From a longtime disability rights activist comes this moving window into the lives of people with disabilities and the lessons they can teach us.
Al Etmanski is a community organizer, social entrepreneur, and author. He became a parent activist in the disability movement thanks to his daughter Liz, an artist, actress, and spoken-word poet who thinks her Down syndrome is "rad." He is a member of the prestigious Ashoka global fellowship of social entrepreneurs and co-founded Planned Lifetime Advocacy Network, which helps parents provide a secure future for their sons and daughters with disabilities. He has received the Order of Canada and Order of British Columbia for his activism.
“Al Etmanski upends the usual self-help formula, as well, but he
does so by telling the stories of a largely ‘untapped and
underappreciated source, people in the disability community.’
Etmanski—a disability activist, community organizer, social
entrepreneur, and author—explains early on that his new book isn’t
really about disability, but about life. And he has found that the
disability community and movement that welcomed him after he
welcomed a daughter with down syndrome into the world offered some
of life’s best lessons. He believes that:
The time has come to recognize people with disabilities for who
they really are: authoritative sources on creativity, resilience,
love, resistance, dealing with adversity, and living a good
life.
This book does that. In sharing the stories of an incredibly
diverse set of individuals, he shows how independence is only
possible through our interdependence, how unity comes from
embracing our differences, how opportunity is extended through a
nurturing environment and expanded justice. He also tells stories
of how opportunity, inventiveness, ingenuity, and clarity can arise
out of adversity—while never glossing over the struggles that
people face or the need to address them more collectively and more
fully as a society. Perhaps it won’t surprise you that two of our
most transformational presidents, individuals who led the nation
through some of its most challenging chapters, were individuals
with a disability—Lincoln with clinical depression and FDR with
polio. The ‘advantages that people with disability offer,’ Etmanski
writes, ‘are the perfect remedy for the troubled times we live in,’
and after what I’ve read so far, I couldn’t agree more.”
—Dylan Schleicher, Porchlight Book Company
“Hopefully the universal lessons in this book will not only empower
all of us to trampoline to our highest potential but also move the
global disability rights movement to achieve the success it fully
deserves—so we can all live in a more just and equitable
world.”
—Susan Sygall, disability activist and MacArthur Fellow
“Etmanski engages every reader, whether new to the world of
disability or an old hand, with thoughtful insights on the value of
difference. This book made me laugh, made me cry, made me
proud.”
—Yazmine Laroche, former Chair, Muscular Dystrophy Canada
“Etmanski mines rich wisdom from the disability world and makes it
accessible to a general audience. In a world increasingly divided
and polarized, this book will unite, while changing the perception
of disability from illness needing only charity to a normal human
condition needing only opportunity.”
—Carol Glazer, President, National Organization on Disability
“In a world defined by accelerating change and interconnection,
those who recognize their differences and give themselves
permission to make a difference have a powerful advantage. The
stories in this book illustrate how people with disabilities are
seizing their power. They will help all of us see and seize
ours.”
—Bill Drayton, CEO, Ashoka
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