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Take a deeper look at the issue Do For One addresses in our podcast. It's an orientation to Do For One's work, guided by stories.

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Confronting the Problem

New York City surrounds us with ambitious, hardworking, fascinating people. It is a fast paced environment, offering the best of the best to see and do. Its cultural aspirations make it one of the most exciting places to live in the world. It can also be the loneliest and most challenging.

Where power, beauty, talent, intellect, and money are valued, those who cannot readily provide them go overlooked. In fact, the exclusiveness in sorting what and who is on top – and what our relationship is to them – pushes attention away from marginalized people.

… the exclusiveness in sorting what and who is on top – and what our relationship is to them – pushes attention away from marginalized people.

Of the 8.4 million people here, it’s estimated that nearly 900,000 people live with disabilities. Lack of accessible transportation and affordable housing, unequal education, and unemployment are only some of the common issues people with disabilities face. These individuals often go neglected and are left with no means of connecting with people in their community or making friends.

Unfortunately, many of us have developed unwarranted fears by not having enough contact with disabled people. While this may seem insignificant at first glance, it is a serious problem.

People with disabilities are often

  • Decreased in social status

  • Moved involuntarily and separated from others

  • Excluded from commonplace socializing

  • Denied personal agency over their lives

  • Exposed to abuse and neglect

Conditioned to these circumstances and suffering hurt from bad relationships, people with disabilities typically have a distrust toward new relationships. At the prospect of making a friend who is there with no obvious obligations, many peel back with reluctance. The symptoms of wounding manifest in different ways; but their underlying question is, “Am I really lovable like that?”

Real Life Problems

  • A man lives at home with his disabled mother who is housebound. He attends a sheltered workshop where he does the same task every day. Staff at the sheltered workshop does not have the time or inclination to recognize that his boredom has turned to depression – or that he is ready to find competitive employment.

  • A timid young woman with intellectual disabilities and a visual impairment lives in a group home. Her only living family is an elderly grandfather who is unable to visit. She rarely gets a chance to eat her favorite foods and longs to attend a dance class.

  • "You try finding work when you can't read and write. I was left in an institution from the age of 9 until I was 23. I wasn't taught! Nobody cares." Perhaps his advocates will be able to help him find work. Perhaps they will help him to start reading. They will be there to listen. He will know they care.