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SHE'S NOT DISABLED ENOUGH FOR PARALYMPICS?!

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2020
  • Abby Sams is an Adaptive Athlete with Ehlers Danlos Syndrome and dreams of Paralympic Gold. However, the Paralympics say she's not disabled enough to compete.
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    #wheelchair #paraplegic #spinalcordinjury

Komentáře • 558

  • @TbirdAnni
    @TbirdAnni Před 4 lety +631

    doesn't surprise me that she's "not disabled enough" EDS and HSD aren't recognised as a disability for most parasports. it makes me furious. There is this crazy notion that if we just did enough physio we would all be fine, I do 3 hours physio a day, I can tell you, I am not fine....

    • @allisond.46
      @allisond.46 Před 4 lety +59

      When she said hypermobility and pain weren’t considered disabilities, I thought “Is your knee falling out considered a disability?”

    • @Hoggaforfan
      @Hoggaforfan Před 4 lety +30

      @@allisond.46 Nah that's just a slight inconvenience :P

    • @Pedro8k
      @Pedro8k Před 4 lety +17

      I had years of physio it is to keep your muscles working and reduce wastage it will never cure you

    • @sixmercer2504
      @sixmercer2504 Před 4 lety +29

      Physical therapy injured me several times when I was going 3 times a week. The PTs would talk and laugh amongst themselves with patients on the tables and were not paying attention to us during massages and cupping etc. It was incredibly uncomfortable which made is hard to speak up. They didn't seem to have any idea what EDS was or how fragile our bodies are compared to their typical patients. One of the exercises I was supposed to do dislocated my rib(s) and it took me by complete surprise so which of course made the pain so much worse. They had no idea what to do and it was the owner of the practice who was working on me and had been chatting it up and ignoring me. After I could hardly breathe and was in tears he offered me ice and I said no and he just went to the other side of the room to continue talking with his friends. He left me sitting on the table crying and I had my service dog help me get down and I grabbed her, my backpack, and my crutches and left. I had seen them for 12 weeks on 3-4 different occasions and it was just like that all the time. The PT would set the patients up with strength training over in the corner gym area and would just walk away. Very poor bedside manner. I would explain that due to hip dysplasia and chronic dislocations in my hips I couldn't do the sit down recumbent bike. They treated me like I was just trying to get out of it. It also turns out I completely tore my rotator cuff doing the stretchy band pulling exercises. It took several years to finally get an MRI because my insurance required an x-ray first. That wouldn't show anything and they said since the x-rays have been clear all this time there's no reason to do an MRI. When I finally did get one it showed that not only are the muscles and tendons torn in there, but there was atrophy in all the muscles and soft tissue around it and all through my shoulder. So I need surgery and probably right after that, more PT. Yay.

    • @penelope563
      @penelope563 Před 4 lety +10

      @@sixmercer2504 Just please don't go back to that place

  • @Marjolein339
    @Marjolein339 Před 4 lety +314

    I'm a professional wheelchair tennis player since 10 years. I have hEDS too. Because the classification rules have changed I'll be kicked out of my sport next year, after the Tokyo Paralympics.
    Step 1 of the classification system is check if you've got an "eligable disability". If you do, you move forward to step 2. If you don't, you're out. EDS is not on the list so I'm out. But if I would go to step 2, they would check my functional abilities. For example "can do x amount single leg high heel raises". I can't do those because of the joint instability. So I do not say "I'm not disabled enough". That implies I have more function then other players. I am disabled enough, I just don't have the right label.
    It sucks. I'm forced to give up my career. They take away my source of income. It's discrimination for sure.
    Thank you for making this item.

    • @thekoo2011
      @thekoo2011 Před 4 lety +59

      I think everyone should forward this video to the Paralympic Committee and ask them to take an extra look at their possibly discriminatory rules . It’s all about bringing attention to the right people. If enough of us take action , who knows what could happen.

    • @beckiehubley5798
      @beckiehubley5798 Před 4 lety +10

      So sad, infuriating and wrong.

    • @Narnendil
      @Narnendil Před 4 lety +5

      omg I'm so angry!

    • @KattReen
      @KattReen Před 4 lety +4

      that's fucked

    • @sarahdaniels5419
      @sarahdaniels5419 Před 4 lety +4

      I'm so sorry, also tennis! That's awesome!

  • @purplestripes3437
    @purplestripes3437 Před 4 lety +606

    I'm so happy you did a colab with a zebra, you just made every zebra who watches you cautiously jump for joy lol

    • @Andrewdeitsch
      @Andrewdeitsch Před 4 lety +39

      "Cautiously jump for joy" 😂😂

    • @vedavester8843
      @vedavester8843 Před 4 lety +4

      absolutely !

    • @jackhill4112
      @jackhill4112 Před 4 lety +6

      Same here 💖 zebra solidarity

    • @cheesemonkey98
      @cheesemonkey98 Před 4 lety +5

      Zebras unite

    • @graceblackett5052
      @graceblackett5052 Před 4 lety +10

      For real! She is so great. I will refrain from saying 'inspiring' because I loath people telling me I'm inspiring for just living my life but bro... you're cool. Zebra strong!!! 🦓🦓✊✊

  • @erinmalone2669
    @erinmalone2669 Před 4 lety +202

    On a similar note... A friend who is a fully state certified guide dog trainer at the biggest training facility had to FIGHT for her accommodations at work. She is severely dyslexic and even disability organizations can be ignorant over "hidden disabilities."

  • @hannahrobin7449
    @hannahrobin7449 Před 4 lety +441

    I also have hEDS - not strong enough for wheelchair racing as my wrists, elbows and shoulders are flaming piles of shit. I play powerchair football instead which I love.

    • @harlows.journey
      @harlows.journey Před 4 lety +3

      Hannah Robin same

    • @KiranWade18
      @KiranWade18 Před 4 lety +3

      I play too in the English premiership

    • @dresksk1422
      @dresksk1422 Před 4 lety +15

      It most be awfull to have to validate a disability, people spect a same look for all disabeled. Thats just wrong

    • @Dayana-gf1nu
      @Dayana-gf1nu Před 4 lety +2

      Wish you the best of luck 💙

    • @naseerahvj
      @naseerahvj Před 4 lety +1

      I was thinking the same. I don't think my upper body could handle it.

  • @nathanmoore1361
    @nathanmoore1361 Před 4 lety +189

    not in a wheelchair myself but I think it's so unfortunate that people who are can be criticized for "not being disabled enough". great video and well done for spreading awareness 😁👍🏼

    • @penelope563
      @penelope563 Před 4 lety +9

      Not disabled either but I'm of the opinion that as long as those that are told they're "not disabled enough" aren't given an unfair advantage they should compete. Like the Paralympic committee, who thought hypermobility equated to flexibility should have at least realized that being flexible has no impact on racing. If she uses the same equipment as everyone else, what's the issue?

    • @irrelevance3859
      @irrelevance3859 Před 4 lety +4

      @@penelope563 exactly. And hypermobility can easily affect upper body too while playing sports it doing anything. I don't understand what's not _disabled enough_ there

    • @tvaholicsquidney
      @tvaholicsquidney Před 4 lety +2

      I have a brain injury, a few other health issues as well as hypermobility well it's actually undiagnosed heds and veds, and I've been told that I'm not disabled enough for disabled sports yet too disabled for able bodied sports so yeah I'm stuck in middle, I try and run but have difficulties with my knees dislocating, I try gymnastics and have my elbows and wrists dislocating as well as low in vit d (for some reason my body can't absorb vitamins and minerals so also lack in many other vits and mins) so break bones easily but not brittle bone disease so yeah I've been told that I'm too disabled for abled bodied sports and not disabled enough for disability sports yet I have friends who compete in disability sports and there isn't anything wrong with them and compete for special olympics so yeah but they live in a different country from me

    • @bella9698
      @bella9698 Před 4 lety

      tvaholicsquidney I know what it’s like to be stuck in the middle: hell

    • @Roadent1241
      @Roadent1241 Před 4 lety +5

      I'm not in a wheelchair but I do have 25% hearing, in one ear. Have all my life. I wear a hearing-aid.
      That was enough for a deaf school to not let me escape the bullying hearing world because I was Too Hearing. So thanks that both sides hate me, there's no inbetween except where I exist.
      ~
      It is definitely unfortunate but oh well.
      I hate that stuff with criteria is so strict for such a varying set of things. Nevermind signing up for Disability Allowance/PIP/whatever other countries' equivalent is, but for stuff like this in the Olympics, which I believe can just be a hobby?
      ~
      There is not one type of blind.
      There is not one type of deaf.
      There is not one type of mental deficiency that defines how independent you are or how you deal with real world/outside the house stuff. (Autism etc)
      There is not one type of 'leg disability', as people can walk around a home 'comfortably' enough but then need sticks or a wheelchair/scooter to get around outside and then can't get into buildings because UGH we have to get the stupid ramp out everytime someone presses the buttooooon. ~glares at various banks and shops that only have stairs~
      ~
      Sorry, just.... yeah. You're right, OP.

  • @MagicLuver101
    @MagicLuver101 Před 4 lety +60

    I have heds and am waiting on delivery of my first custom wheelchair. After three different insurance companies denied me getting one I decided to go and pay for one out of pocket. All of my denials were because I'm "not disabled" it doesn't matter to them that I can't leave my house. I appreciate you covering someone with EDS.

    • @8wheelsracing
      @8wheelsracing Před 4 lety +5

      I ended up buying my sport chair out of pocket as well because insurance will only cover rolators/walkers. The irony is that they pay for them but I put almost full body weight on my arms when I use it. Usually results in injuries or snapping the actual walker. Broke multiple walkers but they keep paying for them! Insurance is a game i swear

    • @whatthehelliot
      @whatthehelliot Před rokem +1

      same, i have eds and am buying my new chair completely on my own bc the nhs doesnt cover chairs for ambulatory users pretty much ever

  • @sixmercer2504
    @sixmercer2504 Před 4 lety +105

    I have hEDS and I must say, Abby described it perfectly regarding the physical limitations. I would add one thing she briefly touched on. We have "good" days and bad days....and absolutely horrible days. We also have flares that can put us down like she said, when she could barely get to the bathroom and back. Those flares can last many many months or just a few days.
    She mentioned comorbidities. We Zebras suffer a lot with illness. The main trifecta are Gastroparesis which is stomach paralysis but it typically also means our intestines are also very sluggish or paralyzed as well. We don't have the strength in our gut to push food through and it just backs up, we have horrible constipation and some of us need feeding tubes that either go into the stomach or into the jejunum which is the entrance to the small intestines. And some of us even need IV nutrition called TPN (total parenteral nutrition) *I might have spelled that wrong)
    The next very common one we have is Dysautanomia and POTS. Our autonomic nervous system is the fight or flight response as well as how out body adjusts to changes that happen with things like movement, where we are in accordance to the space around us etc. It's complicated. The biggest problem we get is POTS (postural orthostatic hypotension) which is another reason a lot of us use a wheelchair. We have episodes of loss of consciousness when we go from sitting to standing or lying down to sitting, even bending over. If you have ever had to steady yourself because you stood up too fast, we go all the way out and down. It just means out blood vessels aren't strong enough (because like almost everything else they're made up of collagen which is what we are lacking and/or is defective and it IS degenerative so this all gets worse with age. I'm 46 and in bed almost all the time mostly due to pain and severe fatigue). Our vessels can't regulate the change in position to push the blood up to our brain fast enough. We also lack blood volume. We have less blood than the average person. We are extremely prone to severe chronic dehydration and like myself, we need daily (or whatever works for whoever) IV hydration which requires a central IV line typically in the chest that is threaded into a large vein in the neck and into the entrance of the atrium of the heart. We do our IV infusions ourselves at home and some have a nurse who comes to change the dressing or if we have a port (a long term little box under the skin that is accessed by a special needle that can either stay in or be removed).
    Last but most definitely not least is the most exciting part (sarcasm). Mast Cell Activation Syndrome/Disorder. Very complicated. Mast cells are allergy cells and they just go crazy over random things that are either airborne, ingested, used topically or even a cold or change in the body like pain or the heat or cold, literally anything can set off an allergic reaction that can be mild to deadly. We are the ones who wear masks no matter what while in public places around people or outside our house. Maybe today I have a reaction to strawberries that I don't have a reaction to next week. Or the other way around. They haven't figured out the exact reason why this happens to some Zebras but they think it's because the mast cells are made in the bone marrow and then they reside in the connective tissue, collagen. EDS is a connective tissue disease so it would make sense that defective collagen or connective tissue can cause problems with the abnormal release of mast cells to random triggers.
    Connective tissue is the glue that holds everything in the body together and makes things strong enough to hold joints together and make blood vessels function properly and digestion go smoothly. Since it's degenerative, defective, and we don't have enough....well it wreaks havoc on the all functions within the body. It's extremely painful and causes severe chronic fatigue. It's also a spectrum disorder. Like Abby explained some of us Zebras do just fine and it can be very debilitating for others.
    My wheelchair has battery powered wheels that assist my pushing without me needing a power chair. I have a portacath in my chest for constant IV access and I give myself saline infusions every day. I have to stay inside in the summer because of severe heat intolerance and geez, I could go on and on.
    I'm happy to answer questions if people have them. As long as you're not just being mean. If you read my entire comment, thank you. We definitely need more awareness so that people like Abby can be included and this genetic illness is not looked at as less disabling than say Cerebral Palsy or a spinal cord injury.
    Thank you to Abby for being so informative about EDS. I hope one day more people will actually listen. And I hope you are welcomed into the Paralympic Games. Take care my fellow Zebras!❤

    • @antm64
      @antm64 Před 4 lety +4

      Thank you for taking the time to describe the issues with which you contend on a daily basis. My daughter is a Pediatrician...tells me that being a physician is a matter of educated guessing. Your symptoms sound exceedingly challenging to pinpoint. At 74, and a very recent cancer survivor, I am learning to live with aging, missing organs and remaining body parts with a "new normal." Life is a challenge to be met and we are doing it, even if it is on a day-to-day basis!!

    • @leahdragon
      @leahdragon Před 4 lety +1

      I have hEDS and didn’t even know most of this! The information is appreciated!

    • @kailuca7519
      @kailuca7519 Před 4 lety +1

      I've been to a ton of doctors, some think I have hEDS and some think I have Fibermialga. I want to go to someone to see if I have hEDS but the doctor I talked to said it didn't matter because they were treated the same way. But even if they are I still want to know.
      I told my boss I needed to go to the ER because my foot was hurting a lot and we stand for 10 hours at work everyday. He said "what if I told you no? That you couldn't go?" I almost quit that day. I just wish someone would believe me when I tell them all the stuff that's going on with me. But people just make me feel like I complain to much and that I'm exaggerating.

    • @TechGirl84
      @TechGirl84 Před 4 lety +2

      kai luca I have a friend who was diagnosed with fibromyalgia, and she’s been living with it for years. But recently, she and her daughters were all diagnosed with EDS. I wonder if those two disorders are commonly confused? It seems like they are because EDS is so difficult to diagnose.

    • @leahdragon
      @leahdragon Před 4 lety +1

      Trista Kittle It’s possible she has both as I have hEDS AND fibromyalgia

  • @JennaGetsCreative
    @JennaGetsCreative Před 4 lety +19

    This is making me think of a story I read a few years back about a blind dressage rider who wasn't allowed to compete in the Paralympics unless she agreed to wear a blindfold because she had light/shadow perception and that wasn't "blind enough."

    • @SlavinChris
      @SlavinChris Před 4 lety +2

      That is to level the field for certain classifications. Is she has functional vision where it may benefit her while competing against others that have no functional vision at all. What other alternative would you suggest to make sure the competition is fair?

    • @JennaGetsCreative
      @JennaGetsCreative Před 4 lety +4

      @@SlavinChris In that particular case her light/shadow perception would not be enough functional vision to help with the sport of dressage. Dressage riding is all about getting the horse to do the right movements at the right points in the ring, which for sighted riders are marked with little white lettered cards on the ground at the edges of the arena. Without enough functional vision to see and read those cards, it would be about knowing how far your horse travels at each gate and counting it off. I believe her concern was that they wanted the blindfold at all times on competition day, which she felt made handling horses in busier spaces outside of her competition time in the arena unsafe because she can normally tell by shadows that there's another horse passing close by.

  • @isabelhicks7313
    @isabelhicks7313 Před 4 lety +68

    I have hEDS too! Also a part time wheelchair user and retired Army vet.

  • @dystoniacdiaries
    @dystoniacdiaries Před 4 lety +49

    "Fat boy wheezing" 😂😂 Reminds me of Chowder running up the hill "Fat kid running. Fat kid running."

  • @Pela_patate
    @Pela_patate Před 4 lety +29

    The International Federation of Sport Climbing (IFSC) organizes paraclimbing competitions and world cups for disabled climbers and they made a category called "Limited range, power or stability" and it's very wide, it includes a lot of different disabilities and I know that there are a lot of EDS diagnosed climbers. I hope that in Paralimpics, now that climbing is an Olympic sport, they will still include this category.

  • @blitz-o-byte
    @blitz-o-byte Před 4 lety +23

    everyone who says "you're not disabled enough" , if faced with the same pain as you, would quickly change their minds and probably not even have the willpower to stand up and TRY to be active
    Heck i got a muscle injury once (VERY MILD ONE) and i had a lot of freaking pain angling my leg or putting my body weight onto my leg muscles and THAT was enough to make me extremely frustrated that i couldnt move like the rest of people- i cant imagine how it would be to live years with that since i was only injured for a month... That didnt like, show me how it would be like to be disabled but it showed me a TINY portion of the damage it does to your mind

  • @lloydislearning
    @lloydislearning Před 4 lety +40

    EDS representation. Whoo
    Really appreciate how you included the struggles of being diagnosed. Been looking for answers since I was 14 and finally got some at 21. It's a slow process.

  • @weirdoneontheblock
    @weirdoneontheblock Před 4 lety +11

    I can empathized with parts of how she was treated by doctors. Why is it always that the reason for invisible illnesses is that the patient must be lying? Her diagnosis process with the doctors telling her that she's lying and the personal self doubt reminds me SO much of how it was for me to be diagnosed with Celiac Disease. It took me ten years to be diagnosed, and only after having a few times of being in so much pain after eating that it hurt to cry and other worrying symptoms.

  • @mr-huggy
    @mr-huggy Před 4 lety +18

    Yep I agree with her there is a lot of 'not disabled enough' out there. I myself am Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis and I can stand and walk for a few meters till the pain gets too much. I had to fight for 2 years to get a decent wheelchair to meet my needs. When I try to get help with things it's like sorry you don't have X we can't help you.

    • @mamamason289
      @mamamason289 Před 4 lety +2

      I have Primary Progressive MS same amount of mobility as you. Diagnosed 1 year ago, thought that would be it, understanding (I thought) equals management. Turns out there's just so much else to face. I'm still with a cobbled together chair (UK lock down hasn't helped) Getting to see videos like these and reading comments like yours are so valuable, not least to learn the language to discuss or even think things through. Thank you, we are not alone.

  • @RandiPoitras
    @RandiPoitras Před 4 lety +19

    I’m not blind enough for paralympic sports. But not really sighted enough for regular sports either.

  • @WhoAmI2YouNow
    @WhoAmI2YouNow Před 4 lety +43

    Hi there! Another H-EDSer here!
    Really nice to see someone like me here on this channel :) even tho my body is way way way different than hers;
    For me EDS means over 40 dislocations every day, and lot's of internal problems, my spine is curved, twisted and as worn out as someones spine who is 85 (I was told, yay).
    Oh btw I am 24.
    But hey I enjoy life so so much, I can walk a little, so I try to go as far as I can, and a little further.. every day! And on days that I only can walk from bed to the toilet to puke etc,.. I enjoy visualising the world, I try to be creative with my hands, as far as they go.
    What I'm trying to say is: trying your hardest, doing your very very best does not always mean you can play sports or something.. so,, keep it up you, who is reading this ;)
    Oh
    Going in for my first surgery this tuesday,, getting two ostomy's. Will yall think of me? Ghehe ;)

    • @susanschroeder9553
      @susanschroeder9553 Před 4 lety +1

      Bless you both.

    • @bkjftribe
      @bkjftribe Před 4 lety +1

      Another CZcamsr with EDS is Jessica Kelgren-Fozard

    • @tvaholicsquidney
      @tvaholicsquidney Před 4 lety

      I have undiagnosed heds and veds, orthotic dr knows I've got these yet can't diagnose me as he isn't that type of dr, as well as orthotpedic dr said they are pretty certain I've got these as well and have to be seen by a rheumotoligist to get properly diagnosed so for now I just can tell dr's I have jhs, yet most dr's I've met take that to mean it's heds, especially after they ask if I suffer dislocations and when I say yes they say ok it's heds then, I have a brain injury and in the accident damaged my spine, it's curving forwards at the top due to the damage and have shrunk a few inches in height, add in other health issues I've been told I have a strong heart of an old person due to 2 opposite heart conditions that usually only occur in elderly people even though I'm in my 20's, I'm like the girl in the video too disabled for able bodied sports yet not disabled enough for disability sports according to various sporting bodies, tried running but between the health issues and dislocating knee caps I stand no chance of being even in the top half of the runners, it's quite disheartening tbh

  • @ceryshembury6346
    @ceryshembury6346 Před 4 lety +41

    You can’t walk without extreme pain. That is a disability. The Paralympics need to accept this

    • @livewellwitheds6885
      @livewellwitheds6885 Před rokem +4

      I'd also add that often, simply walking & doing other "easy" daily activities can cause injuries! I have eds and have literally been injured just coughing!

    • @whatthehelliot
      @whatthehelliot Před rokem

      ​@@livewellwitheds6885 totally lol, the other day I dislocated my finger closing a drawer 🙃 just a tiny little bit of pressure just totally screwed me up

  • @sunny4lady
    @sunny4lady Před 4 lety +27

    I totally get the whole ''not looking disabled enough''. I have chronic back pain due to a burst fracture of my L4 and L5 which almost left me paralysed. And because I broke both my heel bones, I can walk a maximum of 6 km or 1.5 hours during the span of a whole day, the rest of the time I can't walk more distance due to pain in my feet. So I often use a mobility scooter and I can also use my bike. But nobody would ever know I had a handicap unless I tell them.

  • @virginiagill5902
    @virginiagill5902 Před 4 lety +6

    Watching this made me cry. Two years ago I was diagnosed with myasthenia gravis. A year ago my doctors recommended I start using a wheelchair because I fall so often. Insurance said no, that it’s not a medical necessity for someone with MG. I miss being active, doing things with friends, feeling safe. It’s hard not to give up hope.

  • @ShaunySchippers
    @ShaunySchippers Před 4 lety +61

    Whooo abby. And wheelchair racing i am doing wheelchair racing too and have heds too. Just today i bought my own sport wheelchair. Actuallu the fact that i will never be eligible for the paralympics is so sad. But abby and some others are really great i follow her for a long time on insta and it makes me feel great about the fact that we both never will get there but we still rock. Disabled does not mean you can’t rock

    • @Cosmicsurfpro
      @Cosmicsurfpro Před 4 lety

      Never say never!

    • @blitz-o-byte
      @blitz-o-byte Před 4 lety

      well, dont say never :o I know it must suck and i cant even comprehend how much, but hope it changes one day and you can compete and be aknowledged for your real hardships

  • @susanschroeder9553
    @susanschroeder9553 Před 4 lety +34

    Dear God!!! I needed to see this. I was diagnosed with MS six years ago and RA two years ago. I am not chair bound and actually my MS is doing better than the RA!! It SUCKS I’m not disabled enough to get disability because I’m not in a wheelchair but I suffer with debilitating pain. Even all my labs for inflammatory responses are usually in the panic value side of high (because I’m constantly having to push myself to get thru the day and then pay for it later). Thanks for posting this. I don’t feel as crazy now.

    • @artfranklin5406
      @artfranklin5406 Před 4 lety +2

      Hey Susan, you’re not crazy. Sorry about your pain. I have MS (secondary progressive) and in a wheelchair. Keep a positive outlook.

    • @susanschroeder9553
      @susanschroeder9553 Před 4 lety +1

      Art Franklin thanks art. I feel pretty lucky my MS is stable. But my RA gives me grief all the time which causes MS flare ups. It’s a delicate balance. I wish you the best of luck. I’m just trying to educate myself as much as possible before I progress so much that being wheelchair bound doesn’t send me spiraling out of control. Idk. This is all very new to me in a way.

  • @tjeanvlogs9894
    @tjeanvlogs9894 Před 4 lety +2

    Quick correction. Zebra is used to describe people with rare conditions of which EDS is one of the most common. It comes from the common adage taught in medical school "when you hear hoof beats think horses not zebras".
    I have 2 rare conditions (CPS, EDS), mod TBI, and multiple SCI from trauma (concussions and partial transections). My highest injury is C3-C4 with cervical instability at C1-C5.
    Not all zebras have EDS.
    Even though I am considered by rehab to be a high functioning quad, because I can still use my legs (20 years rehab I have learned to use the elasticity and my hypermobility to be upright a bit), I am not disabled enough either. If I hadn't worked so hard, I would qualify.

  • @janar.3633
    @janar.3633 Před 4 lety +12

    I'm getting chills to see this. I have hEDS, too diagnosed after 11 years.
    We're zebras and we're enough disabled to compete. They should learn how rough each day is for us.

  • @jennifertate8930
    @jennifertate8930 Před 4 lety +10

    I’m so glad I found your channel. I’m a part time wheelchair user depending on my level of pain. When this started, I was ashamed to use a chair. I had one for in the house, but wouldn’t use it in public. I felt I couldn’t use store motorized carts because they were for other people. I cut trips short, and found myself grasping for things to hold myself up. When I finally broke down to using a chair in public it was physically freeing, but mentally I just gave up a little of who I am. I figured I’m just an “old lady” now. Drab, boring, unable to do much. When I found your channel I realized first... I had the wrong size chair. Second, I don’t have to give up being me. I’m bright and colorful, and I don’t have to completely give up. You inspire me to find out what I can do. 💖

  • @rosejanet4066
    @rosejanet4066 Před 4 lety +8

    I am ECSTATIC that we found you! My son Christian is 19 yrs old and hes a congenital amputee and facing all kinds of emotional, mental issues. Being his mom I can only do so much to help him grow as a strong , confident, an all around perfectly abled young man. You are helping in more ways I can even mention......you are helping in ways that I cannot!!!! All I can do is express by words just how grateful I am......for YOU!!! Keep up all your awesome, life altering ways!!!! ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️🇨🇦

  • @bio-tech169
    @bio-tech169 Před 4 lety +33

    as a fellow zebra, i am very curious how the track wheelchair affects her shoulders, elbows, and wrists. I was cringing thinking about how much pain that would cause me with hitting the wheels like that. my whole body is affected, but more towards the top of my body so maybe that is part of it.

    • @FiMilton
      @FiMilton Před 4 lety +7

      Yes I can just feel my shoulders and wrists dislocating

    • @eracqoon
      @eracqoon Před 3 lety

      Practice and being very careful most likely but yeah I can just imagine how much that would hurt

    • @neekaphillipstaliesintoo8790
      @neekaphillipstaliesintoo8790 Před 2 lety +1

      as an edser, wheelchair user for 9 years,if shes like me the sheer constant in use exercise its keeping muscles strong and then theyre able to support joints better, from my waist down ive damage to my lower back and my lower half has worsened over the 9 years, but im really strong up top, thumbs slip out alot fingers sometimes but over time ive built my upper body realatively well. shes doing much more than me and that is whats helping to hold her in place

  • @thekoo2011
    @thekoo2011 Před 4 lety +10

    This is sooo educational. Thank you Richard and Abby. I sure hope the Paralympic committee sees this. Keep rollin!

  • @beautifulmisfit2000
    @beautifulmisfit2000 Před 4 lety +115

    My legs at the start of this video: we hurt but we're okay.
    My legs after this video: we died!
    😂😂😂😂😂

  • @Naomi-ty4wf
    @Naomi-ty4wf Před 4 lety +21

    I love the look of racing chairs they look so cool.

  • @8wheelsracing
    @8wheelsracing Před 4 lety +16

    Fellow sport chair and off-road rolator user, and hand cycle athlete here with a neuro disorder. Definitely keep highlighting all the different experiences of the ways we use a bunch of different tools depending on what we’re doing and how we feel.

  • @debraking4982
    @debraking4982 Před 4 lety +3

    I am a zebra too! It’s very affirming and uplifting to even have your disease mentioned. Finding one less person I have to explain this to made me crack into a big giant smile

  • @tiatitanic9302
    @tiatitanic9302 Před 3 lety +2

    I have hEDS & a spinal cord injury!! From a cliff accident. I'm a libra too so I feel balanced & represented haha this is great for such a niche person like me; thank you!! You do so much. I admire it.

  • @aerellejones5949
    @aerellejones5949 Před 4 lety +2

    Hi Abby and Richard. I am a fan of both of your channels. I am a wheelchair track racer who qualifies for the Paralympics. I have a congenital disability which presents with symptoms similar to spina bifida. I totally agree that there are problems with the current paralympic classification systems. Trying to categorize disability is really hard. There is such a wide range. Even within the current system there are gaps. I fall in between classifications and have to compete against those with more ability than me. The paralympics has the hard job of pairing us with equally able athletes and not splitting us up so much we don't have competition. I have been in races at track meets with only three athletes because of classification. Abby, I wish you could compete! We need more people like you in our world! I'm so glad you continue to race even though you are not classified. Richard, I think there should be change. Those of us within the system kind of hate it. Unfortunately, as sad as it is I don't see change coming anytime soon.
    If you want a different look at the struggle of qualifying for the Paralympics, check out this video: czcams.com/video/Y5F_ha7d-PI/video.html. Those who are honest are punished for those who are dishonest.

  • @wereyouaking
    @wereyouaking Před 4 lety +8

    I can only imagine how tough it must be having EDS.
    I dislocated my knee quite badly several years ago and it happened about 3 times again in the 2 years I was waiting for surgery. I can say that those 2 years were horrible. Constant anxiety and nervousness on what people are doing around you because you don't want to get pushed or nudged in the wrong way, not to mention the pain and muscle weakness from all the trauma.

    • @clarytaylor8582
      @clarytaylor8582 Před 4 lety +3

      pretty much exactly what EDS is like :/ there’s a lot of fear about even going out of the house because it’s so easy to injure yourself.

  • @rtlamb
    @rtlamb Před 4 lety +3

    I too have a partially ambulatory disability, It isn't about "can I walk"? It much more about "how far can I walk"? Not very far at all. My disability robs me of the energy to do "normal life". Whatever the hell normal is right? A LOT of what you discussed resonated well with me. Being partially ambulatory is both a blessing and a curse. It's handy as hell when compared to zero ambulatory but can bend people's brains when they see me stand up from my powered wheelchair to stretch after sitting in my chair for eight hours or more. Thank you for sharing your story Amy! And keep rockin it Richard!

  • @tuvahelzulvestad6387
    @tuvahelzulvestad6387 Před 4 lety +16

    I've watched all your episodes but this one is the best I've seen so far. It really touched my heart. I got rid of my wheelchair 5 years ago because I was able to walk again. But I have a lot of pain and low mobility. I've taken the step ordering a new one. A custom with smartdrive and I'm getting it in a couple of weeks. It's a really hard process accepting that my life is going to be higher quality in the chair, when I actually can walk. But like you said in some other videos, it causes so much pain and isn't worth it. Thank you for this video ❤️

    • @caroljohnson3698
      @caroljohnson3698 Před 4 lety +1

      Hugs. I use a chair and walker when i can. Good days and bad days means wheelchair almost always. Good luck to you

    • @Plebku
      @Plebku Před 4 lety

      What was your level of injury and how long did it take for you to recover?

    • @caroljohnson3698
      @caroljohnson3698 Před 4 lety

      Plebku if you mean me... i had spinal myelitis. Hit T1 Right side movement had a good return. Maybe 85%. Left is hip initiation and LOTS of extension. Some spasms. No hot/cold/ wet sensation.

  • @lizkimber
    @lizkimber Před 4 lety +9

    hehe, i love your comment "fat boy wheezing" .. due to my asthma I wheeze almost thinking about doing anything and i say stuff like that about myself :) thanks for making me smile

  • @clairbby1123
    @clairbby1123 Před 4 lety +3

    i recently went on vacation and i have severe fatigue and a tachycardia disorder, and i don’t have my own wheelchair - i don’t have a diagnosis yet so we aren’t sure if it’s gonna be a long term thing - so i borrowed my great grandmother’s for vacation, as she doesn’t use it often. i have 100% ability to walk and while we were at a restaurant a family saw me stand up to adjust my position in the chair, because i was sitting on something. they began to give me dirty looks and whisper to each other (loud enough for me to hear most of what they were saying). it really got to me that they thought i wasn’t disabled enough to be in a wheelchair, because if i would have walked further than a few feet that day, i probably would have passed out, therefore i needed the aid of a wheelchair. it kind of makes me happy to see more ambulatory wheelchair users :)

  • @woodfordtheservicegolden884

    Thanks for covering my illness! It made me straight up cry when you validated what we feel and go through in the beginning. I've had to hold off on watching this one because i knew that would happen. I can't tell you how much I appreciate this one, Richard!

  • @alienmissy4836
    @alienmissy4836 Před 4 lety +7

    I feel like there needs to be more awareness around ambulatory/part time wheelchair use. I mean, almost everything in the medical world needs more awareness... but; I have fibromyalgia which in my case is pretty severe. I mean, it's not a dangerous illness or anything, it's "just" muscle, joint and nerve pain, but in my case the muscle pain is so bad that I can't walk for more than maybe 100 meters at a time. So I have a wheelchair for when I need to go places. I've been judged by other people with fibromyalgia, where they said "i have fibromyalgia too and I don't need a wheelchair so why would you need one?" And someone with a different diagnose that said "why do you need a wheelchair for endometriosis and fibromyalgia? I have *****(I don't remember what she said she had🙈) and even I don't need a wheelchair)". I never said that endometriosis is a reason for why I need a wheelchair, I don't know why she put that in there😂
    You can have the exact same diagnose and the exact same symptoms but still have a different experience.
    I get it that people who don't know anything about certain diagnoses get confused about why someone with that diagnose needs a wheelchair.. but just the fact that you can get judged by people in the chronic illness community, especially when they have the same diagnose, is just unbelievable tbhx)
    Sorry for the long comment, I just needed to get it out somewhere where there might be someone who understands😂😂

  • @christophjannek5398
    @christophjannek5398 Před 4 lety +3

    For a moment there, when he took off in the racing chair, I thought she'd keep up in her regular one just to rub it in! :D

  • @princeloup5093
    @princeloup5093 Před rokem

    Thank you so much. Late diagnosed HEDS at 33 yo, now 39 yo, i finally have my first wheelchair. It's amazing i can finally move without be just focused to try to avoid the pain or not scream because of it. I can finally be present in the moment and take a look around me and not where my feets goes. I had the chance to live in the Nederland and here i have absolutely nothing to pay for my wheelchair. Because of my HEDS i live in poverty since ever, despite working since my 17 years-old. And the idea that a lot of us are denied proper care all around the world made my blood boil of angriness and sadness. The idea that you have to fight to have access to mobility aid that allow to be a member of society is so unfair. Some goes for genetic testing. So unfair that you have to fight to long to have access to it.
    Thank both of you to bring awareness on disability. And thank you so much Wheels2Walking for your educational video. It really helped me to embrace my new freedom with pride and gratefullness.
    Now i gonna go for a "roll" enjoy the sun and read a book and wander in my city, things that i couldn 't do before having my wheelchair.

  • @FreddotheWheelchairGuy
    @FreddotheWheelchairGuy Před 4 lety +7

    Man that’s really sad story. Thanks for sharing that with us Abby ❤️

  • @MonkeyDAmy
    @MonkeyDAmy Před 4 lety +4

    OMG !! That’s so cool that you guys made a collab !! 🥰😍😱🦽💖

  • @FirstMateMist
    @FirstMateMist Před 4 lety +1

    I am so happy that I found this video. The way you set out to educate other people about disability is amazing. Not every disabled person is fully wheelchair bound or can't walk, it really sets a good example for others to learn from. I may be fine but I know a few people who have struggled even getting a diagnosis or even a good pain management system because doctors didn't believe them.
    More education is needed for everyone and your video is amazing for this. Keep up the awesome work :D I am subscribing now so I can keep watching more x

  • @Helena_882
    @Helena_882 Před 3 lety +1

    I have EDS, a TBI from a brain tumor, autonomic neuropathy, dysautonomia, gastroperisis asthma and balance issues and I STILL will get flack for being in a wheelchair with "working" legs!
    I have even gotten flack when I used to use my walker! Sometimes I think people just need someone to pick on and they go for the easiest target. Over time I learned that that says more about them than it does me.

  • @kayleighwebster7826
    @kayleighwebster7826 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi Richard and Abby, thank you for making this video! I have recently been diagnosed with hEDS and fibromyalgia, its taken me 16 years to get a diagnosis but I am glad to have it as it explains why my body is so wonky! The part where you guys talk about using a wheelchair hit the nail on the head for me, I always thought of it (for myself) as giving up, but now I am able to articulate to people how using the wheelchair is 10000% better for me due to pain, fatigue and dislocations/sublaxations and other general wonkiness. great to know I have another Hedser to follow now :) thanks again for making the video :)

  • @BirchLeafPhotography
    @BirchLeafPhotography Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome! Richard, I've commented before (talking about your "dude" podcasts lol) and can't tell you how much I appreciate this video. It's definitely one of your top 5 in my book. I too have hEDS, CRPS, and a metabolic bone disease plus others. These diagnoses are so misunderstood and more common than even doctors realize. Abby's experience mirrors mine in many ways, and even though it took 35 years to get diagnosed (20+ years ago), I still run into barriers. I finally committed to nearly full time wheelchair use a year ago, and you've been a huge part of my journey. Thanks to you and Abby ever so much for this video. I can't wait to share it with others.

  • @searchfield
    @searchfield Před 4 lety +2

    I'm so glad you featured someone with EDS! I have hypermobile EDS too and I'm an ambulatory crutch/wheelchair user. My health and my mobility vary a lot I constantly struggle with feeling bad for everything I /can/ do physically - like when my neighbours catch me walking I feel bad thinking they must think i don't really need the wheelchair.. but I do!
    I was stuck in bed/in a powerchair and extremely weak last year but I used this lockdown to get myself a manual chair and get strong enough to push it. It still causes me pain and dislocations but I am so proud of myself and feel much more able-bodied pushing my chair! I want to get a handcycle as that looks much easier than regular pushing or how Abby pushes the racing chair. Thank you for the inspiration!!

  • @_Claire_Louise_
    @_Claire_Louise_ Před 4 lety +5

    I also have EDS! I'm in a weird place with it right now where I can't do any 'normal' sports but I don't use a wheelchair yet (I use a mix of a stick, crutches and soon a walker) so I can't get involved in disability sports. I really miss being as active as I was as a child where I did gymnastics for years until I was too broken to carry on but at that point we didn't know why. Thank you so much for doing this video, it was really interesting

    • @SLMTx3
      @SLMTx3 Před 4 lety

      If you're interested/able to take part in wheelchair basketball, a lot of clubs also take non-wheelchair users, you're just worth a different number of points!

  • @pyro2521
    @pyro2521 Před 4 lety +2

    I use a wheelchair when I'm out of the house because I have POTS and I've been told that I have no reason to be in the chair or that I'm not disabled. I really don't feel like I fit in this community and it's so disheartening.

  • @celestevanveenen6005
    @celestevanveenen6005 Před 4 lety +5

    Abby, you are so amazing and i truly hope hEDS, marfans and other connective tissue disorders become recognized for the paralympics!! xoxo a fellow zebra

  • @Sebby444
    @Sebby444 Před 4 lety +1

    6:43 the punch to the steering thing was on time with the song lol

  • @Jeppe.P.Bjerget
    @Jeppe.P.Bjerget Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for a great video. To show that people are maybe 90 % wheelchair users, but can walk foe a small distance, maybe make it easier to understand. I would be happy if you make more videos like that. I been in a wheelchair for about 10 years. I wish you bouth a great week. Best wishes from Jan in Norway

  • @HellonWheels777
    @HellonWheels777 Před 4 lety +14

    Can someone explain how EDS isn't disabling enough? Are ableds the ones making the decisions?

  • @karinnewilber7268
    @karinnewilber7268 Před 4 lety +2

    This was super awesome and informative. I love that if I ever needed a wheelchair, there is a community our there to encourage. I love watching you channel regardless if i ever need the encouragement as a wheelchair user or not. I'm encouraged in my day to day life by this channel as an able bodied person. Keep it up!!!

  • @notyeti
    @notyeti Před 4 lety +1

    hEDS guy here. I wasn’t diagnosed until I was 28 (40 now) and what Abby said about people thinking you’re faking is sadly very true. Growing up in the 80s and 90s EDS wasn’t really a thing, you were just lazy or weak and making it all up.
    I’m so happy that people are starting to recognise how complex a condition it is and how it affects us. Gives me some hope that people bring diagnosed now won’t have to put up with the crap I had to.

  • @auggieb2681
    @auggieb2681 Před 4 lety +1

    Ive been a fan of your channel for a while and it helped me transition to being a part time wheelchair user. I have hEDS and it is so wonderful and happy to see how great you handled this topic! It is so great to see representation done well and I am really glad you had someone with EDS on your channel. Made me whole day!

  • @Azaythzara
    @Azaythzara Před 4 lety +1

    I loved hearing her story as someone who is still trying to get diagnosed I found it interesting. I also hate getting the you’re not disabled enough for a wheelchair or for handicap parking. Even though I can’t walk or stand for long periods of time and I’m constantly subluxing or dislocating my knees and hips.

  • @jadehobbs6648
    @jadehobbs6648 Před 3 lety

    This made me smile I love watching you. I have eds and it took me 3 years to get diagnosed. It's still hard now. Only a couple of people know that I use a chair when I am on a bad day. Glad you are making this condition known. So thanks. I have bad knees and my hypomobity is not good my knee goes all the time when I walk. I have chronic pain in all my body. So thank you for sharing this.

  • @shimmyalot
    @shimmyalot Před 4 lety +5

    I saw the title as was immediately like I bet you this is one of my EDS peeps!

    • @sarahbrassard3285
      @sarahbrassard3285 Před 4 lety

      Katie-did omg same,I opened and was like it too good to be true!

  • @edswarriorzebra
    @edswarriorzebra Před 4 lety +3

    Love the channel, great video with Abby. Need to see more positive role models for EDS and other disabilities. I have EDS classical type, basically all the hypermobility stuff plus skin badly affected & CRPS. Always amuses me that I can dislocate my knee/hip/shoulder when at family events / with friends & put it back into place without the people around me ever knowing. There's a famous 'Little Britain' comedy show with Matt Lucas and David Walliams, where wheelchair user gets up and walks when his friend that pushes wheelchair is distracted.

    • @edswarriorzebra
      @edswarriorzebra Před 4 lety +2

      Took 35yrs for me to get diagnosed with EDS in uk, lost count of being told pain was in my head / exaggerated, turned out I had all the classic symptoms but no doctor thought all the daily dislocations of various joints were connected! My wheelchair set me free, gave me independence, my spinal injury friends were an inspiration when I needed it most, taught me to dance in my chair when I got married, to not be defined by my disability.

  • @tyreebrownart
    @tyreebrownart Před 4 lety +1

    Omg! Your story is so powerful ❤️. I’m annoyed that the doctors shunned you off that way, it is a shame. God bless Abby!

  • @paraplegicpianist7890
    @paraplegicpianist7890 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the great video! I'm a T8 incomplete. Where I live (Austria) they use the term "incomplete" for not knowing what is causing paralysis and if there is even a reason for it. This means that whenever it comes to applying for funding or support, it will be rejected. It's not even about not being disabled enough, but about the question of being disabled at all.

  • @boeiing747
    @boeiing747 Před měsícem

    Wow, I'm glad to hear that you got relatively early diagnosed! I mean I had a journey of art least 30 years .... I was in pain and had a lot of different physical problems and physical abuse by doctors ... since my early youth ... Now 50 years old and diagnosed June 2020, also with hEDS.

  • @Shannonbarnesdr1
    @Shannonbarnesdr1 Před 3 lety

    I completely understand !!! i am a part time wheelchair user, i have hyper mobile joints and mild cp and when i walk you can see a slight different gait, sometimes a little limp, and a touch of ''uncoordinated movments'' compared to the norm, but because its mild people even many many social workers have said, '' you dont need that wheelchair'' you are fine, yu walk fine, never mind that i fatiuge and balance gets worse through the day if i walk all day, greatly compromising my independence, and abilities,.... i actually got rid of social services, i am completely on my own as i spent 20 years oin those systems and none of them helped me, they either saw me as incapable, and incompetent, no matter how confident and assertive i put myself out to them and others, or i was regularly ridiculed for my use of a wheelchair, and them being critical and doubting my so called disabilities because i can walk, i can shoot hoops, i can ride a bike ect. but i cant walk 2 miles to the store and 2 miles bacvck with groceries, i cant walk around all day long, plus my wheels enable me to keep up and be at the same pace and fater then non disableds, go all day fully independently and safely... that being said, when i go for jobs and or training, i dont take my wjeels because unfortunately the chair has hindered mne big time in jobs because theyare so afraid of liability, me getting hurt, every time i got toa job or training interview without it,i got accepted, ALMOST EVERY TIME I HAD MY WHEELS, I WAS DENIED THE JOB OR TRAINING OPPORTUNITY, AND ALSO HAVE FREQUENTLY BEEN ASKED, 'ARE YOU RELIABLE'', even though every job i had showed up every, single, day, on time, gave no less than 110 percent, was always praised about how well i did my work / duties... also been questioned frequently HOW DO YOU GET UP AND DOWN, HOW CAN YOU REACH OR SIT IN OUR CHAIRS ECT... I EXPLAIN HOW ND EVEN DEMONSTRATE THAT ITS NO PROBLEM, but still got turned down every time when i was in my whjeelchair, and again regulrarly asked and doubted about my ability to move function safely at the job or training site.

  • @RhysBrattle
    @RhysBrattle Před 3 lety +1

    I have HEDS and I use a wheelchair. I'm so happy u did a colab with her.

    • @RhysBrattle
      @RhysBrattle Před 3 lety +1

      I dislocated my Hip in 2019 since then ive been in constant pain it gets too painful to walk and i used a crutch to get around but over the 2 years the pains gotten too bad to where ive had to get a wheelchair to get some independence back as my GP wouldn't get me one under the NHS. My current Wheelchair isn't fitted to me its just generic but its so freeing compaired to what i had before. most days i couldnt get out of bed without help. ive been critisied being told im faking coz my hip still seriously hurts after my dislocation that happened 2 years ago that never healed. I hope HEDS can be allowed into the Paralympics soon

  • @BasicParaStuffwithCoachVic

    Nice to see you out there racing! I used to wheelchair race back in 1990-1993. Racing chairs have changed a lot, as well as the gloves. Great sport though. I do the hand-cycle riding/racing now. Keep moving!

  • @sharonw.9091
    @sharonw.9091 Před 4 lety

    In March 2013 my husband developed Gillian Barre Syndrome, GBS, after an upper respiratory infection. He was paralyzed from the neck down for a year. Unfortunately he is one of the 20-30% who suffered permanent nerve damage and he is a quadriplegic. He feels everything but some of his nerves don't receive messages from his brain telling them to move.

  • @katlady5000
    @katlady5000 Před 4 lety +4

    I would love to see you work with someone who has MS. It's difficult with MS to determine when you need certain equipment and I have seen people who should use a walker of a wheelchair use a cane or those hiking poles and they fall down a lot because MS isn't a clear path and it's different for everyone. My is mainly in my spinal cord so I don't get brain fog but I have big problems with mobility.

  • @emilyk5285
    @emilyk5285 Před 8 měsíci

    I’ve just come across this video - thank you for posting. I’m sorry these conditions are not “disabled enough” - I hope that a class will be created in time given the increasing numbers of potential Paralympians who don’t meet the current disability standards but are clearly disabled, as in Abby’s case (it is clear she would not be able to run safely). Best wishes to both of you.

  • @alexandramissretro5106

    I have hEDS too! I'm so happy to see this video! I was diagnosed a few months ago after literal years of begging doctors for answers. My hypermobile joints were ignored because I was a ballerina and hypermobility to certain extent is almost a necessity for that sport. I blamed all the joint pain on the fact that standing on your toes and going to six or eight hour practices isn't really what the body is designed for. My other health problems were blamed on anxiety and the random bouts of fatigue on depression. It wasn't until I conquered my mental health issues that I was taken seriously after I started having bizarre nerve issues and had some of my first full dislocations. I hadn't heard of joint hypermobility syndrome or EDS until a youtuber mentioned it and I looked it up. It described me perfectly and I brought it to my doctor. Thankfully I have a wonderful doctor who took me seriously. I feel like I'm at a point where I can reclaim my life with the support I need! People like Abby encourage me so much.

  • @korazuko7389
    @korazuko7389 Před 4 lety +1

    Reading all these comments is so inspiring. I don't have physical disabilities that you can see, but I have a ton of mental and internal disabilities. (I think the number is around 10 or so?) I try and tell myself every single day how proud I am of myself for what I'm doing considering all of the shit that's wrong with my body. I've actually started trying to make my bed thanks to your depression video. Kinda feels nice. Anyway. Love your educational videos. Keep up the good work of breaking down disabled barriers. :)

  • @JohnR31415
    @JohnR31415 Před 4 lety +4

    As someone who uses a chair due to a lack of function of the vestibular system (nothing musculoskeletal) I have the same “issue”, I’d love to have a decent effort at a racing chair... but there’s no para classification for me...

    • @SteveisTall
      @SteveisTall Před 4 lety

      Sure, you might not be classifiable but why should that stop you having fun.

    • @JohnR31415
      @JohnR31415 Před 4 lety +1

      partly funding, chairs aren’t cheap, partly because I know that I would benefit more from being able to meet train and compete with people than just going to a track on my own. That’s a personality thing rather than anything else.

  • @xlovingxxlifex
    @xlovingxxlifex Před 2 lety

    I had a gut feeling when I saw the thumbnail/title that she had EDS. I myself have cEDS and use a cane or forearm crutches when I’m struggling. It’s like being caught between two worlds. Too disabled to function like health people but viewed as not quite disabled enough to be included in things meant for the disabled population. Not only is it a spectrum but the impact of the disorder can vary greatly. Sometimes I can live a few consecutive days without much pain or problems and then the next week I’m unable to do anything without help. So glad I found your channel recently!

  • @rage6806
    @rage6806 Před 4 lety

    I love that you are adding more chair disabilities to things. I am a most time user, we are still working on a diagnosis. My life was hell until I bought a stock chair and a week later i got to go to the mall for the first time in years because I couldnt walk around it before. I slowly worked up to a 3rd hand, well used rigid chair. and its still making my life livable now, even though i worry about it breaking.

  • @danielniffenegger7698
    @danielniffenegger7698 Před 4 lety

    I wasn’t diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome (Now High Functioning Autism/Autism Spectrum Disorder) until I was four years or so into college. I’m not in a wheelchair but having a neurological disorder has its own challenges. It took a decade to get the assistance I needed.

  • @arobertson28
    @arobertson28 Před 4 lety +1

    Love this!!!! Fellow hEDS'er and (nearly) full time wheelchair user here, this was such a great video 💞

  • @jlastre
    @jlastre Před rokem

    I was just diagnosed on October 7 with lupus. Can very much relate to doctors being skeptical of your pain. I think I’ve had symptoms for six years.

  • @mazj2749
    @mazj2749 Před 4 lety +3

    I have GHSD so Generalised Hypermobility Spectrum Disorder, mine mimics EDS. I dislocate, I have damaged joints, I have POTS, i have secondary fibromylagia, hip impingement, TMJ issues, muscle patterning issues. I used a electric chair because the manual ones pop my shoulders out and my finger has dictated wheeling. Im a Zebra too. Took 10 years to get diagnosed

  • @megan1mcevoy
    @megan1mcevoy Před 4 lety +1

    I am also a disabled athlete who is completely unclassifiable, since the rule change in 2012. I was put forward to compete at a world cup for wheelchair fencing for GBR only to be told my disability doesn't count and I would no longer be on a paralympic pathway.
    There are many athletes in the same situation across multiple sports, so thank you for bringing this issue up as it doesn't get the attention it deserves. The worst bit is that because you can't be classified a lot of national sporting bodies exclude you from grassroots levels.

  • @Jesterfaerie93
    @Jesterfaerie93 Před 4 lety

    I actually started crying when I saw this video because I have EDS Type 3, or H-EDS as she says, and it is extremely hard to actually get diagnosed with it because most doctors either won't take me seriously because I am a plus size person or because since the genetic coding is not mapped for this type of EDS you can't get a genetic test for it. It is all based on examination and it is so hard for a doctor to take it seriously. I had to beg for my wheelchair after months of walking getting more and more painful. My aunt was diagnosed years ago but refused to let me see the doctor so I am not fighting to just live now. Thank you for bringing light to people with this disorder!!!!

  • @the_lexolotl
    @the_lexolotl Před 4 lety +1

    I have Classical EDS and am constantly told I'm not disabled enough. In the UK wheelchairs are funded/ partially funded by the NHS but I'm not eligible because I'm not disabled enough, so I'm fundraising for my own chair so I can get out the house without constantly being in agony

  • @cydnicaldwell1337
    @cydnicaldwell1337 Před 4 lety

    I'm an older person with degenerative disc disease, herniated discs (4 total - 3 in neck & 1 at waistline). I have a walker for semi-bad days and a wheelchair for very bad days. Most of my mobility problems stem from sciatica & pain. I've had people look at me (as I'm overweight) when grocery shopping (I use electric scooters in stores; where available) look as me as if I'm being lazy & heard comments in the same vein. Pain is very debilitating so standing to get something from the top shelf is not comfortable. It took me 4 years to get government disability & I only got it due to my age (turned 55) the year I got my approval. So you can look perfectly normal on the outside and still be disabled. Just because, in an emergency, you can take a few steps doesn't mean you're not disabled & in pain. Keep fighting & educating the public and especially the Para-Olympic people. Hearing the words hyper mobility gives most individuals the idea that you can move better than normal. Educating the ones saying you aren't disabled enough to qualify and that hypermobility is an advantage are only hearing the word and not really understanding what they actually mean in medical terms. Medically hyper refers to to much and hypo is to little. They shouldn't call the unconscious dislocations as hyper mobility and should use hypo joint stability which mean the same but hyper leads most non-medical people to associate that word as meaning you move very well and easily instead of the opposite.

  • @rachelwunderle8096
    @rachelwunderle8096 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm so glad to see this video because I'm not paralyzed but I do have a movement disorder that started to progress when I was 16 and people wouldn't believe me and then when I was 19 I was finally diagnosed with Sialidosis type 1 and I had to start using a walker and then right after college my progression was so bad I was in a wheelchair and have been ever since. And people get very confused when they see me.

  • @Shorty24136
    @Shorty24136 Před 4 lety

    Thank you I really needed this... I mentioned to someone that I was recommended to get a wheelchair I was told I was 'giving up'

  • @phxf
    @phxf Před 4 lety +3

    Really cool to see a Zebra on the channel! Thanks to Richard for really getting some diversity on this platform! Really has me thinking about if I might enjoy racing. It makes a lot of sense for my body. I’m wondering if there’s anything we can do as a community to push back at the paralympic committee and create some more pressure and advocacy. It seems to me like, if you’re racing in a racing chair, even if you were totally able bodied, it’s hard to see what advantage you’d have? like, why even restrict access to it?

  • @nor0845
    @nor0845 Před 8 měsíci

    9:22 I wish Abby well in both her life and career.
    As someone new to my wheelchair, sport is something I very much want to get (back) into.
    Excellent video. Thank you for posting.

  • @choconutty9511
    @choconutty9511 Před 4 lety

    As soon as I read the title of this video in my recommend, I knew it would be about hEDS. Thanks for the awareness. Great video.

  • @prihaps
    @prihaps Před 3 lety +1

    Yup! I use a wheelchair for long distances or hot days. I have MS and ligamentous laxity which can be similar to EDS.

  • @AuthenticMage
    @AuthenticMage Před 4 lety

    I also have hEDS, to get diagnosed I literally had to dislocate my hips, knees, and ankles in front of the doctor to be believed. Then they did xrays and MRI which showed that my joints were very damaged. I was 30 at diagnosis. I recently finally got approved for wheelchair by my doctor.

  • @silkedavid8876
    @silkedavid8876 Před 4 lety +1

    I always wondered how the racing chairs work and how people sit in them. Great that you got to experience that!
    EDS is such a horrible condition, it made me feel quite sick when she described it. Really horrible that it takes so long to get diagnosed and to be believed. Good for Abby that she is not giving up, and hopefully she will= be able to enjoy her sports for long time to come.

  • @Rebeccarochelle22
    @Rebeccarochelle22 Před 4 lety +5

    Finally I hear someone having the same condition as me (CRPS).

  • @GingerKiwiDev
    @GingerKiwiDev Před 2 lety

    Yeah a fellow Zebra! Totally love the racing chair. I just discovered the freedom that a wheelchair can give me after borrowing a courtesy one at a museum on my birthday last week. My ankle had sprained itself again and I’m so over having to calculate how long I have before my dizziness means I need to sit (crowds with people jostling me or getting too close to my canes suck).
    I’m a former trail runner, have canoe guided, xc ski raced including the Canadian Ski Marathon, and am a dancer (though taking classes have been out for several years now). Having the wheelchair at the museum meant I could go fast again! And have less pain (ankles, Achilles, right hip, and now right knee have chronic issues/sublux themselves) AND not get seriously dizzy when I stopped. I’m looking forward to getting my own chair (will likely take 1-2 years) as well as my future service dog.
    Thanks for featuring a zebra! Would love to see someone with dysautonomia (like POTS, orthostatic intolerance, …) though there’s a decent chance they’d also be zebras … because many of us are dizzy zebras.

  • @baddiepigen
    @baddiepigen Před 4 lety

    I'm a new wheelchair user. I'm diagnosed with hypermobilitysyndrome and fibromyalgia. It's great to see others with same problems

  • @Alex-fm5mo
    @Alex-fm5mo Před 4 lety +1

    I have EDS too and while watching this my jaw popped out like 7 times.

  • @redsorgum
    @redsorgum Před 4 lety

    Way to go, Abby! 👏👏👏👏👏👏In a way, those of us who have fibromyalgia, go through some similar circumstances. There are no genetic markers or blood test to show what we have. A lot of people don’t wanna believe there’s such a thing. It also takes some time for some sufferers to get a diagnosis. Keep up the great work, Richard. It’s great that you continue to Spotlight the different types of disabilities.

  • @brooklynsalisbury5625
    @brooklynsalisbury5625 Před 4 lety +1

    *This was so good! I always love your content. I would love to see more videos of wheelchair users with various different disabilities. Keep up the epic work!*