Thursday, February 11, 2010

Essential reading

I've been thinking a lot lately about Harriet McBryde Johnson, a lawyer, author, and disability rights activist who died in 2008. I've been reading her excellent autobiography Too Late to Die Young, and seeking out her other writings to help guide me in striving to raise my boy to be a proud trouble-maker following in her tiretracks.

I imagine I'll post more thoughts on her writings and perspectives later, but for now, just two things:

First, I suggest reading her "Unspeakable Conversations" essay from the New York Times magazine in 2003. Here's the official link (subscription required) http://www.nytimes.com/2003/02/16/magazine/16DISABLED.html.

This essay comes out of well-known debates she had with philosopher Peter Singer. I read a good deal of Peter Singer's writings long before ever having a connection to disability issues, and it's wonderful to read Johnson's treatment of some of his most controversial philosophical positions. An interesting note is that Peter Singer came to respect and like Harriet Johnson a great deal and wrote an obituary for her after she died.

Second, I just have to share one of the most wonderful lines from Johnson's autobiography:

"When I die, I might as well die alive."

Monday, February 8, 2010

Rockin' out

I sit here as my daughter hits the auto-song function on her electronic keyboard (piano practice is over) and is dancing furiously to the jazzy tune that is blasting from that cool device. My boy is loves it -- "come on you guys, get up and dance" he yells to us. "Mommy, dance!" ... "Daddy go ahead and dance!" he insists as he cuts quite the rug himself, sitting in his chair in the dining room.

He insists on dancing from his seat in the dining room for two rounds of "rockin out", but I finally convince him to join us in the living room for the third and fourth rock-outs.

The Axis Dance company (http://www.axisdance.org) ain't got nothin' on us.