Disabled limiting beliefs

Rebecca, a white woman with brown hair, is sitting in her wheelchair.00.
Image description: Rebecca, a white woman with brown hair, wears a light green, dark green, light blue, light pink, red and brown diamond patterned closed brown buttoned cardigan with a green faux fur colour, red trousers and shoes . She also wears a green faux fur hat and holding a green bag. She is sitting in her wheelchair that has peach spoke guards with multicoloured butterflies dotted around on it. Rebecca is under a tree her legs are placed over the right armrest. She is smiling at the camera

Dear Reader,

At times life can feel a bit more challenging. Sometimes we know exactly why, and at other times it can be hard to pin point what is causing us to feel this fogginess and it feels excruciating when trying to lift this weight. No matter how we find ourselves at a low ebb, our self-chatter can massively contribute to how we feel. Like a lot of people, when finding myself in tricky waters, I can be the biggest mean girl to myself and this can just intensify my thoughts and feels like I’m standing on quick sand- it is all too ready to swallow me up!

I think a lot of disabled peers will say that internalised ableism can add a bloody great big layer to some of the not so glittery thoughts that we may experience from time to time. There seems to be a real under expectation of disabled people and therefore sometimes feel like we have to work harder to be seen and heard. This is witnessed time and time again in work environments, in education systems, in the travel industry, in relationships and what this looks like, in the media’s representation of disability… it’s endless -all whereby we, as disabled people, are prescribed to the type of role we play by society. However this narrative manifests, it can enable some of us to believe that we are not worthy or good enough or shouldn’t be where we are. I’ve done this countless of times, listening to self-doubt and the cunning charm of internalised ableism way too much, thinking that I should back out of something. It’s exhausting! But rather than realising that we are experiencing internalised ableism, these thoughts can latch themselves on to us and become part of the beliefs that we hold about ourselves.

It’s important to recognise the flavour of our thoughts, where they might have come from and how we can change this up, not letting them consume us.

I’ve listed below, some of the disabled limiting beliefs that I can experience and how I try to break through them. If you find yourself identifying with any of the following limiting beliefs, I hope that you find the tips/reminders that I pair them with helpful.

  • A limiting belief that I have sometimes is in regards to voicing my rights. Enquiring about wheelchair access or saying what I need can feel daunting sometimes. I never know how requests will be received, sometimes with a more than helpful attitude and others with a huff and a puff, when, say, putting down a portable ramp, or even hearing an out and out ‘no.’ The latter two responses can make me feel as if I shouldn’t say anything or shouldn’t be there. But over the last few years I’ve realised just how much my needs and wants are valid and more than that, I deserve the right to be there just as much as the next person. This is a reminder I repeat to myself when get that voice in my head is trying its best to get me swallowing my words. Disabled rights are human rights. I’ll admit, it’s a difficult thing to do but when you start just saying how things are, the less scary it can become- do not ever put your rights second!
  • My speech impediment is something that I can be really conscious off and get a little anxious over whether people will understand me. Last year, I got tired of confining myself I wanted to give myself a bit more freedom. One day I started just to speak into the camera. I normally just post text along with photos online to express my thoughts, never sharing my actual voice, so this was heart pounding stuff. Although very apprehensive at first when I started, I began to settle into it. It showed how I, and I’m sure that I am not alone in this, can magnify things in my mind and they can feel a bit more difficult than they actually are. When I posted this video online, people were absolutely lovely in response. Note to self- don’t spend too much time brewing over something and don’t give into your own doubt! I really want to do a bit more of this in the year ahead.
Rebecca, a white woman with brown hair is sitting in her wheelchair
Image description: Rebecca wears the same outfit as image 1. Her legs are swung over the right armrest of her wheelchair
  • Another limiting belief that I have is around time. A subject that I always get caught up on. My Cerebral Palsy means that it can take me a bit more time to do certain things. Sometimes this can really bother me, especially if in my head I am a step or two ahead. In them moments I believe that I should move faster. The more I try to do this though, the less my body becomes uncoordinated and so tasks take even longer to complete. The thing is everyone is running on their own clock and really…isn’t it about deserving yourself the time you need rather than folding yourself in two to meet an unrealistic time frame? It’s time (sorry!) to start setting realistic deadlines so you won’t burn out and that you can fully focus on the task in hand without forever clock watching.
  • I think this one is applicable to all humans really and surrounds the feeling of being enough. Coming from a disabled person’s perspective, a layer of this could be due to the structure of society and how the word, disabled, is branded. Looping back to the start of this blog post and the little expectations that non-disabled people can have of disabled people, it can make disabled people doubt themselves or believe that they need to prove who they are in order to be seen as enough. It was only through my twenties really that I realised that I didn’t need to do this. Discovering the social model of disability, which says that people are disabled by societial barriers, was a game-changer for me. I learnt that my disability wasn’t at fault. It was the world around me.  I didn’t need to change. I didn’t need to prove who I was. It’s really easy cheesy to say try and not be moved/powered over by stigma but really just being yourself is all you can be. You are enough as you are.

I hope that by sharing some of my limiting beliefs and I how am trying to break them down a little and not letting them have as much power, perhaps it’s given you food for thought as to how to tackle your own limiting beliefs. And remember there just beliefs, not the truths

All my love XX

Seeing Yourself As Enough

Dear Reader,

Ever get that feeling that you’re not enough? That you’re not doing enough? That what you are right now and who you are is not enough? Well this is something that can honestly feel quite lonely and depletes one’s energy and when in such a mind-set….the hope of this turning round does not seem like a move that can be made. However it’s me who is writing this post and even though I can annoy the crap out of myself being a positive Polly and sometimes just wanting to see the volume of water that is in the glass in whatever damn way (without a psychological explanation being attached to this), it is true that this is not a feeling that is felt by a singular person- it is experienced by many.

It feels like I’ve gone off into the deep end, I didn’t mean to here but fear of not doing enough are thoughts that I have been experiencing of late. Back in May I shared on my social media that I had been experiencing pain as a result of my Cerebral Palsy, which meant I couldn’t do very much at all for a while, and for someone like me who always wants to be a busy bee this was kinda hard. Since then these aches have been on and off depending on how much I’ve been doing. It’s that knowing that I’m not doing, not continually moving forwards, which at these times are my more prominent thoughts, the insistent chatter of what I could be doing clogs up the ol’ mind. Somehow this has more of an importance than it did before. I guess it’s a classic case of when you can’t do something, you want to do things even more with the imagination running wild with ideas. Ohhh how the mind chatters!

Sitting there with all these thoughts was kind of like toying with someone else’s story-it wasn’t I who was living out that day, it was a character I created in my brain. A character with no flaws who navigated a flawless day-ironically, this whole idea is flawed! The thing is by participating in such creativity and building a picture of a person of who you think you should be kind of puts one into self-destruction mode, picking out parts of oneself that aren’t enough, that they should be more focussed- basically berating anything that makes one human-the mistakes, the getting things wrong, the going at a different pace to everyone else, the not living up to expectations people or even you had of yourself … the list is endless. All this obsession over what you think you don’t measure up to will only make you feel worse.

I do think now more than ever we need to be kind to ourselves as well as each other. This year has thrown everyone sideways in one way or another, yet we can find ways to tear ourselves down and tell ourselves that we should be doing more or that we’re not doing what we should be. There is no ‘right’ way to think, but if we just found a way not to be too harsh or expect too much of ourselves and be a bit more gentle maybe we would start to feel a little lighter in a world that already seems so heavy. I guess what I want to say is that it’s okay if you are not where you thought you would be, focus on where you are and the pathways that could lead from there. It goes without saying that everyone will experience peaks and trots and just because you find yourself at a low, up against a challenge, facing a flare up, it does not mean you can’t get back or that it will be like this forever. I am saying this to you as well as myself, do not let these not so great days define who you are.

There’s that saying ride the wave. Although this can seem like a fleeting statement, it actually does have some merit-stay with me here. Instead of fighting what you are experiencing and burying yourself down some dark rabbit hole, I started to realise, when I had to take a break from things that rather than focusing on whether or not I was measuring up to being enough or trying to justify to myself as to why I was not doing thing, I started think about how just resting and being more present could just help the future me: if I rest now, I’ll be able to do more later.

All my love XX