There are very few stories out there about what life looks like for a disability family after the parents are gone, so I’m offering ours up as a gift

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I care too much about the other siblings who are carrying time-bombs of their own. I care too much about the parents who are doing their best to protect their children. I want to draw a map where no map exists because I know there are people still navigating the wilderness I left behind. I want you to have a better journey than I had.

https://sibstoryca.wordpress.com/2021/03/29/stories

Radhe and Feni came to find the sole purpose of ABILITAS.ID’s existence

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Thanks to all of ABILITAS.ID’s team, the project has seen so many developments and breakthroughs in just one year. We now have 85 students, seven school partners, four programs, 104 volunteers, and seven sponsors. These achievements would have never happened if Radhe and Feni decided to abandon their visions and never created ABILITAS.ID purpose.

https://abilitas.id/2020/09/13/abilitas-id-in-a-year-going-back-to-the-roots

I finally had words to describe what I have been experiencing all my life as a blind person living in the sighted world, and more broadly, as a disabled person living in the world primarily designed for nondisabled people

Keywords: guest blog posts , ada , ada 30 in color , americans with disabilities act , asian american disabled people , disability activism , disability community , disability studies , disabled immigrants , education , families , korean americans , mewl , model minority myth

I was learning about disability history that I had never been taught before. I was learning about the laws that enabled me to have a seat in a world class university lecture hall as a blind student. Most important, I felt like I was given the permission to celebrate and embrace my disability. I felt empowered. 

https://disabilityvisibilityproject.com/2020/07/19/building-bridges-as-a-disabled-korean-immigrant