Sunday, May 01, 2011

It is possible

Today is Blogging Against Disablism Day 2011, hosted once again at Diary Of A Goldfish - and many thanks to her for this.

Last year I was in the early stages of wedding planning, and meeting with barriers, discrimination and disablism every step of the way, so my post, It's Not Bridezilla To Want Access, detailed a few of the difficulties I was running up against.

This year... well, the wedding is this month and I can't really think about much else. So this is a short, wedding-focused post. You'll forgive me for not posting the exact date, time and location online until after the fact.

I am pleased to be able to report that we have, after a great deal of time and effort, managed to find sensible, flexible suppliers for everything we needed and wanted. The registrars have agreed that it's not necessary to ask us or our guests to stand during the ceremony. The venue rep has been awesome about communicating mainly via email as this is easiest for me. We went out of area and found a couple of accessible dress shops who eagerly helped me to try and find the perfect dress. A lovely family business who deal mainly with repairs and alterations to leather motorbike clothing have created me a beautiful pair of ivory wheelchair gloves with padded leather palms, that are both practical and feminine. A terrific Folksy seller has created our flowers, including an extremely custom corsage for me to wear on my wrist for the ceremony, that is also the perfect shape and size to adorn the controls for my wheelchair during the reception.

The triumph is bittersweet. I really do feel that I should have been able to expect businesses to be accessible. I feel that, in 2011, I should be able to make my decisions based on things like cost, quality, and attractiveness of product, rather than on which businesses were willing to have me as a customer.

All that aside though - I'm getting married. I'm disabled, I'm overweight, I have bad skin, small boobs, and terrible posture, I wear glasses, I have extremely low earning potential, and later this month I am marrying a man who was entirely uninterested in the amorous advances of at least two of the non-disabled guests attending. As a couple that faces disablism (because yes, it affects him too) every day of our lives, we have managed to put together what promises to be a wonderful, enjoyable, accessible wedding ceremony and a relaxed, personal reception party. I believe as a society we CAN get past disablism.

7 comments:

kethry said...

congratulations on your impending nupitals!!!

Wheelchair Dancer said...

CONGRATULATIONS....

remember some of the early posts on this.

may your day be filled with joy!

WCD

SJ said...

Wedding planning is hard enough without people making it harder by being inaccessable :(

I hope your wedding day is everything you've hoped for.

Selene said...

Wishing you an awesome wedding day, and I love the sound of those gloves!

Attila the Mom said...

Wishing you two the very best on your (I almost said "special" gak!)day. Congrats!

Mary said...

Thanks, everyone.

There's a pic of the gloves on my flickr page: Gloves

Melissa said...

This month? Eeep! You must be so excited! I can't imagine mine being that close yet.

I have not had much trouble with accessibility yet. The Venue itself is great. I think the set up is where we might run into a few snags.

Congratulations!