Am I stubborn? Maybe? I don’t know. Most people would say no. They think I am the nicest person. A few people called me an angel. However, my family has something to say about that. The correct answer is yes. Many of us think being stubborn is a negative thing. A lot of it depends on how we look at that word. Born with a physical disability, I have to be stubborn. Otherwise how am I supposed to get what I need or want? Without being able to fully communicate.
Another way to look at it, babies keep crying until they get what they need. Caregivers and nurses think people with disabilities are too picky. If people don’t get certain things right the first time, how are we supposed to be happy when knowing we would be in pain later? Like putting shoes on the wrong foot. Luckily I was able to correct my family quickly. There were a few times when my personal items went wrong. I was in pain for a period of time. People are not always around to help. Who wants to be in pain for hours? They don’t realize that we can’t help ourselves when stuff starts hurting us. Same principle applies. I don’t want to do my homework twice because I listen to my parents instead of doing what my teacher taught me.
There are nine words that made the biggest difference. In the early intervention programs, my parents were told, “never set limitations on what I would be able to do”. Since then, they never forget that phrase. It guides them in their decisions of letting me go to a regular school, play flag football, be a high school basketball manager, etc. If they hadn’t put me in a normal school, we would have never known how smart I am. It was the best decision they made. As I was going through school, I learned to stand my ground when everyone else is trying to tell me what I can’t do. Always figuring out a way to do certain things or make stuff better. Being stubborn not only helped me to get what I want, it also got me where I am today.