Jack (
jackandahat) wrote in
accessibility_fail2010-02-05 04:10 pm
Follow up to yesterday.
Went back in to Remploy, turned out my adviser had had a word with the guy about the cane-snatching after I left. I told him if it happens again, I'm walking and there will be a serious complaint put in. Cane-snatcher apologised then spent the rest of the afternoon ignoring me and refusing to look at me while in the same room. (Yes, he is in fact a grown man and not a six year old. Allegedly.)
So that was sorted... and then my adviser promptly started lecturing me again on how he was sure I could use a phone if it was "Just a bit". Thing is, I know how "Just a bit" works - you start off with a little, then they go "he's coping fine, see?" and give you more, then they ask how why you're not doing your job. He also doesn't seem to understand that I'm not used to phones and I actually don't respond to them. You know how if someone calls someone else's name, you don't look up or respond because it doesn't apply to you? That's me - I'm just not used to phones, so I tend not to register they're ringing. It's a habit rather than a disability but it's due to my disability. It's not me "being awkward"
I don't get it. I'm hard of hearing, why are they the ones not hearing what I say? Why is it so hard to understand that no, I can't hear/understand you if I'm not looking at you? I've told the adviser a few times - get my attention, then when I'm looking at you, talk. Saying "But I called your name" when I had my back to you working on a computer isn't helpful.
And yes. These are the people whose entire job is to help with disability issues.
So that was sorted... and then my adviser promptly started lecturing me again on how he was sure I could use a phone if it was "Just a bit". Thing is, I know how "Just a bit" works - you start off with a little, then they go "he's coping fine, see?" and give you more, then they ask how why you're not doing your job. He also doesn't seem to understand that I'm not used to phones and I actually don't respond to them. You know how if someone calls someone else's name, you don't look up or respond because it doesn't apply to you? That's me - I'm just not used to phones, so I tend not to register they're ringing. It's a habit rather than a disability but it's due to my disability. It's not me "being awkward"
I don't get it. I'm hard of hearing, why are they the ones not hearing what I say? Why is it so hard to understand that no, I can't hear/understand you if I'm not looking at you? I've told the adviser a few times - get my attention, then when I'm looking at you, talk. Saying "But I called your name" when I had my back to you working on a computer isn't helpful.
And yes. These are the people whose entire job is to help with disability issues.

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Clearly, I need me a hot boy/girl/one of each to do my shopping. *Nods* It's A Plan. Think I could get one down the supermarket?
(If you don't mind me asking - because I'm clueless and haven't picked up - are you male, female, other option, etc? I'm just wondering how to refer to you.)
And yeah - the "Disability happens" is OK for one chapter, after that it just gets ridiculous - because that's how life is. You can't wallow, or you don't get to have a life. So it's nice to see a queer disabled guy having himself a life - with stuff like work and sex and family being family, and troubles with all of the above, and realistic (Um. Well. If you discount the alients...)
Heh. I was going to apologise for going off-topic. Wait. I'm the OP!
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And yeah, part of teh fun of writing Cam is that you get to figure out how he deals with all this plus the disability...
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