A simple plea to the alleged "normal"....

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As I believe in (among other things) total honesty, I have to say, I love recognition.

No, that's not quite accurate. "Crave it like a drug" would be closer to the truth.

Even so, I find myself at a loss when I'm recognized for all the wrong reasons.

This past Tuesday, I and the fellow residents of the apartment complex in which I live took part in an annual trip that's become sort of our farewell to summer. (As summers in Wisconsin have a kind of "blink and you'll miss it" quality, we get our goodbyes in early).

Some two dozen of us were loaded onto buses and taken to the Chain of Lakes in Waupaca some hundred miles from home, where we would take a brief boat tour of that impressive waterway. The view is extraordinary, but I must confess to being drawn less to the natural wonders than I was to the excellent food at the Harbor Bar, the little bar and grill where our tour began. (Hey, if I have to travel a hundred miles in pursuit of the perfect chicken tender, I'll do it.)

Because my monster wheelchair does not fit easily into the boat's cabin, I opted this year to stay out on deck. The view was so much better than what I would have seen peering out a window indoors that it was worth the slight sunburn.

Getting off the boat for me can be a bit tricky. It required the assistance of two or three strong men (cute ones optional but preferred) and the loan of a walker from another woman on the tour (there's an advantage to living in a complex composed largely of the elderly). I managed the short distance from the deck to the pier while the wheelchair was hauled up behind me.

As I climb back on the dock, I look over to see a woman tourist staring at me. For a moment, I thought I might have been "read"--that old paranoia never goes away. She, however, looked as if she were about to burst into tears at any moment.

"You're amazing!" she gushes.

I breathed out slowly, willing my eyes not to roll. Dear God, not one of them.

I never know how to respond in situations like this, but I did manage a murmured "Thank you--I do what I can..." and got out of there as soon as my bottom hit the wheelchair seat.

When you're disabled, such people come with the territory. Over the years I've learned to hide my irritation, but one thought still gnaws at me:

Why do able-bodied people applaud me simply for doing what I do every day of my life? Or worse, stare at me with a mixture of awe and pity?

They think they're paying me a compliment, but what they're really doing, however unintentionally, is turning my day-to-day existence into "inspiration porn". And spectacularly failing to grasp how condescending that really is.

Therefore, so I'm never subjected to that situation again, I have just one thing to say to the "normies" out there.

Knock it off already.

I'm a lot more like you than you think. Like you, I play the hand life dealt me. That doesn't make me inspiring or courageous or any other saccharine word you wish to use. It just makes me someone who prefers living to the alternative.

Granted, if I were to become a famous writer tomorrow, it wouldn't bother me if I'm held up to other disabled folks--and people in general--as an example to follow.

The difference, however, would be that I'd be acknowledged for accomplishing something meaningful, as opposed to making my morning toast without getting margarine in my hair.

Got it?

I doubt the woman I encountered that day will read this. But the next time someone starts to sob when they see me, I'll have a copy of this post ready and waiting for them.

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