Ambulatory Wheelchair Users Exist! Why I use a wheelchair when I can walk! wheelchair = giving up?

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  • Опубликовано: 20 апр 2023
  • Discussing what an ambulatory wheelchair user is, why I choose to be one and the benefits of being an ambulatory wheelchair user!
    Reminder: everyone with ME/CFS is different! So you or someone you know might have a very different experience with ME/CFS than I do at the moment! Also, remember that chronic conditions such as these can change dramatically over time, so my life may look very different to this in the future (and has be A LOT worse in the past).
    Thank you so much for watching!! Make sure to like, comment, and subscribe to see more videos from me 3 out of 4 FRIDAYS!
    About Me:
    My name is Elinor, I am a 24-year-old sociology graduate who has been living with ME/CFS for 8 years. I also have anxiety and depression as co-morbid conditions! I started making RUclips Videos consistently about my experience with chronic illness and mental health struggles in June 2020! I also love fashion, connecting with people in the community and being creative!!
    Watch Next:
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    1 year with a Wheelchair: • 1 Year with a Wheelcha...
    Dissertation and chronic illness vlog: • Working on my disserta...
    Disabled girl room tour: • Disabled Girl Room Tou...
    Decorating my Wheelchair: • Finally Decorating my ...
    I Finally Bought a Wheelchair: • I finally bought a WHE...
    ME/CFS Essentials: • ME/CFS ESSENTIAL ITEMS...
    Weird ME/CFS symptoms: • Weird ME/CFS Symptoms ...
    I used a WHEELCHAIR for a week: • I use a WHEELCHAIR for...
    I use a WHEELCHAIR for the first time: • I use a WHEELCHAIR for...
    My experience using a WALKING STICK for 6 months: • My experience using a ...
    I Bought a FASHIONABLE WALKING STICK?!: youtu.be/
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Комментарии • 90

  • @kaybrown3162
    @kaybrown3162 Год назад +71

    Two of the biggest advantages of having a wheelchair are 1- Being able to be spontaneous while out of the house with friends and 2-not having to turn down invitations because you don’t think you’ll be able to walk far enough and still have the energy to enjoy the outing. Everyone just needs to think of it as a tool to help with difficulties. I really liked the comparisons with reading glasses and umbrellas 🤓 🌂 x

    • @Growingroot_allotment
      @Growingroot_allotment 5 месяцев назад +3

      Iv been really thinking about using one but been to embarrassed this has made me consider it more now x

  • @IconixBeauty
    @IconixBeauty 6 месяцев назад +33

    I’m also an ambulatory wheelchair user. It changed my life as I was “disabling” myself by avoiding situations and occasions I couldn’t manage, and my chair ENABLES me. You have done a great job at explaining what it’s like xxx

    • @reneets5729
      @reneets5729 6 месяцев назад +4

      I came across this channel by chance and I’m now thinking the same thing. I’m avoiding so much of life because it makes me so exhausted. What if I had energy for experiencing more by getting a wheelchair? I’ve rented one before going to an amusement park and it helped so much.

    • @IconixBeauty
      @IconixBeauty 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@reneets5729 Renee? It changed my life. If you feel you are saying no to opportunities then it is your lack of equipment ( I call my chairs my “tools “. I have a couple - electric and manual) that is holding you back. I believe that was me ‘disabling’ myself, and why? In case some arse calls me a fake when I step out? My youngest son makes a great joke of it…. If we are in a supermarket and I have to step up from my chair to get a high item he says loudly “it’s a miracle!!” Before collapsing into a fit of giggles!
      ENABLE yourself by getting the tools you need to live the life you had before (almost) xxx

  • @DeathRisiing
    @DeathRisiing 5 месяцев назад +14

    It's wild how ableist and misinformed so many people are about mobility aids and disabled folks. Lately, I've considered getting a mobility aid bc I'm so done with feeling like I'm dying and/or passing out whenever I go out and walk too far/stand too long (POTS, hEDS, narcolepsy), and having to say no to things I really wanna do bc it involves too much walking. I'm young, I want to _live_ and experience things, not be stuck at home. :( I know from awful experience what my body can and can't tolerate, even a few blocks is too many, and my body needs some sort of mobility aid and I need to stop denying it one regardless of anybody else's opinion. I appreciate this video and your channel and transparency about your own experiences. ♥

  • @aham-bi7zb
    @aham-bi7zb Год назад +42

    i just searched "mobility aid for fatigue" and found your videos. my gf has long covid, which gives them a lot of fatigue and muscle/joint pain. we're both trying desperately to adapt, and trying to deal with this shrinking of what's possible. the idea of using a wheelchair for days out, even if it's just when i or a friend can be there to push, is an incredible thought. and you just made it sound really possible. thank you so much for making these videos.

    • @user-oq3jt8wl2w
      @user-oq3jt8wl2w Месяц назад

      I have long covid and have become a wheelchair user as a result, if you have any questions lmk!

  • @frentbow
    @frentbow Год назад +58

    Regarding not being disabled enough to use mobility aids. This view was forced on me by health professionals who refused to listen to me say I need help walking, they didn't care I was housebound. I feel cfs is not taken seriously and we are left to find our own way to live with our illness. Great video I agree with all your points. My family and partner also gaslight me saying I don't need it.

    • @rebeccagoddard3273
      @rebeccagoddard3273 Год назад +7

      my husband didn’t believe i needed a wheelchair . or mobility aid . a few years later he has finally realised my struggles and how much they help me

    • @kristiharman2843
      @kristiharman2843 9 месяцев назад +10

      I had similar stuff with doctors who kept insisting that if I used a mobility aid I'd just get weaker and weaker so instead I just became homebound since I couldn't walk without something. You deserve to use whatever helps you have more freedom and move more easily!

  • @Wheelchair-Andy
    @Wheelchair-Andy 10 месяцев назад +7

    I'm an ambulatory wheelchair user, and it's sad how many times I'm called lazy because I don't use my chair a lot in my house. There are two reasons for this: my house isn't set up for a wheelchair, and secondly, it's referred to as wall walking.

  • @ZannySarkar
    @ZannySarkar 3 месяца назад +4

    I just started using a wheelchair ambulatorily a few days ago and I created a sticker to put on my wheelchair explaining why my legs move. I made it fun to look at and read, in case a little kid comes up to me. I’m a short person with a Mohawk and I wear mostly black, and my wheelchair is covered in stickers so if people are gonna stare, I’m giving them something to look at :) You’re not faking it, don’t let people gaslight you into suffering without a wheelchair. Personalize it like I did! It bonded me to my chair honestly, and I think it’s good for the soul to take care of something that takes care of you❤ stay slaying, guys!❤

  • @thesheetghostnextdoor
    @thesheetghostnextdoor 7 месяцев назад +8

    Halloween, and going to Christmas light shows are too painful for me so i cant stay very long. Many times my mom would take me home because i would fall down and start crying and writhing on the dirty dirty ground. So im currently researching mobility aids so i can finally do what i love without the pain. This video has indeed helped.

    • @ElinorBrown
      @ElinorBrown  7 месяцев назад +1

      oh no! that sucks! sounds like a mobility might help! x

  • @quiet_shy
    @quiet_shy 4 месяца назад +4

    Ambulatory wheelchair and crutches user here. It took me a long time to accept that im disabled and it was actually my husbands idea to get a wheelchair so i can actually leave the house as i was housebound. I felt so embarrassed to use it at first, scared that someone was going to see me stand up from the car to get into it or vice versa and shout at me that i was "faking it". Its been 3 years and the feelings are going away gradually. For me it's meant i can go to places that i wouldnt have before. An example is that we lost a beloved family member just before Christmas and i was able to goto their funeral knowing that firstly i would get a seat (because so many people went that most didn't get a seat and had to stand for the entire service) and also if we had to wait around outside for any reason (talking to family afterwards etc) then i would be able to sit in my wheelchair during this and join in the conversation instead of having to go and wait in the car for my husband to finish talking etc. I've also been able to go to shops and such so no more being housebound and i also dont need to worry about getting unwell in public and fainting or falling. For me its as much about my safety as it is giving me back some freedom, I have POTS, fibro and CFS and my wheelchair has improved my life. If you're struggling and its impacting your life consider getting one. Despite my worries that someone is going to yell at me for being able to walk a few steps from my car to the chair, its thankfully never happened.

    • @jorgelacaneita2345
      @jorgelacaneita2345 3 месяца назад

      This is the reason I'm considering a cane instead the crutches I use when I go to a wheelchair. Some time I used wheelchair with my armpit crutch but it is uncomfortable to keep it, but without nothing more when people look at us and we can stand it's embarrassing. For that reason I think a cane would be good and also a kind of help when I leave the wheelchar for a while.

  • @brendavankomen182
    @brendavankomen182 8 месяцев назад +4

    I’m an ambulatory wheelchair user, it saves me so much energy. This allows me to go more places and enjoy my life more fully. Thanks for sharing.

  • @sashadonovan-anns9528
    @sashadonovan-anns9528 Год назад +28

    I needed to see this today! I also have ME/CFS combined with long-covid which impacts my breathing and causes fainting episodes. My world is getting smaller because I'm struggling to take the step of incorporating a wheelchair into my life, as a tool of freedom. But I'm getting there! I remember how easily I understood taking my grandma out for the day with her wheelchair, sometimes she would push it and walk and then she would get tired and we would push her in it. But on very uneven ground the discomfort of the wheelchair was worse than walking so she would get out of it again. We have a lovely photo of her pushing her wheelchair round Karnak temple in Egypt, a trip she wouldn't have been able to do without the chair ♿. I need to worry less about what other people think and afford myself the same flexibility and understanding I've given to others 🥰

    • @HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey
      @HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey 10 месяцев назад +4

      I have been in a wheelchair everytiime I leave the house since 2014 due to ME/Fibromyalgia being in pain and suffering fatigue with lack of stamina and strength and sleep daily is no joke. I too initially had resistance from my GP about going into a wheelchair. - she said my legs would weaken through lack of use - I said they were weak and in pain anyway that was why I was asking not because they were the latest fashion trend! Eventually an OT recommended the use of a wheelchair to my GP. Very recently I moved house and bought a stairlift too. I will be 60 next b/day but never feel too young/too anything to ask for help

    • @sarabengtsson5741
      @sarabengtsson5741 7 месяцев назад

      I have ME/CFS too and have also been struggeling a bit with starting to use a wheelchair. Because I can walk, just not very far. I mostly stay home because of it.

  • @sarahuk8265
    @sarahuk8265 Год назад +10

    I am an ambulatory wheelchair ♿️ user my self i had some one came running up to me and said that i was cured all because i stood up to get something from a shelf once, and i did not want tackle her so i just smiled but it is so much better for me using my wheelchair makes my life easier than trying to walk as walking causes me pain and fatigue

    • @jorgelacaneita2345
      @jorgelacaneita2345 3 месяца назад

      Kkkkk my wife had that same experience on a shopping mall. When she stood up a young lady looked at her with the face of someone witnessing a miracle!

  • @ruby3200
    @ruby3200 Год назад +11

    Before getting a wheelchair I definitely thought getting one would be giving into the illness. I recently read a saying on having CFS and still trying to live life as best you can,but still having hope that you will heal. The saying called it realistic hope, or acceptance with a fighting spirit. I thought that was a great way to put it. 😊
    I find that I can actually shop around now that I have a wheelchair. I never realized how focused I was on walking till I didn’t have to anymore!💗

  • @rosebyan0thername
    @rosebyan0thername Год назад +8

    I really appreciate this video. I have hEDS and orthostatic hypotension, and I have been considering getting a wheelchair but I definitely get the feelings of being "not disabled enough." I'm very lucky in that I am still pretty physically fit (minus the actual health conditions obviously) and I work a full time retail job and am sometimes able to walk or hike for miles, but every once in a while I'm just so exhausted or all the pain catches up with me at once, and it's hard to even get out of bed. It feels like I'm "not qualified" for a wheelchair, even though I'd never say that about anyone else, and I think I've just convinced myself that, because I'm still able to move through the pain, I don't deserve help. It's really nice to hear that other people feel the same way and it's not just in my head 😅

  • @rebeccagoddard3273
    @rebeccagoddard3273 Год назад +11

    i have really needed a video like this ! i actually had severe anxiety the first time i went out in the wheelchair and one of the shops had steps . hubby was like just get out of the wheelchair . the overwhelming fear of being judged i couldn’t cope with it . although i now still have anxiety i don’t look at anyone’s faces as it’s my business not there’s . thank you for your videos !!! you don’t know how much they are helping people ❤

  • @Jules-zw7iu
    @Jules-zw7iu Год назад +20

    Thank you for being a voice for ambulatory wheelchair users! (especially online) ❤ The benefits, practicalities and limitations are shared by myself and many others, I'm sure. Thank you 😍

  • @cydneyhartwell8295
    @cydneyhartwell8295 2 месяца назад +1

    I‘ve recently finally gotten my diagnosis for my severe back pain, muscle weakness and spasms in my legs and back that i‘ve been dealing with for over 4 years. I‘m starting to look into mobility aids because i‘ve been struggling so much recently and it‘s just been getting worse and worse that I can barely get around my house (which has a lot of stairs) I‘m 20 years old and i‘ve been fighting for years for validation and understanding from doctors which i‘m finally getting. I‘ve been starting to get scared of getting to and from work and simply doing life. Thankfully where I live is extremely accessible for wheelchairs. It‘s been a long journey, but i‘m so happy i‘m finally able to get the help I need. Your video is really helpful for me to in a way accept my future, because it is scary. So thank you for this.
    (I have nerve problems in my back that get worse with time and one day without surgery I will be fully paralyzed from the waist down.)

  • @ecologist_to_be
    @ecologist_to_be 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm ambulatory too. I use a chair most of the time even in house but I have privilege is I can walk around people's houses if needed as long as plenty of seating opportunities !
    Lovely you have good friends who'll push you 🙂

  • @Jenali1978
    @Jenali1978 Год назад +7

    I appreciate your video. I have a medical condition that sometimes making walking dangerous because during those times I usually fall down. To stop getting harassed I take a walking cane with me (and sometimes I get hurt anyway). I fall down in parking lots, at home, anywhere. I've accidently broken items in my home, lost the diamond off my expensive engagement ring when I fell hard on the concrete, twice broken my glasses. Thank for your video, making me realizing I'm not alone.

  • @ckmusic3482
    @ckmusic3482 2 месяца назад

    Hey Elinor, thanks for your video 👏.
    I have recently become an Ambulatory Wheelchair User to Dash. I have struggled for years with my mobility because like others have said I didn't feel that I was disabled enough to warrant my using a wheelchair & I didn't want to be labelled, but recently things got so bad that I now can't walk far or for long without being in extreme pain. I call my wheels 'Dash' as it helps with my acceptance & the chair doesn't feel so foreign to me. Still getting used to it, but it is opening doors that I felt were closed to me. Thanks again for sharing & best wishes to all Ambulatory Wheelchair Users, we CAN do this 👍. Christine

  • @Sophie-pi4ov
    @Sophie-pi4ov Год назад +3

    I love my wheelchair. Without it I hadn't the opportunity to leave the house and go to the city for example. Since I use my wheelchair I was at so much places I haven't been in years. ❤

  • @sacredjinx705
    @sacredjinx705 Год назад +3

    26 years into my rare disease, 17 of which, undiagnosed. I’ve run the range of physical limitations many times. I’ve atrophied from severe flares, extended hospitalizations, and even coma. I’ve had to learn to walk again or need physical therapy to regain strength. Now ALL my connective tissue’s have torn in 2 shoulders & 1 hip, leaving just wheelchair use. But… I can still stand on 1 leg if I hold onto something. Oh the dirty looks I got when I DARED stand at the last show I went to. Heaven forbid I wanted to see the stage better. Such ignorance in the world. I don’t let it phase me anymore. It’s my struggle to fight or enjoy however I see fit. If their narrow minds can’t understand that, it’s nothing to do with me. So thanks for educating the masses!

  • @darkteatime
    @darkteatime Год назад +8

    This video was super necessary! I've struggled too with not feeling "disabled enough" to use mobility aids, and society having next to no education on them adds an extra level of discomfort and sometimes even harrassment. I agree that people irl are much kinder to those with mobility aids than on the internet! That's been my experience too. Also, off topic, but your outfit is fire 🔥 👌🏼

  • @legeinia
    @legeinia 10 месяцев назад +2

    For me, I'm a permanent ambulatory wheelchair user. Meaning I can walk or stand but only for a few minutes at a time (getting less and less as the months go by) but I have an electric wheelchair that I use daily for most of my "walking". So I can walk to the bathroom since it's close by, but I can't walk to the kitchen or living room because it's a little too far away. I can also walk down some stairs to get to my car, but them I'm in excruciating pain and have to sit and relax my spine before going anywhere. And I say permanent because every few months (for the past 2 years) my back and hips get worse. More and more pain doing anything, which is why I'm disabled and qualified for an electric wheelchair. Also because I have dwarfism and have short arms and a bad neck, arthritis, weak muscles strength and also hyper extention in my joints so I can't push myself in a manual wheelchair.

  • @Maycat133
    @Maycat133 3 месяца назад +1

    Just wanted to thank you Elinor as your vlogs really encouraged me to get a wheelchair a few weeks ago. It’s so freeing and really opens your life up. All so well put ❤

  • @SmallandStrong66
    @SmallandStrong66 8 месяцев назад +3

    Well said! So happy I get to represent ambulatory wheelchair users on TV as a lot of people have no understanding of us!

  • @ldar630
    @ldar630 Год назад +3

    Another reason it’s nice to walk sometimes, if possible, instead of using the wheelchair is to get a bit of exercise and avoid the de-conditioning that is so common with this illness.

  • @PrettyEyesz
    @PrettyEyesz 3 месяца назад

    When you spoke about walking somewhere and then feeling unwell once you finally reached your destination, I could definitely relate. And you're absolutely right. It does take the initial excitement and enjoyment out of you. Thats why I've chosen to purchase mobility aids and use them when needed. So that I can avoid those situations.

  • @KernowFishy
    @KernowFishy 4 месяца назад +1

    I have recently become a Wheelchair user, due to severe pain from Ankylosing Spondilitis meaning I can't walk more than very short distances now. I struggled with it but am so glad I did now, it's giving me a freedom.again to be out and about and enjoy it again. It's making such a difference to myself and wife .
    This is a great video, wish I'd seen it ages ago, I had really internalized the idea that people who can walk at all don't use them, so wrong.

    • @ChelseyIsATotal5SOSFan
      @ChelseyIsATotal5SOSFan Месяц назад +1

      I am wondering if I could have that, because after 3 years, the injury I had limits me quite a bit. I also can’t work certain jobs bedside it requires me to stand on my feet. It’s hard to walk those long distances with pain, but also I am in pain a lot of the time. And now it seems like it’s gotten worse

  • @o.o4566
    @o.o4566 2 месяца назад

    I struggle with feeling entitled to use a wheelchair. I use them in stores and I'm always amazed at how much better I can enjoy things.. but I'm terrified of people especially coworkers being rude about it.

  • @creiwentheelvenone6730
    @creiwentheelvenone6730 2 месяца назад

    I'm looking forward to watching the rest of your videos because, at 35 years old, I am soon going to be an ambulatory wheelchair user. I have ankylosing spondylitis and psoriatic arthritis. My experience basically tracks with yours particularly in the accepting-disabilities department.

  • @bdctrans70
    @bdctrans70 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you! Thank you for sharing. I have recently become an ambulatory wheelchair user. At 53, I developed spinal stenosis within the inner cavity of my spine. No herniations, no slipped discs. Just an aggressive form of arthritis is growing and slowly constricting my spinal cord. This means, like you, I can maneuver throughout my house with the aid of a cane unless lifting is involved, then it is safer for me to do it in the chair. When I go outside, I do use the chair, but I do have my canes to help me. My biggest problem is the folks in my hamlet. They all know how I used to be, always working in my yard, running errands, and taking the kids to functions and school events. But in the last two years, the arthritis has been so aggressive that all of a sudden, they see me around town in a chair and then getting up with my canes to do stuff. I am always asked why the chair if I can walk? I tell them, "You can walk and use your arms and hands to do things as you walk. When I walk, I need my canes and I can't use my arms and hands to carry things because I am trying to stand upright without my legs giving out. I use the chair to be able to function as normal as I can with my new disability" I still get the clicky ones that keep spreading rumors, but they don't bother me. I was offered to have surgery on my back, but there is only a 52 to 58% success rate, with only one to two years of pain-free, but I would lose the total use of my legs. So I rather have little use of my legs now than not have use of them at all. Your videos are great! I am glad I found you!

  • @RobynElizabeth28
    @RobynElizabeth28 Год назад +4

    Such an important video, very close to my heart too. Plus, I love your outfit and hairstyle here! xx

  • @ninaandianfan21
    @ninaandianfan21 Год назад +4

    I'm loving the regular uploads at the moment :D. Still no pressure to keep it up though :D

  • @noahdaigle1735
    @noahdaigle1735 Месяц назад

    this really convinces me to get a wheelchair, also due to chronic fatigue possibly caused by MS. I have my cane and I'm going to ask my doctor about getting forearm crutches for more support and mobility, but ive been considering a wheelchair for a good bit ESPECIALLY since my last flare up where I literally was basically housebound while trying to get through a semester of college (wherein I missed most of my classes and finals were ROUGH). Im out of my flare now (presumably) since about the last couple weeks of school, but my fatigue and weakness are much worse, and while on vacay to see my partner I slept through a good bit of it or was unable to move from doing honestly pretty light activities. I still work on getting past the feeling like this is, like many believe, me giving up, because its NOT. So yes, if you sympathize with these things like in the video, definitely consider it. even if you work your way into it like I plan to in a way with getting crutches first!!
    ALSO IF YOU HAVE MEDS, T A K E T H E M *BONKS YOU ON THE NOGGIN GENTLY*

  • @ashleighhennessy
    @ashleighhennessy 9 дней назад

    Thank u for showing me there's others like me! Love your video, thank u for making me feel like a person for a change x

  • @LIFELIKECHAOS
    @LIFELIKECHAOS Год назад +2

    Thankyou so much for this video- I’ve been umming and ahhing getting one because I always thought I’m not disabled enough, and what will people say? But I am disabled enough I don’t go out because I’m worried I won’t be able to get back or do the thing I’m travelling to. I won’t walk my dog, I won’t go shopping , I won’t go to the doctors despite being Ill with the pots,Eds, fibro and having chest pains. I can’t wait to get my chair so I can go to the zoo again, going shopping even, going out with friends. Thankyou for making me feel valid.

  • @frankienixon8413
    @frankienixon8413 Год назад +3

    I have FND I have been using crutches but I don’t feel like I need them but my legs can be effected because I fed like most of the time I can walk but during flare ups I can’t

  • @andyvan5692
    @andyvan5692 8 месяцев назад +1

    yes I get you, not all people are permanent users, Pain, fatigue, or balance conditions (I have this{left leg shorter than right, AND I have no sense of balance-due to schizencephaly}), can use these to, and RIGHTLY SO, this is an OT capacity maintenance\mobility strategy; you can't last forever, or at least all day (you are NOT powered by the "energiser bunny"), so to conserve what capacity you do possess, you do "chair" for a while, and when needs must, you go 'normal' for as long as your conditions allow for, NO problem with that!! just takes the 'normal people' some acceptance, understanding and accommodation of your specific needs, whatever they may be. I don't use a wheelchair, but due to my Autism and the balance conditions, I do take advantage of the "courtesy seats" on trains and busses, to rest, and compose myself.

  • @lizzyg9966
    @lizzyg9966 28 дней назад

    Thank u so much for this video. I bought my 1st transit wheelchair this week (although I have used some before). I'm so nervous about going out on bumps, slopes, public transport etc. I know it will take practice. But I'm excited to finally get outside again, even a little bit.

  • @lisanicholson1072
    @lisanicholson1072 Год назад +2

    OMG 7:36 - 8:10 >>>> My thinking patterns exactly!! LOL, Guess I have some things to re-think about. Thank you for opening my mind to a different perspective Elinor!

  • @fridamartins9834
    @fridamartins9834 2 месяца назад

    Love this video and your outfit! The explanation with the glasses is perfect , and so is your elaboration on how to choose whether to bring along the wheelchair! I alterate between 2 canes (named Fritz and Franz), a walker (named Ferdy) and a wheelchair (named Geraldine). I mostly cannot lift Gerri onto a bus by myself but with Ferdy it has become routine and the most bus drivers here have somewhat got to know me and Ferdy's folding mechanism

  • @bethprosser1740
    @bethprosser1740 Год назад +2

    thanks for this, I'm currently using crutches full time and have just started using wheelchair when I go into supermarkets and the difference it makes is astounding but my mum still questions why I even need crutches which is what is mainly putting me off from getting a wheelchair of my own. My husband though is really supportive. It's going to take me a while to save up the money to be able to get a wheelchair so I'm just going to see how things go with my mum and that in the mean time whilst saving up.

  • @ohdarling6657
    @ohdarling6657 2 месяца назад

    Oh the accessibility! I am not disabled however i went through an acident where i broke both legs, i had to relearn how to walk and broke some teeth, when i went to the dentist to get them fixed i told them about the acident and about how i would go in a wheelchair and needed to know if they had accessibility for it, they said they did because the building had an elevator. When i get there just imagine the surprise when i see not only one but two steps to get to the dentist ofice, yeah, great accessibility. I was lucky enough that i managed to get up and down the steps holding the wall and my husbands hand, but i did get pissed off and it did hurt a bit. I have had close relationships to some wheelchair users so i was pretty aware of this dificulty but never in my life i had to go through this, it was humiliating and dehumanizing

  • @donnastrathearn5712
    @donnastrathearn5712 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for explaining this. I'm so fed up of people asking mw. 😊

  • @HydraCoffee42-wj5ir
    @HydraCoffee42-wj5ir 2 месяца назад

    I wear eye glasses to read and draw, no prescription I just bought them when I found out it was harder to not wear them than to wear them, I don't regret that decision at all I don't feel imprisoned when I wear my reading glasses I don't feel sad or put down or like I just gave up when I wear them im glad I'm not putting that extra strain on my eyes damaging them further I'm really grateful for that I do feel a little bad when I dont wear them because its frustrating and that's when I do feel down I do struggle and I do worry about my body, buying those glasses made everything better not worse it was not giving up super greatful they cost six dollars not six hundred thousand though that makes me feel really lucky someday we will have progressed to the point that mobility aids don't break the bank and everyone who needs one I hope will have one

  • @AgostoMary
    @AgostoMary Год назад

    Thank u so much for this informative video. I really thank god for coming across your video

  • @jacquelinemolloy2977
    @jacquelinemolloy2977 Месяц назад

    I used to walk beside my mobility scooter so I could walk a little bit and someone actually accused me of stealing it. I never walked with it again, and now I hate using it.

  • @jaredwalton3135
    @jaredwalton3135 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this video. I'm dealing with this new reality and I appreciate your positive outlook.

  • @Wisephoton
    @Wisephoton Год назад

    I am getting to the point where I might need a wheelchair on and off. Your video is inspiring ❤.
    And you are so very beautiful ❤️

  • @Moonbeamglider
    @Moonbeamglider 3 месяца назад

    Thank you so much. Just bought my second powered chair and can walk. I have BVH imbalance condition. After being in hospital for three months with many fractures. The time has come but coming terms is hard. The new wheelchairs folds up and goes in the boot of the taxi. I’m terrified of its first outing but must do it.

  • @Tedd335
    @Tedd335 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for your clear explanation.

  • @lovely__shadow9305
    @lovely__shadow9305 7 месяцев назад

    My family says I'm fine. Then the doctor said something was wrong. Now I need to fight it. Act normal. Eventually, they accept it. My older sister and mom are the worst.

  • @annettesuterswiss
    @annettesuterswiss Год назад +2

    Thanks for sharing. That video just helps and encourages me. I have a wheelchair / mobility aid advise in a mobility aid shop tomorrow. I am super nervous about it, but with my recent EDS flare I need help.

  • @demileigh6113
    @demileigh6113 Год назад +1

    This. I’m going to be an ambulatory wheelchair user I’m terrified to get my first chair

  • @UncleEjoy
    @UncleEjoy 4 месяца назад +2

    I myself use a wheelchair,it's like you said like using when you needed.i myself use a electric wheelchair and it's great n have the mobility that everyone takes forgented.

    • @ElinorBrown
      @ElinorBrown  4 месяца назад +2

      so true! i never thought about it until I couldn’t do it anymore!

    • @UncleEjoy
      @UncleEjoy 4 месяца назад

      @@ElinorBrown when using my wheelchair,I don't bother what people think.the important thing is that I'm mobile n free to do things that I need or want.

  • @ChelseyIsATotal5SOSFan
    @ChelseyIsATotal5SOSFan Месяц назад

    I actually just got a referral for a wheelchair, I have bad chronic pain in my left leg due to work accident about 3 years ago. My foot healed wrong so now I have bad chronic pain.

  • @fionamcmillan8206
    @fionamcmillan8206 5 месяцев назад

    Some help/advice, I just don’t want to make myself that vulnerable and ask for the help from friends or family, don’t get me wrong they’d be happy to help, and for me there’s this fear that if I sit in the chair I won’t get up, it terrifies me

  • @AmethystWoman
    @AmethystWoman 2 месяца назад

    I've needed to use a wheelchair for a few years but embarrassed. I own an airhawk that I got low cost from a "medical closet" by luck (and very aware of total gratitude for having it.) I am now at the quality of life but can't get it in and out of my car alone even tho it's folding and "light" (40 pounds). Just being in electric cart in the grocery store and getting up to get something pisses people off, it feels like being in a wheelchair people will feel more "ripped off?" Hard enough. Who can afford to pay for a way to get it in and out of the car?

  • @MatsRappe
    @MatsRappe Год назад

    Thank you for the reflection. You really should consider an electric wheelchair.

  • @renem2257
    @renem2257 8 месяцев назад

  • @lindak1768
    @lindak1768 23 дня назад

    I have problems with weak legs and I run out of breath. I’ve started looking at the Overland off road rollator. I’m thinking it will help me go places and not worry about falling.

  • @anniespring8986
    @anniespring8986 7 месяцев назад +1

    Is it okay to get a wheelchair as a preventative? I can walk very well but if I’m on my feet for more than an hour I start feeling a lot of pain. I’ve considered getting a wheelchair so I don’t have to get to that point when i go to events or have longer days but it still feels like it might be excessive or not worth the money for the amount of times I would need it.

    • @ElinorBrown
      @ElinorBrown  7 месяцев назад +1

      of course! the only rules are what will help you/work for you is what you should get! x

  • @courtneykenyon9513
    @courtneykenyon9513 Год назад +1

    I recently got some new tablets for my epilepsy and ive noticed one of the size effects are that sometimes my legs go weak, im debating if i should get a wheelchair but im scared everyone will just call me lazy, because sometimes i can walk and then others i walk to my garden gate and my legs basically collapse on me would you say im lazy?

    • @lauraannebevan1198
      @lauraannebevan1198 10 месяцев назад +2

      Hi, not at all. I have a heart /lung condition and use a wheelchair which also works as a rollator.Also thinking about a wheelchair because of severe fatigue,chest pain,falls, dizziness and black outs.
      If it keeps you safe and helps improve your quality of life. It is a good thing

    • @courtneykenyon9513
      @courtneykenyon9513 10 месяцев назад

      @@lauraannebevan1198 might have a good look for one

  • @volt4ten187
    @volt4ten187 Год назад

    will you be friends

  • @alieb1863
    @alieb1863 9 месяцев назад

    ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🤎🖤

  • @Lady95Jane
    @Lady95Jane Год назад +2

    Did you get medical encouragement to use your wheelchair?

  • @emilyvbr1878
    @emilyvbr1878 Год назад

    🩵