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Segments: Breakfasters: Carly Findlay On Growing Up Disabled In Australia — Triple R 102 7FM, Melbourne Independent Radio

Segments: Breakfasters: Carly Findlay On Growing Up Disabled In Australia — Triple R 102 7FM, Melbourne Independent Radio
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Why Telling Our Own Chronic Illness And Disability Stories Is So Important

Why Telling Our Own Chronic Illness And Disability Stories Is So Important The first instalment of our monthly Chronic and Iconic column with Chloe Sargeant. We missed you too. Sign up to our newsletter, and follow us on Instagram and Twitter, so you always know where to find us. Welcome to Chronic and Iconic, Junkee’s monthly column about chronic illness and disability, written by Chloe Sargeant. Hi, wow, hello! This is the first in our Chronic And Iconic column, and I’m just so unbelievably overjoyed to be working together with Junkee to create a lil’ chunk of internet that is dedicated solely to the experiences, issues, and successes of disabled and chronically ill communities. I hope with this column, I can help to amplify the stories of my beloved community, as well as help people learn and challenge their ableism. 

Litty Committee: 13 New Books Dropping In February 2021

Updated March 1, 2021 To sign up for our daily newsletter filled with the latest news, goss and other stuff you should care about, head HERE. For a running feed of all our stories, follow us on Twitter HERE. Or, bookmark the PEDESTRIAN.TV homepage to visit whenever you need a news fix. It’s February, folks! It’s a whole new month and there are books aplenty. Every month, I – Steff Tan, hello! – will be dishing out a list of fresh releases. Think: fiction, non-fiction, romance, young adult, mystery, gothic thrillers, and fantasy. Whatever tickles your pickle, there’s a good chance it’ll end up on the list.

The question I always ask other disabled people: did you ride horses?

The jury is still out on just how effective hippotherapy is – but for Alistair Baldwin, it offered more than a treatment This is an edited extract from Growing Up Disabled in Australia, edited by Carly Findlay and out now through Black Inc Books ‘As with humans, a horse’s value to society is inextricably, albeit unfortunately, linked to its abledness.’ Photograph: Welcomia/Getty Images/iStock ‘As with humans, a horse’s value to society is inextricably, albeit unfortunately, linked to its abledness.’ Photograph: Welcomia/Getty Images/iStock AlistairBaldwin Mon 1 Feb 2021 11.30 EST Last modified on Mon 1 Feb 2021 21.55 EST Whenever I meet someone else who grew up disabled in Australia, there’s only one key thing I want to know about them. I go through the small-talk motions, I feign interest in how their day went, I wait a respectful amount of time before I derail the conversation with the question I’ve been dying to ask.

Carly Findlay on Growing Up Disabled in Australia

The humour. And most of all, the shimmering spectrum of it. There are stories from writers with physical disabilities, intellectual disabilities, chronic illness and appearance differences, young and older Australians, people of colour, First Nations Australians, writers from the LGBTQI community, parents, famous names (Senator Jordan Steele-John, athlete Isis Holt, musician Eliza Hull) and relative unknowns. In her piece, Jessica Knight, a writer who has inoperable cataracts and no peripheral vision, writes about eating pot-pourri from a bowl in a cafe because she thought it was mixed nuts. And of mistaking a stranger s toddler for a small, adorable dog . In the very next, C.B. Mako writes poetry about being a migrant with mental illness, Separated. Alienated. Excluded. Erased.

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