{"id":11912,"date":"2019-05-29T16:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-05-29T16:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.yesmagazine.org\/article\/peace-justice-pleasure-activism-disability-justice-care-joy-20190529\/"},"modified":"2019-12-05T12:05:11","modified_gmt":"2019-12-05T20:05:11","slug":"pleasure-activism-disability-justice-care-joy","status":"publish","type":"article","link":"https:\/\/www.yesmagazine.org\/social-justice\/2019\/05\/29\/pleasure-activism-disability-justice-care-joy","title":{"rendered":"The Joyful Intersections of Disability Justice, Care, and Pleasure"},"content":{"rendered":"
When I think of care and pleasure, I think of:<\/p>\n
\u2022 Me and my partner hanging out in bed during a \u201cbed day,\u201d constantly communicating about what hurts and what positions our bodies need to be in, offering to make each other tea or bringing over the chips. Spooning, reading, telling stories, making out and napping, in the middle of a massive pillow pile. We aren\u2019t trying to cram ourselves into an able-bodied vision of what sexy or a relationship is; it\u2019s totally OK for us to rest, chill, care for ourselves and each other. Our care needs are not some gross secret walled off from date night.<\/p>\n
\u2022 Or my friend whose multi-decade-old disability care collective helps her get on the toilet, shower, and dress every day, and people laugh, gossip, hang out, and have a great time\u2014it\u2019s the place to be! When I show \u2028a video that she made about her collective to the care webs workshop I teach, there\u2019s usually awed silence. Afterward, someone always says, \u201cI\u2019ve never seen someone be so joyful and unashamed while getting help getting on the toilet.\u201d<\/p>\n
\u2022 Or last weekend, when two disabled femme BIPOC [Black, Indigenous and People of Color] friends and I went on an accessible hike and had a blast. The care that allowed this joyful-ass space to happen included everything from one friend getting a guidebook of accessible hikes and researching routes to the ways we strategized together when all of a sudden the trail had no curb cuts, to our stopping every five minutes to take a breath (because one of us has lung tumors and one of us was using a manual wheelchair that day and I have asthma), to how my friends were chill when I got hit with sudden food poisoning and had to squat behind a not-so-private tree and have a really bad shit as bikes whizzed by. \u201cThis is where access intimacy gets real!\u201d I yelled, and we all laughed.<\/p>\n
\n
These are a few examples of the many joyful intersections of disability justice, care, and pleasure that I\u2019m really fucking lucky to have in my life. But I know that for most people, the words \u201ccare\u201d and \u201cpleasure\u201d can\u2019t even be in the same sentence. We\u2019re all soaking in ableism\u2019s hatred of bodies that have needs, and we\u2019re given a really shitty choice: either have no needs and get to have autonomy, dignity, and control over your life or admit you need care and lose all of the above.<\/p>\n
Also in the mix is the fact that some of us come from immigrant, Black, and Brown communities and have worked shitty, badly paid caregiving jobs for years, which hasn\u2019t made giving or receiving care uncomplicated. Many of us have been taught that needing care is a weakness we cannot afford and have survived through needing absolutely nothing. A lot of our communities still look down on disability or mental health as weakness and stigma, and we know that if we show ours, we can lose a lot\u2014dates, credibility, social capital, jobs, kids. It\u2019s no wonder I\u2019ve heard many friends say, \u201cI could never show my partner(s) that <\/em>disability, illness, mental health thing, <\/em>it\u2019s not sexy, it\u2019s too embarrassing.\u201d<\/p>\n For my part, I spent decades curating myself so only my \u201cnormal\u201d parts showed\u2014on dates, in the social world\u2014and never showed anyone my damn care needs. I did it because it was the best way I knew to survive. But it also made me deeply believe that those parts were disgusting and unlovable, which meant that I was, too.<\/p>\n For much of the past decade, I have been part of a disability justice community whose members have dreamed new ways of creating and accepting care as a pleasure, not a chore, and experimented with creating joyful spaces where we care for each other as queer, disabled people of color. I\u2019m proud of the work we\u2019ve done and the impact it has had. I also want to complicate it. There can be nothing more badass than a bunch of crips loving and caring for each other.<\/p>\n And community isn\u2019t utopia: We can fuck each other over or just be too exhausted or mad to be there, and some of us don\u2019t have community at all. Care isn\u2019t always orgasmically pleasurable: People need to be able to get what we need and go to the bathroom whether or not it feels like a dance party. I\u2019ve heard plenty of folks who work with personal care attendants say that they don\u2019t want their care workers to be friends\u2014they want them to be professionals who get paid well and treat them right, where there are labor laws and mutual respect.<\/p>\n I want there to be a diversity of care tactics. And I want everyone to be able to create wildly intimate, healing relationships where your care needs are present in the room, not crammed in the garbage. I want everyone to have access to this joyful, dangerous, wide-open pleasure, because it\u2019s the vulnerable strength we all deserve.<\/p>\n This excerpt from Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good, <\/em>edited by adrienne maree brown (2019 AK Press<\/a>) appears here by permission of the author, editor, and publisher.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" A different kind of disability care is possible\u2014and necessary.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":19055,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","format":"standard","categories":[8,261],"tags":[],"article-type":[253],"master-category":[463],"special-series":[],"type-of-work":[],"class_list":["post-11912","article","type-article","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-social-justice","category-activism","article-type-excerpt","master-category-social-justice"],"acf":[],"apple_news_notices":[],"yoast_head":"\n