Answering wheelchair questions the children ask

Kids and I are Like This

Not too long ago I thought I was an "old person" person and not a "kid person" (they say we're either one or the other).  I still have those moments where I'm still not very comfortable being someone with a disability, and old people rarely stare or think it's too out of the ordinary to see someone [..}


Wheelchairs users unknowingly inspire others

Being an Inspiration – Even When You Don’t Know It

Who did you look up to most when you were little?  Was it your big brother or sister doing all the cool stuff you wanted to do? Or was it some TV celebrity you tried to emulate? Either way, there's always someone out there we attained to be like, and we still do this as adults. In the disability [..}


Successful Vent Dependent Quad that Uses Standing Frame

Podcast #85: A vent? No big

In episode #85 of No Free Rides, I'm joined by Jenni Taylor, a positively fabulous woman from Minnesota, who's a C1-C2 vent-dependent quadriplegic and the former Ms. Wheelchair Minnesota 2011. At 25, she's had more deeper life experiences than anyone I've ever had on the show. [..}


Disability Independence or Assistance for those with Spinal Cord Injuries

Help Wanted Occasionally, but Don’t Linger

The concept of help and a spinal cord injury/wheelchair user/disability lifestyle like mine go hand in hand by default. Every day I need help in the morning from personal care assistants. Depending on a number of other circumstances that come up more sporadically I need help reaching things, moving [..}


Spinal Cord Injury and Sleep

Getting a Good Night’s Rest

To say getting a solid night of sleep is challenging when you can‘t move would be one of the greatest generalizations I‘ve ever written. I was already a light sleeper before my injury. It’d usually take me an hour to sleep. I could never relax. And to say these past 19 years of being [..}


Getting a Wheelchair Through Insurance

Time for a New Wheelchair

I knew it was time to get a new wheelchair when my joystick stopped working in the rain one day. That was about a year and a half ago. I really should’ve gotten a new chair after having it for five years (like my insurance used to do before the Recession) which was in 2010, but my insurance [..}


JoeStone

Podcast: Joe Stone – Reclaiming the Mountain

In episode #84 of No Free Rides, I interview Joe Stone, a C7 quad injured while speed flying in Montana (where you parachute down a mountain on foot). We discuss the importance of staying true to your passions despite a life-changing injury, as well as his documentary, Wings to Wheels. [..}


Frida Kahlo - an artist in a wheelchair & a disability role model

A Great Disabled Artiste – Frida Kahlo

There are lots of famous artists you should know about, but there's one very special artist you definitely need to know about if you use a wheelchair. Her name is Frida Kahlo and she was an artist who lived in Mexico over 70 years ago.  She had Polio and used a wheelchair after a tram [..}


Surviving winter with a spinal cord injury

This Past Winter Deserves a High Five

I have lived my entire life in either Wisconsin (birth through college) or Minnesota (since 2003 when I moved here for law school). In those 33 plus years I have become a well-seasoned winter season veteran who has experienced all kinds of combinations of snowy, icy, and frigid cold conditions in [..}


Medical Answers to Disability Related Questions Via The Internet

Turning to “Dr. Internet”

About ten years ago out of the blue, I woke up one morning to mysteriously find my right thigh red, swollen and hard as a rock. Having no idea what was happening to me, I turned to the internet, not my doctor, to see what was up. It’s easy, accessible and available 24/7, but is it always a good [..}