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Comparing Becoming Disabled 'And The Disremembered'

Decent Essays

In the two articles, “Becoming Disabled” by Rosemarie Garland-Thompson and “The Disremembered” by Charles Leadbeater, both authors write about the differently abled throughout society. Garland-Thompson and Leadbeater both want the differently abled community to be treated more appropriately in society by delivering evidence through depicting a specific audience and providing details of their own personal lives to better the differently-abled community. Both Garland-Thompson and Leadbeater are writing to describe how to communicate to an audience that is unfamiliar with the subject of differently-abled people. Garland-Thompson talks about how people with disability should be identified (4). For decades, people haven’t acknowledged what to call …show more content…

Garland-Thompson herself is disabled so she understands the struggles people are going through when she articulates, “Because I was born with six fingers altogether and one quite short arm, I learned to get through the world with the body I had from the beginning” (Garland-Thompson 3). Garland-Thompson is someone who is an example of being physically disabled. She cannot do everything that the physically able can do and she embraces that. If one allows disability to stop them from achieving their dreams, then that disability has conquered them. Leadbeater has dealt with a similar life not as someone with a disability,but instead someone who has witnessed someone close go through it. Leadbeater’s mother-in-law, who has dementia, has affected his understanding of how crippling dementia can be when he pronounces, “My mother-in-law’s narrative of herself has narrowed” (9). Leadbeater’s mother-in-law can no longer fully remember her life, but only certain parts that have come to define her. People like this need to be treated with a patient attitude. A lot of the time, people affected by dementia will just recite certain things about their lives and forget the rest. This requires the caretaker of that person to be understanding and realize that the person they once knew hasn’t changed, but rather his/her mind is forgetting memories but not losing them. Leadbeater does a good job when doing his own research about the topic of dementia. He talks about that when studying Baldwin van Gorp’s opinions on dementia that Gorp has a good point when talking about that people should do daily mental and physical exercises so that one’s mind can stay fit because down the road, that could make dementia more tolerable (Leadbeater 3). Leadbeater’s research on the subject of

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