Wheelchairman of the Board

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Philip Patston puts down his razors to “grow a Mo”!

Monday, November 2nd, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsPhilip PatstonThemesCerebral BallsyWheelchairman of the BoardTumour HumourThe UpDown ReportCampaign Watch

Title_graphic_via_freemoustache_dot_com

“Movember is an annual, month-long celebration of the moustache, highlighting men’s health issues, specifically prostate cancer and depression in men. Mo Bros, supported by their Mo Sistas, start Movember (November 1st) clean shaven and then have the remainder of the month to grow and groom their moustache. During Movember, each Mo Bro effectively becomes a walking billboard for men’s health and, via their Mo, raises essential funds and awareness.”

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Visit Philip Patston’s MoSpace page >>
And please donate, donate, DONATE

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VIDEO: Philip Patston’s truly jive live poetry!

Monday, November 2nd, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsPhilip PatstonThemesCerebral BallsyWheelchairman of the Board, Irked Videos

By now, most of you already know the indomitable, the unsinkable, the mind-bogglingly entrepreneurial Mr. Philip Patston.

Here’s an October 20th video clip of Philip onstage at The Thirsty Dog, in Auckland, New Zealand reciting poetry (with Tony Lewis on blues harp):

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Check out Philip’s awesome work @ philippatston.com

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A feel-good story on All Hallows’ Eve

Saturday, October 31st, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board, Irked Videos

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Read the related article on 9news.com >>

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Gardening in spite of challenges? Anyone can do it!

Friday, October 30th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board

Quoting dallasnews.com:

David_Gary_gardening - Text: Dallas Arboretum volunteer David Gary, diagnosed with muscular dystrophy when he was 28, planned his new backyard to accommodate the needs of an avid gardener who plants, prunes and fertilizes from a wheelchair.

Visiting David Gary’s garden would make a special trip to East Texas worthwhile. Beyond beautiful, the garden is a living manual for anyone longing to cultivate beauty but hesitant to begin because of age or physical disability.

“Gardening in spite of challenges? Anyone can do it,” Gary says with confidence; he lives the experience himself. “You can garden even in a wheelchair. And age isn’t a reason to quit gardening, either.”Now almost 63, Gary was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy in 1975 at age 28, and he was told he’d be in a wheelchair before he turned 40. He managed to go almost 20 years past that prediction.

“I’m a hammerhead,” he says with a laugh. “I wanted to prove them wrong.” Although he gets around now in a motorized scooter he calls “my Harley,” normal strength in his calves and ankles allows him to continue driving himself from Tyler to the Dallas Arboretum, where he began volunteering in 2003, two years before moving from Dallas.

In fact, it was the Arboretum that first inspired Gary to garden.

David Gary’s gardening tips…after the jump!

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Spotlighting Gilbert Smith: a former police officer who has turned disability equality into his life’s mission

Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board

Disabled advocate Gilbert Smith, a former police officer, works to spread awareness and equality for the disabled. The disAbility Resources Center recently presented him with a lifetime achievement Award. (Photo by Tyrone Walker)

Disabled advocate Gilbert Smith, a former police officer, works to spread awareness and equality for the disabled. The disAbility Resources Center recently presented him with a lifetime achievement Award. (Photo by Tyrone Walker)

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Even sitting in a wheelchair, his hands not fully functional, there’s a physical presence about Gilbert Smith, the former police officer who was shot on duty and left paralyzed from the waist down.

Maybe it’s left over from his rough-and-tumble days as a bouncer in his dad’s bar. Or maybe it’s just the force of his spirit.

“He’s left his stamp on a little bit of everything here,” Gwen Gillenwater, executive director of the disAbility Resource Center, said last week when presenting him with a Lifetime Achievement Award for making Charleston more accessible to the handicapped. “He’s one of the real giants in our community.”

Smith will be 63 in December. He was paralyzed Dec. 12, 1970, nearly 40 years ago.

“I’ve outlived the statistics,” he said.

Before he became a police officer, Smith worked as a bartender and bouncer at his dad’s nightclub. It was called the Coconut Grove on Pittsburgh Avenue in North Charleston. Smith also collected loans for his dad.

“I was big and strong back then,” he said.

His dad died in a tractor accident when Smith was 20. He went to work for the Charleston Naval Shipyard before joining the police department.

He took a test in the morning and was given his badge, gun and handcuffs that evening. He spent the first two weeks riding around with an older officer, who was also shot on duty but survived without any permanent damage, and then was sent out on his own.

Fewer than four months on the job, Smith got a call that a man was passed out in the middle of the road in rural Charleston County. Smith loaded him in the back of the patrol car to take him to the jail. He didn’t handcuff him because the man didn’t have a right hand.

Smith would learn later that the man lost his hand in a shootout. He previously had served time for robbing a bank.

The man woke up in the back of the car, grabbed Smith’s gun, shot him in the back and pushed him out of the car. The man later said he saw the devil.

Smith would never walk again.

As a result of the incident, the department installed cages in all the patrol vehicles and instituted a training program … Continue reading this article

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Jeremy Lade “wanted a new challenge,” so…

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board

Jeremy_LadeVia wkowtv.com comes this great story about a wheelchair athlete named Jeremy Lade:

“When Jeremy Lade (pronounced LAH-day) heard about an upcoming racquetball tournament in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin that featured some of the best players in the world, he wanted to take a shot at playing the best. But for Lade to even play is pretty amazing. Lade is in a wheelchair. He says they adapt some rules for him to play. For instance he gets two bounces to return instead of the standard one bounce in racquetball.

Lade wanted a new challenge because he is already pretty dominate in wheelchair basketball, and as director of athletics for wheelchair sports at UW-Whitewater, Lade is an inspiration to other people with disabilities.

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Here’s video:

Jeremy Lade featured on WKOW-TV

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Staten Island Technical High School’s “Team TechSmart” gets 10K from M.I.T. to design/create a “Comfort Control Wheelchair”

Monday, October 26th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board

Quoting Diane Lore, writing on SILive.com:

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Staten Island Technical High School is gaining national recognition for its proposal to help design a state-of-the-art wheelchair to assist the physically challenged. The New Dorp school was recently awarded a $10,000 grant from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to research, design and develop a new type of wheelchair. Tech is one of 15 high schools nationwide selected to participate in MIT’s InvenTeam initiative. InvenTeams, comprised of high school students, teachers and mentors, receive grants up to $10,000 to invent technological solutions to real-world problems. The MIT initiative, in its seventh year, aims to inspire a new generation of inventors. Tech engineering teacher Steven J. Raile applied for the MIT grant last spring and attended training at MIT in June to mentor his students in the process. Their wheelchair will be designed with a bacteria-free seat, which will allow the user to relieve pressure, as well as control the temperature. “The idea is to keep the user comfortable while minimizing the likelihood of him or her developing sores from sitting immobile,” Raile explained.

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Last week, we suggested/wished that the founders of whereslulu.com could add Canadian cities to their awesome website…

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the BoardCampaign Watch

one-message-received

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And they heard us!!!

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Read the boisterous & salty Lulu blog…regularly!

(& click here to add it to your RSS feed reader, eh.)

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“Total Access” Product Promotion: Irked spotlights TiLite Wheelchairs

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board

“TiLite wheelchairs are designed by engineers who use wheelchairs. The company TiLite—based in Kennewick, Washington—evolved from the simple idea of developing a superior class of manual wheelchairs that would combine orthoses-like customization with the most advanced materials. A TiLite wheelchair is handcrafted by Titanium Experts exactly to the user’s unique dimensions—just like orthoses. The founders of TiLite believe that these attributes help users remain independent longer, experience reduced body stress, and incur fewer posture-related problems. Since the first chair was designed over a decade ago, TiLite has developed a full range of titanium and aluminum wheelchairs that cater to the unique requirements of each user. Their goal is that each new design further advances the performance function and style of manual mobility.”

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To watch a video segment about TiLite Wheelchairs from John Ratzenberger (aka “Cliff Clavin” on the hit sitcom Cheers)’s Made in America TV series—CLICK HERE!

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Learn more at tilite.com

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The always-entertaining Tiffiny asks: do you think it’s morally sound for a professional to provide sexual release for a person with a disability, in a group home environment?

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board, Campaign Watch

Screenshot_of_Family_Guy_2_wheelchairs_in_bed_title_graphic

Quoting Tiffiny’s October 5th column for disaboomlive.com:

I love hearing stories about sex doing more for humans [than] just helping them procreate. When sex is literally, as silly as this sounds, doing God’s work from making women feel beautiful again to helping men maintain healthy cardio health, I smile inside. When naughty “bad” things are actually good for you? Yeah, that makes life worth living. So when I read about a disabled man in a group home, paralyzed from the neck down and unable to talk, who was running over nurses and spilling trays, basically earning the title of “Official Group Home A**hole,” who was cured of his asshattery after getting some much needed manual stimulation (from one of the nurses no less) I thought, “Wow what a great nurse!” Obviously, it isn’t too surprising that after this 22 year old got some much needed release he was more pleasant to be around, but going from “belligerent” to “serene,” now that’s a big change. It exemplifies just how important sex is to the human psyche (and to overall mental health). But it makes you wonder how priests and nuns, and all the other celibates of the world, do it. Is it unnatural to abstain? A lot of people with disabilities are NOT getting laid. They’re not finding partners and for millions of them, it’s a frustrating daily predicament that never goes away. Try and finagle as they might, whether all they want is to masturbate, or find something even crazier like actual sex, it’s a disappointingly illusive endeavor. Can you imagine being shot down time and time again? This is why Belgium pays for it’s disabled citizens (if they want it) to have a sex worker visit on a monthly basis. The sad part about this story is that someone walked in on the nurse one day, she was swiftly fired, and the guy went back to being an insufferable a**hole. Life isn’t fair. It’s really too bad they weren’t more smart about it and did it off-site. What’s your opinion on all of this? As long as both adults are consenting (despite what the laws say), do you think it’s morally sound for a professional to provide sexual release for a person with a disability, in a group home environment?

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Read more of Tiffiny’s risqué columns

Read Tiffiny’s official bio

Visit disaboom.com and disaboomlive.com

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