I got invited to a Lake House which to normal people sounds idyllic. The name “The Lake House” reminds me of horror movies – a charming house, a big body of water, an isolated spot — all perfect for a horror movie. I thought I’d take a stab (ha, a pun) at writing some light horror titles for the blog.
First a few in honor of the Americans with Disability Act turning 34 tomorrow, and July is Disability Pride month, we’ll start with a few horrors for people with disabilities.
A wheelchair ramp in Eastern Europe that is at too steep an incline. Photo credit United Nations
15° Slope – The horror of trying to navigate a ramp that is too steep and with bumps
The Cord – As electric vehicles become more common, all of those charging cords are draped over sidewalks. So annoying. They are tripping hazards, bad for wheelchair users to have to bump over, and if you want to strangle someone it makes it much easier – please don’t.
Anxiety, The Election 2024 – The title is self explanatory. Hopefully we turn it into not a real life horror movie.
Kareem and the Karens – Kareem must escape a room full of white women, all named Karen. The Karens are ‘good people’ who aren’t racist — they could never be. They compete to adopt Kareem as their office project. They start out nice giving him banana bread, then move on to knitting him hats, and finally insisting on giving him a nickname of Ken. He attempts to plot his escape, will it work or is he in so deep he can never escape?
Dorm Fever – Five college freshmen, all from different racial backgrounds, like a 2024 Target ad, move into a dorm. They are part of an unwitting experiment to see who will survive the longest as a laboratory virus takes hold and preys on those with the highest stress levels.
The Maze – A Latina lawyer attempts to rise in the world of corporate law. She thinks she’s being mentored by a lawyer who acts as a fixer to the city’s most powerful people. Can she survive the bland ‘power lunches,’ fundraisers where everyone gets sloshed, and will people step aside so she can lead?
Condensation in Drips – A group of POC volunteers get called before an all-white organization and told how wonderful they are for doing “God’s work.” The nightmare continues when they are continually questioned but praised at the same time.
Children of the Soybean – As Asian family moves into a rural town that grows soybeans. The towns people believe they will save the dying soybean crops but only if the family sacrifice their youngest.
White female, two white males wearing ties. Computer generated image made to look like plastic Ken type dolls.
The Hiring – A Black person being interviewed for a job by an all-white hiring panel. Wait this isn’t a horror movie, this happens in real life ALL THE TIME.
An Asian in a City without Rice – This would be a nightmare. I cannot.
Have a chuckle with me and let’s make sure these stay as fictional movie titles.
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Thank you for subscribing. Please check fakequity.com for the most up-to-date version of the post. I often make grammatical and stylistic corrections after the first publishing which shows up in your inbox. To subscribe — on the right sidebar (desktop version) is a subscribe box. To see what I’m reading and recommended books check out the Fakequity Bookshop. I am an affiliate of Bookshop.org where your purchases support local bookstores. I earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. The commission goes into purchasing books by POC authors or about disabilities to donate to high-poverty public schools.
Image: cat with big green eyes staring straight, using a walker, front paws on the walker arms.
Economist cover showing a walker with the presidential seal. Words No Way to Run a Country
Guest blogger Carrie returns this week with a timely blog post about the upcoming presidential election, abelism, and disability justice.
The July 4th cover of The Economist was a picture of a walker with the Presidential seal, accompanied by “No Way to Run a Country.” The article about why Biden must withdraw included a subheading: “The president and his party portray themselves as the saviours of democracy. Their actions say otherwise.”
Regardless if you feel as if the presidency is an underwhelming lifetime achievement award or pivotal to seeing the next generation exist, you have to take note that this move by The Economist is well-played and ableist. A walker symbolizes not only aging and decline, which will happen to all of us, but also feeblemindedness, vulnerability, incompetence, and dependence. On the cover, the walker is empty– there’s no picture of Biden, nothing happening, just a mobility device taking up space, while no work is performed.
As a disabled person, I cringed at the cover, but I was not surprised. The quickest way to undermine someone is to question their competence and professionalism. The Economist’s line about saviourism is apt, too. It reads to me as: Disabled people are so frail, such a suck on society, that they cannot even save themselves. They expect nondisabled people to take care of them and give them leadership positions? Who are they fooling?
Most disability organizations are not even led by disabled people because a charitable view of disability pervades society. Disabled people can be inspiring, can remind us of how grateful we are to not be like them, can be funny and self-effacing, and overachievers, but they cannot be full or flawed humans. They must understand their place, show gratitude, and understand their access to power can be easily taken away. Every leadership position I’ve occupied has felt like this dance between advancing disabled folks as leaders and not offending nondisabled folks who were kind enough to hire me or allow me to remain in place. I realize that perspective reflects an unhealthy dose of internalized ableism, but to go through the world as a leader with disabilities, especially one with mobility equipment, is to feel precarious. It isn’t the equipment that makes me precarious– it’s the nondisabled people.
Don’t get me wrong: I believe much of how nondisabled folks react to disabled people is not intentional, and sometimes, not even within their awareness. The reality is that becoming disabled is one of people’s greatest fears, along with aging and death. If people are grappling internally with their terror about becoming like me or having to stand behind a walker, then they can’t see me or others in my community as full people.
Others in disability communities have altered The Economist image with a reminder that President Franklin D. Roosevelt had disabilities. My first reaction to this reclaiming of disability was President Roosevelt seemed to feel tremendous pressure to conceal his disabilities and mobility equipment. Early narratives that touched on his disability were focused on him “overcoming paralysis and polio”, which only further makes disability something to avoid, get rid of, or make palatable to others. The reality was FDR realized that too much sharing of his disability made him unelectable. I understand the community’s need to claim FDR as one of our own, but I also imagine he would not be leading the celebrations of July as Disability Pride Month. Similarly, I have no idea what President Biden’s sense of disability identity is, apart from his acknowledgment of his experiences with stuttering.
I’m not sad or enraged for Biden, but I am for anyone who sees that cover and thinks, “Well, that’s confirmation of something that I’ve always felt– no one sees me as fit to lead.” How long will it be before we have mainstream magazine covers where our most powerful leaders across sectors and at all levels of elected office are sporting their mobility equipment as a sign of strength, pride, and function?
Carrie Basas (she/they) is aconsultant with CoDesignWorks: carrie@codesignworks.com. While not working she can be found singing and talking loudly in her garden and doting on her two cats. Carrie has a MEd in Education Policy, Organizations and Leadership from the University of Washington. She earned a Juris Doctorate from Harvard Law School and an Honors B.A. in Psychology with a minor in Sociology/Anthropology from Swarthmore College.
Thank you to our Patreon subscribers. At this time I don’t offer ‘extras’ or bonuses for Patreons. I blog after working a full-time job, volunteer and family commitments thus it is hard to find time to create more content. Whatever level you are comfortable giving pays for back-end costs, research costs, supporting other POC efforts, etc. If your financial situation changes please make this one of the first things you turn-off — you can still access the same content and when/if you can re-subscribe I’ll appreciate it.
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Thank you for subscribing. Please check fakequity.com for the most up-to-date version of the post. I often make grammatical and stylistic corrections after the first publishing which shows up in your inbox. To subscribe — on the right sidebar (desktop version) is a subscribe box. To see what I’m reading and recommended books check out the Fakequity Bookshop. I am an affiliate of Bookshop.org where your purchases support local bookstores. I earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. The commission goes into purchasing books by POC authors or about disabilities to donate to high-poverty public schools.
I skipped writing this post last year, but this year it seems like a good time to revive the theme. 2024 marked the five-year anniversary of the Carrie and Erin Birthday Book Drive. Carrie is a frequent guest author on the blog.
In 2019, on a whim I decided instead of celebrating my birthday with stuff for me I wanted to donate 40 books to schools in my neighborhood. I vaguely mentioned it on Facebook, Carrie saw the post and text to say she wished she could do the same. Since we both have February birthdays I invited/told her to join me. It worked out great since she brings a disability justice focus which compliments my focus on POC authors — both of which are under-represented in publishing and books.
Piles of books on a table — delivery of books to a middle school
How it works
The short version of how this project works, is for our birthdays instead of accepting gifts or other stuff for ourselves we put together a wishlist of books that match our criteria. Any book we accept has to be by an author of color, or about disabilities. We have rules – the books about disabilities can’t be overly sad, no disability porn, and nothing about people with disability dying. For the books by authors of color, they must be K-12 appropriate. We also request new books or very gently used books.
Our friends and family are generous and have fun choosing books that resonate with them to donate. The books get shipped to me and part of my house becomes a temporary book warehouse. I keep a spreadsheet of what is donated and who sent it. We share the progress on social media and this becomes a fun community project.
In the spring the books are delivered to schools. We have a few schools we consistently donate to their school libraries. It’s been fun to develop relationships with the librarians and teachers at these schools. They know we are bringing high quality books that often help to diversify their school libraries. I often add new releases to our wishlists which can help schools get these books more quickly into the hands of students. I like reading the new releases and know students feel the same.
New this Year
One of the reasons I wanted to re-share this annual project this year is several friends have done similar projects for their birthdays. Nisha, a teacher friend, said she now wants to be like Dolly Parton, and create her own Dolly Parton Imagination Library. For her birthday she held a birthday book drive too and had her family and friends gift her books. She wrapped the books so her first graders could each open a new book for their classroom library refresh. Another friend did the same and invited her friends to bring books to a silent reading party during her birthday and donated them to school libraries.
It’s been so much fun to watch this project grow. Knowing we’re helping to diversify the books students have access to. With people trying to ban books – books mostly about people of color, LGBTQ, and other experiences that make them feel something – it is important to ensure we’re providing access to high quality books where we can.
Science sign, book Nervous to the right on a library shelf
This year we focused on including books by Washington authors of color. This was really fun since it made the connections even more local. A friend who wrote the book Nervous was so thrilled to know her book was heading into the hands of high school students. I was at one of the schools that received her book and saw it prominently displayed in the school library – I’m sure it will be read many times.
You!
I hope this inspires you to do something for your local community. I realize how privileged I am to have so many good friends who embrace this book drive every year. Maybe the something for you is different, such as sharing your favorite POC authored book title with someone else so they learn about it. Or during your birthday you invite someone to trade a book with you so you both learn something new. For me the book drive is about connections and wanting to share something I love with students. I hope you find something that matters to you and share it with others.
Book List
Here are some of the books that were donated. Sharing this list is always a fun part of this blog post since it is such a rich list of titles, authors, and hopefully you find a new book to read.
The coding is mine, apologies for any errors — I tried my best.
Title
Author
School
Race
Disability
Hi’iaka and Panaewa Hawaiian Graphic Legend
Ahuli’i, Gabrielle
Elementary
Native Hawaiian
Head Above Water
Alshammari, Shahd
High School
MENA
1
One Person No Vote
Anderson, Craol
High School
Black
Keep Dancing Through
Boss, Allison Holker and Stephen “tWitch” Boss
Elementary
Black
Fire Keeper’s Daughter
Boulley, Angeline
High School
Native American
Rez Dogs
Bruchac, Joseph
Elementary
Native American
Fall Down Seven Times, Stand Up Eight Times
Bryant, Jen
Elementary
Asian
Empathy is your Super Power
Bussolari, Cori
Elementary
First Gen
Campoverdi, Alejandra
High School
Latino
Ordinary Ohana
Cataluna, Lee
Elementary
Native Hawaiian
1
Chinese Soul Food — Vegetarian
Chou, Hsiao-Ching
High School
Asian
Crying in H Mart
Zauner, Michelle
High School
Asian
Parker’s Big Feelings
Curry, Parker and Jessica Curry
Elementary
Black
Freedom is a Constant Struggle
Davis, Angela Y.
High School
Black
Maria Tallchief, She Persisted
Day, Christine
Elementary
Native American
We Still Belong
Day, Christine
Elementary
Native American
Across a Field of Starlight
Delliquanti, Blue
Invisible
Diaz, Christina
Elementary
Latino
1
Season of the Bruja
Durán, Aaron and Sara Soler
Middle School
Being Ace
Dyer, Madeline
High School
1
Bitter
Emezi, Akwaeke
Middle School
Black
Huda F Are You?
Fahmy, Huda
Middle School
Miss Quinces
Fajardo, Kat
Elementary
Latino
1
Swimming Toward a Dream
Faruqi, Reem
Elementary
MENA
I Will Dance
Flood, Nancy Bo
Elementary
1
Of Blood and Sweat Black Lives and the Making of White Power and Wealth
Ford, Clyde W.
High School
Black
Essential Labor Mothering as Social Change
Garbes, Angela
High School
Asian
Friday I’m in Love
Garrett, Camryn
Middle School
Black
I was Their American Dream
Gharib, Malaka
Middle School
MENA
Ghost Roast
Gibbs, Shawnelle and Shawneé Gibbs, Emily Cannon
Elementary
Black
Samira Surfs
Guiroz, Rukhsanna
Middle School
Asian
I Never Thought of it That Way
Guzmán, Mónica
High School
Latino
Hijab Butch Blues
H, Lamya
High School
MENA
A Day With No Words
Hammond, Tiffany
Elementary
Black
1
We Deserve Monuments
Hammonds, Jas
High School
Black
Sal & Gabi Break the Universe
Hernandez, Carlos
Middle School
Latino
1
Sal & Gabi Fix the Universe
Hernandez, Carlos
Middle School
Latino
1
La Última Cuentista — Spanish
Higera, Donna Barba
Middle School
Latino
The Last Cuentista
Higuera, Donna Barba
High School
Latino
Alebriejes
Higuera, Donna Barba
Elementary
Latino
Push Girl
Hill, Chelsie and Jessica Love
Middle School
1
Say My Name
Ho, Joanna
Elementary
Asian
all about love
hooks, bell
High School
Black
Displacement
Hughes, Kiku
Elementary
Asian
Mango Delight
Hyman, Fra,caswell
Elementary
Quietly Hostile
Irby, Samantha
High School
Black
Good Talk
Jacob, Mira
High School
MENA
The Laughter
Jha, Sonora
High School
Asian
How to Raise a Feminist Son
Jha, Sonora
High School
Asian
All Boys Aren’t Blue
Johnson, George M.
High School
Black
1
Strange Weather in Tokyo
Kawakami, Hiromi
High School
Asian
Jennifer Chan is not Alone
Keller, Tae
Middle School
Asian
Tryout
Keller, Tae
Elementary
Asian
Jennifer Chan is not Alone
Keller, Tae
Elementary
Asian
Stamped YA
Kendi, I and J Reynolds
High School
Black
Our Brave Foremothers
Kennedy, Rozella
Elementary
Black
Rescue & Jessica
Kensky, Jessica and Patrick Downes
Elementary
1
Brown Album Essays on exile and Identity
Khakpour, Porochista
High School
MENA
1
I am the Night Sky
Khan, Hena
Middle School
MENA
Golden Domes and Silver Lanterns
Khan, Hena
Elementary
MENA
Amulet 9
Kibushi, K
Elementary
Asian
Tomorow is New Year’s Day
Kim, Aram
Elementary
Asian
Last Fallen Star
Kim, Graci
Elementary
Asian
Borders
King, Thomas
Elementary
Native American
In the Lives of Puppets
Klune, TJ
High School
Pieometry
Ko, Lauren
High School
Asian
Measuring Up
LaMotte, Lily
Elementary
Asian
Mindy Kim and the lunar new Year Parade (2)
Lee, Lyla
Elementary
Asian
Autum Pelteir, Water Warrior
Lindstrom, Carole
Elementary
Native American
Allergic
Lloyd, Megan Wagner
Elementary
1
When the Stars Came Home
Luby, Brittany
Elementary
Native American
The Unbeatable Lily Hong
Ma, Diana
Elementary
Asian
Revolution of our Time – The Black Panther Party’s Promise to the People
Magoon, Kekla
Middle School
Black
I am a nurse: Color Me Exceptional!
Maheady, Donna
Elementary
5
Mexikid
Martín, Pedro
Elementary
Latino
The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store
McBride, James
High School
Black
The Sum of Us
McGhee, Heather
High School
Black
Furia
Méndez, Yamile Saied
High School
Latino
Latinas Celebrating 40 Big Dreams
Menedez, Juliet
Elementary
Latino
The Kindest Red
Muhammad, Ibtihaj
Elementary
MENA
The Last Sakura Tales of the Yuta
Nakanishi, Ashley
Middle School
Asian
Saving Sorya Change and the Sun Bear
Nguyen, Trang
Elementary
Asian
The Magic Fish
Nguyen, Trung Le
High School
Asian
The Light We Carry
Obama, Michelle
High School
Black
Mediocre
Oluo, Ijemoa
High School
Black
Be a Revolution
Oluo, Ijemona
High School
Black
Heartstopper series
Oseman, Alice
High School
1
ADHD for Smart Ass Women
Otsuka, Tracy
High School
Asian
1
My Grandffather’s Song
Quang, Phung Nguyên and Huynh Kim Liên
Elementary
Asian
Dancing Hands, a Story of Friendship in Filipino Sign Language
Que, Joanna & Charina Marquez
Elementary
Asian
1
The Only Way to Make Bread
Quintero, Cristina
Elementary
Latino
There Was a Party for Langston
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
Ain’t Burned All the Bright
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
There Was a Party for Langston
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
Ain’t Burned All the Bright
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
Stuntboy In the Meantime (2)
Reynolds, Jason
Elementary
Black
The Last slice a Three Kings Day Treat
Richardson, Melissa Seron
Elementary
Latino
Barely Floating
Rivera, Lilliam
Elementary
Latino
Unearthed, a Jessica Cruz Story
Rivera, Lilliam and Steph C.
Middle School
The Song that Called Me Home
Robertson, David A.
Elementary
Native American
When We Were Alone
Robertson, David A. and Julie Flett
Elementary
Native/Indigenous
Para Chicas Fuertes De Corazón Tierno Y Piel Canela
Rodríguez, Prisca Dorcas Monica
High School
Latino
1
Our Work is Everywhere
Rose, Syan
High School
1
A Quick & Easy Guide to Consent
Rotman, Isabella
Middle School
Grounded
Saeed, Aisha et al
Elementary
MENA
Jovita Llevaba Panalones
Salazar, Aida
Elementary
Latino
Victory. Stand!
Smith, Tommie
Elementary
Black
Nervous
Soriano, Jen
High School
Asian
1
Wilma Mankiller, She Persisted
Sorrell, Traci
Elementary
Native American
1
Give Me a Sign
Sortino, Anna
High School
1
The Autism Friendly Guide to Periods
Steward, Robyn
Elementary
1
The Chance to Fly
Stroker, Ali and Stacy Davidowitz
Elementary
1
Cut Loose!
Stroker, Ali and Stacy Davidowitz
Elementary
1
All my Rage
Tahir, Sabaa
High School
MENA
I am Not Starfire
Tamaki, Mariko
Elementary
Asian
I’m Going to Be a Princess
Taylor, Stephanie
Elementary
Black
Kings of B’More
Thomas, R. Eric
High School
Black
Game of Freedom
Tonatiuh, Duncan
Elementary
Latino
Dear Daughter
Tran, Christina
High School
Asian
Inclusion on Purpose
Tulshyan, Ruchika
High School
Asian
1
Everything is Ok
Tung, Debbie
Middle School
Asian
1
Unordinary
uru-chan
Middle School
Asian
Prince and the Dressmaker
Wang, Jen
Elementary
Asian
1
Not He or She, I’m Me
Wild
Elementary
Kapaemahu
Wong-Kalu, Hinaleimoana, Dean Hamer, and Joe Wilson
Elementary
Native Hawaiian
The Words We Share
Wong, Jack
Elementary
Asian
Mooncakes
Xu, Wendy
Elementary
Asian
1
A Nest in Springtime – Bilingual Book of Numbers
Yang, Belle
Elementary
Asian
Lunar New Year Love Story
Yang, Gene Luen
Middle School
Asian
American Born Chinese
Yang, Gene Luen
Elementary
Asian
Superman Smashes the Klan
Yang, Gene Luen
Elementary
Asian
Lunar New Year Love Story
Yang, Gene Luen and Leuyen Pham
High School
Asian
Jar of Fat
Yim, Seayoung
High School
Asian
The Sun is Also a Star
Yoon, Nicola
High School
Mixed
Rainbow Shopping
Zhuang, Qing
Elementary
Asian
Being Seen
High School
1
This Place 150 Years Retold
High School
Native/Indigenous
Breathe and Count Back from Ten
High School
1
Mighty Mara
Elementary
Asian
1
A Spot of Worry
Elementary
1
Link to the list on Google Spreadsheets in case the list doesn’t show up or isn’t screen reader friendly.
Thank you to our Patreon subscribers. At this time I don’t offer ‘extras’ or bonuses for Patreons. I blog after working a full-time job, volunteer and family commitments thus it is hard to find time to create more content. Whatever level you are comfortable giving pays for back-end costs, research costs, supporting other POC efforts, etc. If your financial situation changes please make this one of the first things you turn-off — you can still access the same content and when/if you can re-subscribe I’ll appreciate it.
Adrienne, Aimie, Alayna, Alessandra, Alexa, Aline, Alison FP, Alison P, Allison, Amanda, Amber, Amira, Amy, Amy K, Amy P, Amy R, Andie, Andrea J, Andrea JB, Andy, Angelica, Ashlie, Ashlie B., Barb, Barbara, Barrett, Beth, Betsy, Big Duck, Brad, Brenda, Bridget, Brooke B, Brooke DW, Cadence, Caitlin, Calandra, Callista, Cari, Carmen, Carolyn, Carrie B, Carrie C, Carrie S, Catherine, Cathy & David, Chelsea, Christina C, Clara, Clark, Clark G., Courtney, Dan, dana, Danielle, Danya, Debbie, Debbie S., Dede, DeEtta, Denyse, Dennis, Dennis F, Diane, Don, Ed, Edith, Eileen, Elizabeth, Emily, Erica J, Erin, Frances, Gene, Genita, Hannah, Hayden, Heidi and Laura, Heidi, Hilary, J Elizabeth, Jaime, Jake, James, Jane, Janet, Jelena, Jen C, Jen E, Jen H, Jena, Jenn, Jennet, Jennifer, Jess, Jessica F, Jessica G, Jillian, John, Jon, Julia, Juliet, June, Karen, Kate, Kathryn, Katie O, Kawai, Kelly, Kiki, Kimberly, Kyla, LA Progressive, Laura, Lauren, Leslie, Linda M, Lisa C, Lisa P-W, Lisa S, Liz, Lola, Lori, Lyn, Maegan, Maggie, Maile, Maki, Marc, Mareeha, Marilee, Matthew, Maura, Melissa, Melody, Michael, Mickey, Migee, Mike, Mindy, Misha, Molly, Nat, Nicole, paola, Peggy, PMM, Porsche, Rachel, Raquel, Rebecca, Robin, Ryan, Sally, Sally P., Sandra, Sarah B, Sarah D, Sarah H, Sarah KB, Sarah R, Sarah S, Sarita, Selma, Sharon B, Sharon Y, Shaun, Shawna, Siobhan, Steph, Stephanie, Stephanie J-T, Steve, Su, Sue, Sue C D, T Wang, Tamara, Tania DSA, Tania TD, Tara, tash, Teddi, Tim, Tracy TG, Venu, virginia, Vivian, Wan-Lin, Ward, Wendy, and Zan
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First to my Seattle friends and neighbors, please be extra kind to the educators and kids. The news that another student has died because of gun violence at school is hitting hard, especially during a time of the school year that is often marked with celebrations and graduation. If you can take care of another person, please extend that to the POCs, students of color, and allies. I re-read the blog post I wrote in 2022 after another school shooting in Seattle. We need to do better.
I welcome back my favorite guest blogger Carrie to tell us why many mainstream fundraisers are not disabled friendly or inclusive.
Plate of food — green beans on the left, chicken on the right, on a white plate, fok and knife beside the plate on a cloth napkin. Photo by Jer Chung on Pexels.com
Recently, I was invited by friends to several, let’s say, mainstream, fundraising events– one for a large nonprofit and another for a campaign. (Before you decide this is my thing and you want to invite me to yours, please read on and know that I feel fully satisfied with mainstream events for 2024.) Then I had the honor of being the crone auntie for graduating Harvard students with disabilities by telling them about all the unpaid labor they could expect to do. Apparently, I left out one of those tasks– cripping fundraisers.
Now, when my friend invited me to be part of her diversity efforts for the large nonprofit, I felt like:
These folks don’t need my money.
I love her, so I will do it, and she will endure whatever postmortem comes her way— especially if my very arrival at the event involved an elevator that has been broken for weeks and a path of travel missing curb cuts.
Attending the event reminded me that fundraising professionals of all kinds are fully missing out on exploiting me for my crip-dough (i.e., disabled lady dollars). While disabled folks are at least 20% of the population, they are absent from most of these rooms. At the large nonprofit, I found some of my people when I took over a tiny table in the corner when others were expected to meander and learn before the plated chicken unveiling. I should have charged for those seats and donated the money to a smaller institution. My people and their family members will find the quiet nooks.
Similarly, at the campaign event, I was heartened to find friends trying to eat snacks in a corner or hoping to have conversations where they weren’t just nodding along and not hearing anything. I was also grateful to my host for providing the parking options, finding me when I arrived, and saving me a spot to rest.
For the nonprofit event that hosted 400 or more people, access features were decidedly absent. The room arrangement was poor, so there was no clear line of sight to the speakers. A few monitors were placed in awkward positions around the room, but they weren’t working consistently and there was no captioning. (For a donor base of older folks, who might not identify politically as having disabilities, but need to hear or read your heartwarming appeals for $500,000, this is a misstep.) There was no ASL interpreter. I was the only person with a visible disability– which is a surveying past-time I enjoy when I can’t always hear or see the speaker and have no idea where to direct my body. My other pro bono service was processing with several other attendees– some strangers– how they didn’t realize that one of the gender-inclusive bathrooms was a wall of urinals. Let’s be trauma-informed with our signage. I redirected them to search for the other door that had disability and stall signs, though not all stalls were accessible.
For a lot of focus on bringing services to communities, there was no mention (or I couldn’t hear it) of disability and youth. If you want me to give and bring along my people, I have to exist in your appeal. At the campaign fundraiser a few days later, I was sucked in by calls for representation, but I was still wondering what that meant about commitment to issues in my community. I tried not to deduct frustration points for having to remove sandwich boards near the only elevator to get to my seat. Something about that event made me feel like I should run for office, which I realized was a sign of too much Kool-Aid for me, so I sought fresh air after those feelings. However, seeking that fresh air meant I had the choice of either charging the stage to reach the elevator when 500 people were walking towards me to take the stairs.
Here are some next steps for fundraising professionals, executive directors, campaign managers, and Board members:
If you’re a large organization, build in basic accessibility and relevant information about access needs to your event. Don’t wait for someone to ask for inclusive planning – see my previous post about having to be a disability doula, don’t put that burden on disabled people, orgs this is your burden. Communicate what you’re already providing and know that I will spam my people to highlight what you’re signaling to us. Build it and they will come– unless you’re committed to keeping your broken elevator and also asking us for money.
If you are in a leadership role where you feel as if you are pushing a group for diversity and inclusion, yet you do not identify as having a disability, use your position to advocate that the organization do better and learn together.
Provide as many details about the event so that people can identify their access needs. What is the schedule? What spaces and transitions are part of the event? What’s the format? Where are the closest entrances? Public transit options? Access request contact and turnaround?
Include us in your work genuinely throughout the year so that we are appearing in your heartfelt pleas, promotional images, and leadership.
Pay disabled consultants to assist you with event planning and debriefs.
Know that accessibility and belonging efforts are always evolving and that you shouldn’t treat missteps as an excuse for avoiding access entirely. The problem isn’t disabled people, buildings, or stages with stairs– it’s that we aren’t having open and proactive conversations that lead to welcoming, affirming experiences for people we note casually in our standard DEI language. You will mess up, but the biggest mistake is the failure to try and then the avoidance of any feedback.
Attend events run by disability-led organizations to understand what those spaces look and feel like. While you’re there, donate some money. Most of our organizations can’t get $500,000 over a lunch; they are excited to raise $20,000 at an event and yet they commit to accessibility as a baseline.
Forge authentic relationships with disability organizations that evolve into shared resource-generation spaces and strategies.
I’m waiting to be wooed. Meanwhile, I’ll try to get better at capitalism so I have more to donate to you once you find your way into my heart.
Carrie Basas (she/they) realized after several chicken lunches and dinners of cheese and cookies that her heart is in assisting organizations with building their capacity for disability as belonging. She is now consulting through CoDesignWorks. carrie@codesignworks.com
Thank you to our Patreon subscribers. At this time I don’t offer ‘extras’ or bonuses for Patreons. I blog after working a full-time job, volunteer and family commitments thus it is hard to find time to create more content. Whatever level you are comfortable giving pays for back-end costs, research costs, supporting other POC efforts, etc. If your financial situation changes please make this one of the first things you turn-off — you can still access the same content and when/if you can re-subscribe I’ll appreciate it.
Adrienne, Aimie, Alayna, Alessandra, Alexa, Aline, Alison FP, Alison P, Allison, Amanda, Amber, Amira, Amy, Amy K, Amy P, Amy R, Andie, Andrea J, Andrea JB, Andy, Angelica, Ashlie, Ashlie B., Barb, Barbara, Barrett, Beth, Betsy, Big Duck, Brad, Brenda, Bridget, Brooke B, Brooke DW, Cadence, Caitlin, Calandra, Callista, Cari, Carmen, Carolyn, Carrie B, Carrie C, Carrie S, Catherine, Cathy & David, Chelsea, Christina C, Clara, Clark, Clark G., Courtney, Dan, dana, Danielle, Danya, Debbie, Debbie S., Dede, DeEtta, Denyse, Dennis, Dennis F, Diane, Don, Ed, Edith, Eileen, Elizabeth, Emily, Erica J, Erin, Frances, Gene, Genita, Hannah, Hayden, Heidi and Laura, Heidi, Hilary, J Elizabeth, Jaime, Jake, James, Jane, Janet, Jelena, Jen C, Jen E, Jen H, Jena, Jenn, Jennet, Jennifer, Jess, Jessica F, Jessica G, Jillian, John, Jon, Julia, Juliet, June, Karen, Kate, Kathryn, Katie O, Kawai, Kelly, Kiki, Kimberly, Kyla, LA Progressive, Laura, Lauren, Leslie, Linda M, Lisa C, Lisa P-W, Lisa S, Liz, Lola, Lori, Lyn, Maegan, Maggie, Maile, Maki, Marc, Mareeha, Marilee, Matthew, Maura, Melissa, Melody, Michael, Mickey, Migee, Mike, Mindy, Misha, Molly, Nat, Nicole, paola, Peggy, PMM, Porsche, Rachel, Raquel, Rebecca, Robin, Ryan, Sally, Sally P., Sandra, Sarah B, Sarah D, Sarah H, Sarah KB, Sarah R, Sarah S, Sarita, Selma, Sharon B, Sharon Y, Shaun, Shawna, Siobhan, Steph, Stephanie, Stephanie J-T, Steve, Su, Sue, Sue C D, T Wang, Tania DSA, Tania TD, Tara, tash, Teddi, Tim, Tracy TG, Venu, virginia, Vivian, Wan-Lin, Ward, Wendy, and Zan
Thank you for subscribing. Please check fakequity.com for the most up-to-date version of the post. I often make grammatical and stylistic corrections after the first publishing which shows up in your inbox. To subscribe — on the right sidebar (desktop version) is a subscribe box. To see what I’m reading and recommended books check out the Fakequity Bookshop. I am an affiliate of Bookshop.org where your purchases support local bookstores. I earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. The commission goes into purchasing books by POC authors or about disabilities to donate to high-poverty public schools.
Description: Square black and white photo of Carrie outdoors wearing a dark demin jacket with a tiger face growling patch on the right, a patch of fist in a women’s symbol on the left, stud earring in one earlobe, other ear is covered by hair. Carrie has short hair above her shoulders, she’s looking at the camera and smiling. Background is blurry outdoor scene.
Carrie Basas returns with a guest blog post. Carrie delivered a graduation address at Harvard at the Disability Affinity Ceremony. She joins a storied league of graduation speakers imparting knowledge and hope to the next generation of ambassadors, doulas, and firestarters.
For allies, read her remarks and commit to undoing abelism and not asking our friends, colleagues, and relations for unpaid labor. Congrats to the graduates.
I never thought today would happen when I graduated 22 years ago. My time at Harvard shaped me, but maybe not in an inspiring way or one of healing– more like through a deep sense of feeling out of place. The good thing that came from it, however, was appreciating solidarity across communities, finding other misfits, repeatedly asking if we tracked alumni with disabilities, and organizing the parking garage attendants to get very mad and loyal when my access went astray here. Harvard made me realize that I needed a community, especially a disability community and mentors. But to be honest, I gave up on finding it at Harvard. So, for a person who is more snark than woo woo– which will become obvious quickly in our next few minutes together– I have been telling others for weeks that this experience that you all created, even though it’s 22 years late (We Harvard folks aren’t always perfect, either), is healing and wonderful– and I get to claim no credit for it, which is also great.
Let me explain why– today, I’d like to tell you about some unpaid labor you’re about to see increase as your career and personal lives move closer to my crone and curmudgeon status. Don’t worry– it’s going to be fun, well, sometimes, and I can promise you that you’ll have lots of stories. The good part is that everyone in this room who identifies as disabled or Deaf or living with a disability identity of any kind is also now employed in this free labor. You’ll have some choices to make along the way and that’s where my sparkling and snarky personality today can help you. You also might recognize some of these tasks, well, from just living as a person so far with a disability, but they’re about to become even more important, usually when you least expect it.
First unpaid labor role: Ambassador
Though we might have a few Kennedy School students here, when I say prepare to be an ambassador, I don’t mean it in an overachieving, on the payroll, negotiate a peace accord, kind of way. I mean you will– and probably already have– been an ambassador for how others view disability.
The ambassador role isn’t for introverts, but congrats, I am one, and sorry for those who cringe in recognition. The ambassador role is both constant in its hours and surprising in its workload peaks. If you have a visible disability or you’ve shared your disability story, you become more recognizable. Upside: You can just live into having a facial recognition disability because everyone already knows your name or thinks they do.
You’ll be approached in yogurt aisles (true stories, friends), courtrooms, playgrounds, and sidewalks with someone sharing how you’ve inspired them, maybe hugging you inappropriately, or wanting to share a story about their third cousin who had a disability that was nothing like yours but how he is happy every day. This will probably happen on a day when you are not happy, just warning you.
But here’s the upside: You will also be approached for the visible choices you make in community, for things you have said and done when you thought absolutely no one was watching, and for reminding people that disabled people belong in public everywhere, doing everything. While it is absolutely exhausting to be representing wherever you go, you should also remember that part of achieving our liberation is asserting our right to just be some days, to even be mediocre, as one of my disabled friends dreams of at times.
The second unpaid emotional labor role is: Disability Doula
Now, some of these intimate yogurt aisle conversations don’t just end in mistaken identity about which disabled person you are that they met, they are sometimes people really grappling with their own place and identity. While I highly encourage you to get a counseling license and charge hourly rates especially for impromptu sessions, I see these moments where someone is struggling with naming disability for themselves as beautiful opportunities for recruitment. See, one strategy for making this world more accessible and responsive is we’ve just got to raise our numbers, particularly among people with money and access to power.
One of my dear friends calls these my “foot moments” because while it’s way too early at least for this Pacific Time speaker to give you an inspiring speech about feet, a surprising number of people have shown their feet to me and told me they have disabilities. I have a doctorate in law, which makes me very confident about googling really any issue, but not as comfortable providing direct medical care. A law school friend said it was more like I ran a confessional. I’ve always threatened to print disability membership packets, but so far, I haven’t. Still, it is one of the coolest and most sacred moments when someone shares their disability with you, even if they haven’t figured out all the politics of it.
We know how much stigma there is about disability, particularly mental health disabilities. The reality, too, is that our disabilities evolve. When I was at Harvard, I only understood that I had physical disabilities, but in my 30s, I realized that maybe one of the reasons that I skipped class so often in law school was that I had ADHD and anxiety. It took me a while to feel like being neurospicy was not yet another thing someone would hold against me.
As one of my colleagues says, we need disability doulas– not just for the newcomers or the ones we’ve been waiting to realize were always members of our community. (Side note here: I play the long game.) We need them for ourselves as we sort through any internalized ableism. Community is hard to build and doing so will be one of the roles that I won’t get as much into today, but know, too, that some of our worst and best behavior comes from how we treat each other.
The third unpaid emotional labor role is: Firestarter
According to MA fire code, given the age of this building, and some supreme court cases involving shouting words about fire, I want to make clear that I am not asking you to start a fire today. Also, as a disability-proud group, we hold space for our siblings in this movement whose disability might be pyromania– please just mind our dogs, canes, and prescriptions with your matches.
There will be so many times when the ambassador and doula roles aren’t it, when you are shaking with righteous rage about an injustice, something that has been said, or something you need to say. I struggle with this one a lot. A nondisabled friend with an autistic young adult daughter told me that she just wants her daughter to not be treated as a “commodity” or object that services and providers move around and find inconvenient. I told her that I sometimes feel like I can’t be angry or fierce because I’m vulnerable to how nondisabled people– from my doctors to potential employers– will react. In case you haven’t gotten the memo, yet, one of the many stereotypes about disabled folks is that we’re a risk or litigious, or angry, or unproductive.
Do I feel like I have to make people comfortable often? Yes. Is it exhausting? Yes? Is it always productive toward people changing their behavior? No. Could I also spend every day burning everything down that was wrong or annoying? No. I think my righteous rage would consume me and I’d lose my general orientation toward joy and humor.
When you feel a fire rising within you, take a moment and ask yourself some questions:
Is this smoky heap of ableism a good place to roast a marshmallow and make a s’more, instead? If so, grab some friends– preferably cross-movement, cross-disability– and just have a tasty snack. Talk strategy. Who else is impacted? Is this where we need to spend our time right now? Should I take this on so someone else doesn’t have to who has less privilege and energy than me right now?
Do I have positional power to make a difference here? Don’t give yourself an easy out, either. You went to Harvard. You might not be the person in charge and you might feel vulnerable, but you could have less at stake than someone else who is just trying to survive a system.
And finally: a question that my husband (not disabled, but a man of color) has always asked me: Would you be fired (insert whatever verb here makes sense for your situation?) for the right reasons? By “right”—right to me.
Find mentors and friends who will support you when your heart is telling you it’s time to forget the s’mores and light a match. Or to quote one of my former colleagues: “I’m feeling the need to negotiate like a terrorist.” So, now I ask my cat if he is feeling the need to negotiate like a terrorist. That phrase brought me joy. I’ll hold her s’more while she does that.
Finally, I have paid labor to offer you: Now that you’ve made my Harvard dreams come true of gathering students with disabilities, I need you to be in charge of many things. I don’t care if it’s practicing tax law, becoming a plastic surgeon, building a family, or becoming an art history professor. I want our people everywhere making decisions because we’re creative problem-solvers who understand that access and belonging go beyond steepness of ramps and captioning. I want us to lead within disability rights and justice, too, because the reality is that so much of this work continues to be led by nondisabled people– which I hope will become unacceptable in my lifetime. I believe that systems change when the people making the decisions change, and so I’d ask you to take your ambassador skills, doula or foot analysis techniques, and matches wherever brings you joy.
Create spaces where you feel loved and seen. Realize that not all the work is yours or ours to do, and that we, too, have a responsibility to work in solidarity with other movements and dream for collective liberation. Our main duty is to live such that we honor our bodies, minds, disability and Deaf culture, and not wait for permission. Thank you.
Thank you to our Patreon subscribers. At this time I don’t offer ‘extras’ or bonuses for Patreons. I blog after working a full-time job, volunteer and family commitments thus it is hard to find time to create more content. Whatever level you are comfortable giving pays for back-end costs, research costs, supporting other POC efforts, etc. If your financial situation changes please make this one of the first things you turn-off — you can still access the same content and when/if you can re-subscribe I’ll appreciate it.
Adrienne, Aimie, Alayna, Alessandra, Alexa, Aline, Alison FP, Alison P, Allison, Amanda, Amber, Amira, Amy, Amy K, Amy P, Amy R, Andie, Andrea J, Andrea JB, Andy, Angelica, Ashlie, Ashlie B., Barb, Barbara, Barrett, Beth, Betsy, Big Duck, Brad, Brenda, Bridget, Brooke B, Brooke DW, Cadence, Caitlin, Calandra, Callista, Cari, Carmen, Carolyn, Carrie B, Carrie C, Carrie S, Catherine, Cathy & David, Chelsea, Christina C, Clara, Clark, Clark G., Courtney, Dan, dana, Danielle, Danya, Debbie, Debbie S., Dede, DeEtta, Denyse, Dennis, Dennis F, Diane, Don, Ed, Edith, Eileen, Elizabeth, Emily, Erica J, Erin, Frances, Gene, Genita, Hannah, Hayden, Heidi and Laura, Heidi, Hilary, J Elizabeth, Jaime, Jake, James, Jane, Janet, Jelena, Jen C, Jen E, Jen H, Jena, Jenn, Jennet, Jennifer, Jess, Jessica F, Jessica G, Jillian, John, Jon, Julia, Juliet, June, Karen, Kate, Kathryn, Katie O, Kawai, Kelly, Kiki, Kimberly, Kyla, LA Progressive, Laura, Lauren, Leslie, Linda M, Lisa C, Lisa P-W, Lisa S, Liz, Lola, Lori, Lyn, Maegan, Maggie, Maile, Maki, Marc, Mareeha, Marilee, Matthew, Maura, Melissa, Melody, Michael, Mickey, Migee, Mike, Mindy, Misha, Molly, Nat, Nicole, paola, Peggy, PMM, Porsche, Rachel, Raquel, Rebecca, Robin, Ryan, Sally, Sally P., Sandra, Sarah B, Sarah D, Sarah H, Sarah KB, Sarah R, Sarah S, Sarita, Selma, Sharon B, Sharon Y, Shaun, Shawna, Siobhan, Steph, Stephanie, Stephanie J-T, Steve, Su, Sue, Sue C D, T Wang, Tania DSA, Tania TD, Tara, tash, Teddi, Tim, Tracy TG, Venu, virginia, Vivian, Wan-Lin, Ward, Wendy, and Zan
Thank you for subscribing. Please check fakequity.com for the most up-to-date version of the post. I often make grammatical and stylistic corrections after the first publishing which shows up in your inbox. To subscribe — on the right sidebar (desktop version) is a subscribe box. To see what I’m reading and recommended books check out the Fakequity Bookshop. I am an affiliate of Bookshop.org where your purchases support local bookstores. I earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. The commission goes into purchasing books by POC authors or about disabilities to donate to high-poverty public schools.