ableism

on dating

09:15

After three years of avoiding anything even remotely related to love and romance, I decided to go back to dating scene.

And I did what every polish lesbian does when in need of meeting new people. I got Tinder account.

This post is not about my dating adventures though. It’s about how dating when you’re disabled looks from the inside.

And it’s not pretty.    
                         
After ditching so many possible candidates who, curiously enough, disappeared among finding out I’m on a wheelchair, I actually met couple of nice girls. In a mess of uni finals and me being constantly sick or in the ER, I managed to schedule a meeting.

And I got tachycardia syndrome linked to drop od potassium level, and landed in the ER for the whole day. Hospital Glam aside, I was pretty disappointed, especially that after that flop our conversations kinda ceased.

I kept talking to others, and liking one girl in particular (shhhh it’s not a crush!) I decided to meet. We’re meeting tomorrow. And here’s what I have to say.

Dating me, and even wanting to be my new friend, you have to realize one thing: you are also dating my disability. You’re dating my wheelchair. And my illness. It comes in the packet.

I’ll probably cancel couple of meeting due to pain being too bad, catching costochondritis for the 10th time this year, or sudden ER emergency.

If that sounds bad for you, if you’re gonna make me feel bad for that, here’s the news for you: you’re an ableist. Surprise!

But it’s not only that.

To get to the meeting, I have to beg. I, like lots of disabled folks, have abusive caretakers. My mum, who cares about me 24/7, is disabled herself, and due to that doesn’t drive. My dad, who drives, is abusive. Hence, being unable to take a bus myself, not having another caretaker, I have to beg my father for help. Cue him humiliating me, putting me down, and sometimes flat out refusing to help.

It happened today, and I still cringe from some stuff he said. And I’ll have to put up with him being the worst caretaker in the world.

You may be curious now, why do I, 21yrs old grown woman, need a caretaker. What does actually a caretaker do. I’m here to provide an answer: being on a wheelchair you need someone with you, to help you on pavements, push you up if the road is steep, handle you things that are too high (like in shops), and so on and so on. For me, with my hands being affected too, I need constant help because I can’t wheel myself for a lots of times. I also can’t just stand up when my chair won’t go through certain terrain. You got me? I need someone to help me with stuff my body will refuse to do.

But let’s say I got to the meeting. Caretaker is out, leaving me with my date. If we want to be actually alone, my date must take the role of caretaker. Even if she’s good at that, imagine how I feel, with an almost stranger taking care of me in this intimate fashion? Pretty fucking embarrassed is the word.

As a wlw (woman loving women) I also have to deal with homophobia that is sure to affect me, and pretty goddamn scary after last events.

And then starts the whole “do we match, do we have something to talk about, do we like each other” stuff.

As usually on this blog, I Am Bitter. I am already tired before I even went out. Instead of being excited about the meeting, I am embarrassed, tired, and scared.

Glamorous life on the wheelchair. Places are inaccessible, people are rude and ableist, I am in pain.

I usually have some ideas what to change so the situation would improve, but without whole societal change here, we can’t reach anything. People’s attitude needs to change, we need accessibility and more ways to get rid of abuse in families containing disabled people, because the ways we have aren’t working. Without that change, all disabled girls, and boys, and nonbinary people, will still have problems connecting, meeting new people, finding love.

I want to be that change.

But I also just want to be 21, love women, enjoy summer and be happy tomorrow.

And while losing my health, I also lost that.


And this is so fucking sad. 

abuse

on Orlando shooting.

01:33

 A/N: this post is not edited. I'm sorry for the mistakes but I am too shaken to do it now.

***
You see me here blogging about disability issues, and I susppose you have some image of me already, based on what I write. Whatever it’s good, or bad, I don’t really mind. I’m happy you’re here, I’m happy to make a difference.

And as you probably already know about me from my blogging I am Very Gay. I identify as a genderfluid woman, in a spectrum between female and agender. And I identify as a lesbian. I am an asexual lesbian, and I am proud to wear a label. I rock pinky-red flag, I love wlw aesthetics posts, I am all here for the rising movement of Sapphic girls.

And, being a queer woman, today at 4am I read about Orlando.

And I am scared.

I live in Poland, far, far away from where it happened. But situation here doesn’t make me feel any safer. It could happen here on a pride on Sunday. It could, and I am thankful to all the gods it didn’t. 
But it made me think about the past, and I want to tell you a story.

At age 16 I was in all-girls boarding school in another city, and I first time met an outed lesbian. I fell in love with the label, I finally felt I know who I am, I have a place in the world. I was deep, deep in the closet, but I was me. My friend dated girls, and I was proud of her. Proud of me.

I got a crush on a girl from my home town. We got together. Long story short, she was very abusive. 
She would hit me in places no one would see bruises and force me to have sex with her. She would tell me no one will ever love me cause I’m a lesbian, that I am dirty, that it’s unnatural and that she’s the only person who’ll ever love me. That I’ll go to hell. She would force me to walk kilometers to prove me my disability is not real. She wouldn’t let me sit down when we met. It’s possible some of my joint damage is caused by her.

And she would tell me she’ll kill herself and kill my family if I don’t sleep with her.

I didn’t know then that girl can rape another girl, that forcing someone to sex in relationship is rape too.

She would shame me for who I am, and she make me feel ashamed of myself. She made me hate myself and hate the label lesbian. Because it was wrong. And because she was a lesbian too and I didn’t want anything connected to her to stay with me.

When I broke off, with severe trauma and PTSD, all I felt was fear. I was out to my mum and sister, but to no one else. I hated being gay. I hated the community. I hated everything. I tried to force myself to like men. As you can imagine, it didn’t quite worked.

It took me over 3 years to heal. It took me over 3 years to love myself again. I don’t self-harm anymore, I’ve beaten eating disorder. I’m seeing a therapist every week. And, really, 

I’m okay. I wasn’t afraid.

Till today.

First time in three years, I felt fear that I felt with her. Fear of being a lesbian. Fear of loving women. Fear of being out.

And I DO NOT WANT TO FEEL THIS WAY.

All my love is with survivors and their families, with families and friends of those who didn’t survive. I pray for them, I send all good energy their way. The dead are safe and in better place, but we, who remain, have to deal with the loss. Families and friends with loss of loved ones. We, the queer community, with loss of being safe in our safe spaces.

I mourn for LGBTQIA+ youth, who will now be afraid to go to bars, to go to pride. Who will meet significant barriers in meeting ones alike them, to get into relationships, to find love.

I mourn for those of us who are now afraid to come out, or, like me, afraid to be out.

I mourn for those in bigoted families, who will have to listen or even agree to bullshit spawn by their relatives, just to be safe.

I am with all of you, sending energy and prayers your way.

My best friend once told me my posts here are empowering. I’m glad. But today’s post is not, I suppose. It’s my way to say how sorry I am this shit in the world ever happens. How I love all of you in our community. How we need to stand together.

But it’s also my way to say: cry. Mourn. Be sad. Don’t let them tell you to get over it. Don’t let them tell you “not to fight hate with more hate.” No. Be angry. Hate. Be furious.

Cause we have a right to cry, right to be mad, right to be furious. We will not be silenced.
To all my folks in queer community, disabled and abled alike, I stand with you, and I will not be silent.

And I will cry.


And I will scream till the world hears me.