Yesterday, I posted this on facebook:
(Sorry, not sure why it's not sized right!)
After mentioning things like this, I almost always get the "what's the big deal?" question. I had a whole answer typed out myself...and I wrote a whole novel about it on my facebook page...but then I saw this (copied below)...and who to answer this question better than an individual with Down syndrome?
My daughter's disability is not a joke. It is not something she can change--she will always have an extra chromosome. It is up to the rest of us--those of us on the outside of having special needs--to make a change in the world for those on the inside. If we all rally together, if we each commit to having a society where every member is valued and encouraged; if we encircle those that are different from ourselves with love and respect, the world will change. I know it. Will you be part of the solution? Will you go take the pledge right now and make a change?
From the Special Olympics Fan Community Discussion Board:
Why the word 'retard' hurts people like me
Back in September an athlete named John Franklin Stephens wrote an amazing op-ed on why the R-word hurts him. I've had a few people request a link to this speech and I myself had trouble finding it, so I'm posting it here.
So without further ado...
Using the word "retard" to describe me hurts
By John Franklin Stephens
September 1, 2008
A lot of people are talking about the movie "Tropic Thunder." One of the reasons that it is being talked about is that the characters use the term "retard" over and over. They use it the same way that kids do all the time, to jokingly insult one another.
The people who made the movie, DreamWorks and Paramount, and many of the critics who have reviewed it, say that the term is being used by characters who are dumb and shallow themselves.
You see, we are supposed to get the joke that it is only the dumb and shallow people who use a term that means dumb and shallow. My dad tells me that this is called "irony."
So, what's the big deal?
Let me try to explain.
I am a 26-year-old man with Down Syndrome. I am very lucky. Even though I was born with this intellectual disability, I do pretty well and have a good life. I live and work in the community. I count as friends the people I went to school with and the people I meet in my job.
Every day I get closer to living a life like yours.
I am a Global Messenger for Special Olympics and make speeches to people all over the country. I once spoke to over 10,000 people at the Richmond Coliseum. I realize that I am a voice for other people with intellectual disabilities who cannot easily speak for themselves. I thank God that he gave me this chance to be someone's voice.
The hardest thing about having an intellectual disability is the loneliness. We process information slower than everyone else. So even normal conversation is a constant battle for us not to lose touch with what the rest of you are saying. Most of the time the words and thoughts just go too fast for us to keep up, and when we finally say something it seems out of place.
We are aware when all the rest of you stop and just look at us. We are aware when you look at us and just say, "unh huh," and then move on, talking to each other. You mean no harm, but you have no idea how alone we feel even when we are with you.
That is why I love being a Global Messenger. I work for days telling my dad what I want to talk about and he tries to write it down for me. Then we do it over and over until we have something that says what I mean. We wrote this letter the same way.
So, what's wrong with "retard"? I can only tell you what it means to me and people like me when we hear it. It means that the rest of you are excluding us from your group. We are something that is not like you and something that none of you would ever want to be. We are something outside the "in" group. We are someone that is not your kind.
I want you to know that it hurts to be left out here, alone. Nothing scares me as much as feeling all alone in a world that moves so much faster than I do.
You don't mean to make me feel that way. In fact, like I say in some of my speeches, "I have always depended on the kindness of strangers," and it works out OK most of the time. Still, it hurts and scares me when I am the only person with intellectual disabilities on the bus and young people start making "retard" jokes or references.
Please put yourself on that bus and fill the bus with people who are different from you. Imagine that they start making jokes using a term that describes you. It hurts and it is scary.
Last, I get the joke — the irony — that only dumb and shallow people are using a term that means dumb and shallow. The problem is, it is only funny if you think a "retard" is someone dumb and shallow. I am not those things, but every time the term is used it tells young people that it is OK to think of me that way and to keep me on the outside.
That is why using "retard" is a big deal to people like me.
John Franklin Stephens is a Special Olympics Virginia athlete and Global Messenger who lives in Fairfax, Va.
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4 comments:
wow, I have never read that. Thanks for sharing. It brings tears to my eyes that our children have to live in this sort of world. I am so thankful for this young man standing up for himself and speaking out with such grace. Wow.
Ah, yes, I remember reading that. Gave me chills to read it again. He's from this area and he spoke last winter at the state budget hearings. People were talking about it for a long time. Amazing and inspiring. Thanks for posting that!
Thanks for posting this. My daughter is 25 and I am one of those people who wonder what all the fuss is about. I don't agree we should use the word retard to describe other people, but it is a real word. Your post has given me something to think about.
Thanks for sharing that. I think people need to realize that what they say affects people.
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