover up my social issues. I knew at that moment that she could never help me with anything and all of this was just a job to help her think she was doing something so she could feel better about herself.
If I had known that the proof was LITERALLY ON MY FACE at that time, I would have pointed it out, but I didn't know that my pupils were why my eyes are sensitive. Then again I'm not a doctor, but I guess she thought she was? But the fair treatment I get at college and help I get there has shown me that my kind of story isn't unusual for people with disabilities. There's a lot of people who need help but have never been tested and either don't know where to start, or look at the bills to get tested for different things and realize that it costs a LOT and there's nothing that will cover it for you. Sometimes I wish my pupils functioned normally, or that I wouldn't think one number or word, than write out another completely different one. I feel a bit isolated from everyone around me and like there are times I do my best, but still don't end up accomplishing as much as I would like. I have more issues than those two but... this post is already long enough, I don't even remember why I replied to this thread in the first place anymore...>_< I've tried to get a job, but nobody ever takes me, so that's why I'm in college. I'm just hoping to look more desirable to hire after I get a full college education. It always feels weird when a teacher treats me like I'm intelligent, or they actually listen. I guess I'm just not used to staff at a place treating me like a person. Gods that sounds bad, I'll stop my post here.
(0) (0) |
|