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Some Disabilities Are Invisible!

MistyMagic March 13th, 2018

Some disabilities are invisible to the eye!

Please don't assume - that makes an ass of u and me!

Pain can't be seen but it can disable someone just as much as any other disability.

Imagine having tooth ache in your leg or having bee stings all over your back.

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NancySV1 April 18th, 2018

I encounter this all the time, People see my daughter and think that her behavior is aweful but they have no clue that she has a disability.

They just stare and make comments.

I have had cards made from vista print explianing her disabilty and I had them out to people who stare and gawk at her.

It is the only tool in my arsenal right now. lol

3 replies
tluper6491 April 18th, 2018

@NancySV1 It's disgusting to me that people would stare and gawk at a disabled child, or anyone with a disability. When my disability WAS visible I experienced it quite a bit myself, and people just being downright condescending and rude to me. Even when they meant well, with comments like "it's so great you're out doing things!" "You're so brave!" "Good for you for not letting the disability define you!" Yeah, great, thank you random stranger for coming up and treating me like the Elephant Man. What does a disabled person love more than being thought of as a freak show act? Anyway, sarcasm aside, I'm really sorry you and your daughter have to put up with that. I think it's repulsive, even if I hadn't experienced it myself it would have disgusted me.

1 reply
RebuildingCate April 19th, 2018

@tluper6491

Lol, yeah, I've had that happen a time or two, it's kind of like, bite me, I'm getting groceries, just like anyone else, I'm not here to inspire you!

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AffyAvo April 19th, 2018

@NancySV1 Do you find the cards to be helpful?

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richyShiny39 April 29th, 2018

Lupus ,pulmonary hypertension, and low blood platelets. Also finding Drs who wish to operate on you?

amarifey June 17th, 2018

mental illness

Axalotal August 12th, 2018

@MistyMagic Thank you for this. As someone with brain damage and highly intelligent no one takes me seriously when I'm having a bad day or struggling with a task that's affected.

2 replies
MistyMagic OP August 12th, 2018

@Axalotal

Welome!! Yes I understand what you are saying , I hope you enjoy the community :)

2 replies
Axalotal August 12th, 2018

@MistyMagic

Thank you.
Two of my issues is memory recall and slow processing speeds.
Case in point, I'm part of a group that has proved that the sun triggers earthquakes and that electrical signals can be used to forecast their location.

We discovered what was the first relationship between solar magnetic fields and earthquakes. Using only 12% of the fault lines as our test zones, since 2016 we have predicted nearly all the magnitude 5 or higher earthquakes.

The paper was co-authored with people from Ohio State and NASA. And since has been peer-reviewed, copied, cited over 100 times, and sough by scientist around the world.

In 2017 NASA and ETH Zurich announced they would start using magnetic anomalies for pre seismic forecasting.

This year, China and Italy launched the SEISMO electromagnetic satellite which will track electromagnetic anomalies before earthquakes.

We have also studied the coronal hole typhoon connection. This year one of our team members won the National Science Championship for this exact study.

We also predicted that science would not be able to find dark matter because it doesn't exist.

My point is I'm relatively smart and accomplished. Because of this, people don't believe me when I tell them I have brain damage. Even after I drop over 100 pages of medical documentation, they act like it's made up or somehow wrong. One of my favourite responses is I'm overreacting, everyone has memory problems. This infuriates me.

Yet, because I struggle to form my thoughts and without notes get numbers mixed up. Because of this friends and family constantly tell me I'm stupid, should get a "real" job and talk down to me as if I'm three and dismiss any ideas or arguments when having a discussion.

I'm in my 40's now, so grade and middle school were different. I nearly failed both, but now have been very successful in cutting-edge scientific discoveries in an array of fields.

Back in grade school, I was labelled "special needs" and spent two hours a day on penmanship; I'm a messy writer. As it turns out that's because my fine motor skills are impacted by my brain damage.

In high school, I skipped a lot of classes and was labelled a troublemaker. One teacher even accused me of plagiarism. Their reasoning was if I'm not attending class there is no way I could hand in such great work. As it turned out, I was writing nine peoples assignments; it paid well for easy work, if anything they should have been the ones getting in trouble.

The reason I wasn't showing up to class was I couldn't find my locker. They all looked the same. If I could find my locker, I couldn't remember my combination. I was being treated by teachers and admin as if I was a worthless nobody, a pest that didn't deserve to be there. There are many other stories, but this post is getting fairly long.

My overall point is, yes having invisible disabilities is hard but don't give up on your dreams. Once you find what you're good at, you will be successful. It's important to take advantage of help, but do not use it as a crutch.

I am successful, but it still is painful knowing people treat me as something I'm not.

What's hardest on me the most is myself. If my brain were "normal", I would be a genius and be much better at socializing. Most days I feel like a fraud. Because I'm damaged, I shouldn't be successful or able to grasp concepts that most people can't. Somehow because I can't explain myself, it seems like I don't know what I'm talking about, as if I'm not smart but a parrot.

In short, I feel like a failure because space agencies around the world use research I worked on, yet family and friends constantly treat me as if I don't know anything and imply the space agencies are wrong to use the reasearch we did as a team.

2 replies
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JaytheNinja November 26th, 2018

@MistyMagic

that sounds painful

K87 January 25th, 2019

This is soo true. I have fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome I also get disability because of it, but some people have accused me of faking it. Considering how horrendous the pain is, I wish I was faking

1 reply
MistyMagic OP January 25th, 2019

@K87 they can be very painful, and I understand that people can't see them whch is frustrating having to explain all the time.

1 reply
K87 February 17th, 2019

@MistyMagic

I think the worst part though, is all of the health issues that accompany fibromyalgia. I see so many different doctors for so many different things that I honestly can't even tell you what a few look like. I have trouble keeping track of them.

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Doglover1991 July 22nd, 2019

@MistyMagic

Invisible disabilities are misunderstood.

MistyMagic OP January 31st

@All This is one of my favorite posts, it says so much and so I wanted to bring this up again. How are you today? 

Is your disability invisible?

How does it make you feel when others ignore your condition?


 

Listening - One Step At A Time!

1 reply

@MistyMagic.  I have an invisible disability. It’s very frustrating when people ignore or don’t believe me, especially medical doctors and other health professionals!

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slowdecline48 February 1st

@MistyMagic Very true. I was gonna post in here with the headline "disability doesn't have a 'look'"...you saved me the work. Thank you.

2 replies
MistyMagic OP February 3rd

@slowdecline48  You can still post! The more the merrier when it comes to bringing this to people's attention?

 

Listening - One Step At A Time!

1 reply
slowdecline48 February 3rd

@MistyMagic Doing it now would be repetitive...I'll wait a few weeks. Then if I still remember, mine will go up once everyone else has forgotten this one.

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pinkLion9840 February 3rd

Thank you for bringing awareness!

I have chronic pain, and even some health care professionals don't acknowledge it! I hope more people will realize this.

2 replies
MistyMagic OP February 3rd

@pinkLion9840 That sucks, sometimes pain cannot be measured on a scale from one to ten, can it? Pain is something that we each need to find a way to cope with. My Dad used to say " Pain is a friend, it tells you when something is wrong!"  But when the pain becomes chronic, and we have had medical attention and treatment then we need to find ways to cope. 
What do you find helps you?

 

Listening - One Step At A Time!

1 reply
pinkLion9840 February 4th

I think the key part of coping with disabilities is to talk about it, but also keep it balanced.

For the longest time, when I first got my diagnosis, I didn't talk about it.

Now when I have gotten older I finally started opening up about it.

Most people didn't even know about my disability.

However I found, that sometimes I didn't want to talk about it, and just be allowed to live my life as a "normal" person.

People pity disabled people, and it can seem degrading, I'm not all about that.


I think building a community of supportive people is the best thing I could have done for myself.


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