Monday, December 8, 2008

Families together

Hawley Conger
Matt Wappett
October 1, 2008
Families Together


Through families together I learned more than I thought I would, I thought that it would just be the same old thing I knew about disabilities in society. I thought that it would just be another one of those cheesy get together that was very corny and somewhat pointless. I thought that I would feel as though they were just exposing these children for all the wrong reasons. I had never really had any interaction with families of children with disabilities, and so this was a really good opportunity for me.
I worked with a little girl named Johanna, her brother David had Downs syndrome. He was eight his brother Matt was six and Johanna was four. They all played together very well and watching them interact was really interesting to me I was so surprised at how close the family was, because that rarely happens in society today. I watched how close it had brought this family.
Though David could not communicate in the way that Matt and Johanna could he could very well communicate with the family through motions and signing with his hands it was honestly amazing to watch and it takes a lot to learn how to sign and communicate to other people without using the voice. He interacted with the other people around somewhat but mostly he interacted with the things around him such as the water and really any object that was around him. Through watching him I realized that he treated everything as though it had some sort of a meaning every little thing he would pay attention to and interact with as though he was speaking with it. I think that if everyone had that outlook on life our world would be a lot different than it is today. If people paid attention to everything around them they would not take so many things for granite. We would appreciate the world around us and all that it stands for. That is what I really form got working with David.
While I was working with David’s sister Johanna I realized what the innocence of being four was. Johanna played with all of the other children as though there was nothing different about any of them. They were all equal in her book. She played with the other little girls and interacted with them; she never stared or treated any of them differently. I then thought about how shortly once she entered the school system this innocence would be corrupted. Those kids were going to be separated and she would know then that they were not like her, they would be different to her now and she may no longer interact with them they way that she used to. Which to me is what is so sad about the entire situation it is taking away from the social life of kids with disabilities. If society changed this then maybe Johanna would never have to think this way about some of her peers that way. I could start to see a little bit of corruption when she would ask me where David was, she knew that he always had to be watched out for, I’m sure she had heard her parents ask that very question several times. She was starting to realize that there was something different about David at the age of four. This is what really struck me about the weekend.
Matthew who was six he was the middle child of the family was fully aware of the fact that some of these kids were different than him. He would kind just go off and do his own thing and he wouldn’t really interact with the other children there. He was very aware that David was different as well. He would constantly follow David to make sure he was in the right hands and that he was not wondering off into his own little world. He knew that his parents really had to keep an eye on David because he was different and he also knew that the other children there needed special help. Matthew has been through the public school system however so he was shown that theses children are separated from the rest of the children his age. It seemed almost a little bit hard for him to accept the fact that his brother was different from the rest of the children his age and I believe that Matthew was scared of that idea.
Matthew had drawn a picture of his family but somehow he had forgotten to include David in the picture, and when we asked to draw David he wouldn’t. It was then that I knew society had completely gotten to him. I am however confident that Matthew will learn to accept the fact that David is different it just might take a while.
If I could have the opportunity to have another experience like this is would in a second. It was very interesting to observe how the different families dealt with it. I feel like the families that were there should get to the point where they feel as though they don’t need to go to gatherings such as this anymore, because whether they want to accept it or not they are in fact separating themselves from society by going to things like this. If they want to live a normal life then I believe that they should work on learning how to have there children become as mainstream as possible and maybe not cry for help for them as much. Being mainstream is just what they need to be happy and successful just as their peers are.
The family was very strong and they seemed to have everything down to a routine and they were very educated as well about David and what his conditions entailed it was interesting to see how closely they worked together to try and make David as comfortable as possible. David had a really hard time leaving his family however he cried every time they had to part he really couldn’t do it. It would be really good for David to become more independent and learn how to be separated from his family. I believe it would help him as he got older he would learn then how to become more apart of mainstream society.
I am very happy that I had this experience I learned more from it then I ever imagine. It got me a lot more interested in the class and gave me a deeper thought process on the whole subject I now have more questions and I want more answers!

The history of mental illness

Hawley Conger
Matt Wappett

The History of Mental Illness

In listening to the history of the disabilities and visually seeing what they are all about I have come to realize that it has come a long way though it is still a problem. It was really disturbing for me to see because I feel as though that stuff is hidden from us. We are taught a lot about history all through school but nothing of the history of disabilities is mentioned. Had I not taken this class I would have never know what had happened in the past and how highly disturbing it was.
While learning about the history I realized that as a society we look at them somewhat the same. Even if we feel as though we treat them kindly today, that is not the case we still hide them and separate them from the rest of society. Cases are still showing up everywhere where parents are treating there disabled children horribly and they are neglecting them; sometimes to their death. In several countries they still have institutions that treat them very poorly as though they are not human beings like the rest of us. The history always revealed a lot about medical history as well and where some of the ideas we still have today came form as well as some of the names that are now known as offensive. Moron and idiot and many more used to be known as medic

movie response

Hawley Conger
Murderball Response
1. The two main Characters of the documentary were Mark Zupan and the coach of the Canadian team who in facto used to be a player for the United States team. Throughout the movie the head coach of the Canadian team learned to soften up and become less intense about things going on in his life. He started to lighten up on his son and on the fact that he did not make the team for the United States.
Mark Zupan re-united with His friend Igoe who was the cause for him being in the wheelchair. He mended that friendship and relieved some of the guilt that was going on there.
2. I really enjoyed the movie and I was honesty amazed throughout the entire thing. It wasn’t anything like I had expected it was much more intense. At first I felt bad for the characters, but by the end of the movie I really didn’t see anything wrong with any of them and I did not feel as though I was watching a documentary about disability.
3. They did all or the same things a typical male American would do, they went out to the bars they dated they had social lives and they played a serious sport. The only thing that could have been viewed differently was that they were in wheelchairs. By the end of the movie though I didn’t even notice that part. They weren’t disabled at all they are just like the average male athlete. I think that is what the director of this film was trying to get across by putting things such as the sex talks in the movie.
4. This film made it as though it was just another sports film it showed that they are just everyday people like everyone else. It made it so that the audience doesn’t have to feel sorry for them but happy rather.
I know that as I watched I forgot about the disability aspect and I was more focused on the sport they were playing and on there lives as people. I think that that was the point of this film. To show that we don’t have to feel sorry and we don’t have to constantly help them. We Are in fact all on the same level regardless of ho our bodies work.

movie response

Hawley Conger
King Gimp and Gahanna Bill Movie Response

In the short film King Gimp the main character Dan Keplinger the main character is followed from the time he was twelve through his college graduation. He is in a chair and he has a hard time with fine motor skills. He become very frustrated with people who tell him he is not capable of doing things. He makes it through public high school and graduates with his fellow classmates. Dan then proceeds to move out of his house and live on his own. He also attends college and becomes an art major and he graduates with a degree in art. Dan now has well known paintings displayed in such places like New York.
In Gahanna Bill the main Character Bill Withrow can understand what people are telling him he just has troubles communicating things back. He grew up with a very supportive mother and father. He was very into his high schools sports and he loved to be as involved as he could.
As he grew older he got into a routine. His father would make him breakfast and then take him to work at the Sprite factory. He would then go help out at Gahanna High School in the sports department. It was his favorite thing to do he was very passionate about the sports there. When his father passed away he was devastated and he moved in with his sister. It was decided that Bill was going to work at the high school. It was the one thing that made him very happy and everyone there enjoyed him and his company.

2.
a. In king gimp and Gahanna Bill they are both social models of disability because they are trying to just fit in with day to day society but due to the way they communicate it is difficult for them to. People shun them and tell they cannot do things and both of them live productive successful lives.b. To me King Gimp was more empowering because I felt as though Dan himself was really trying to send a message to the audience. He had very empowering lines in his story. Talking about being alone his whole life and the way completely expressed his life and his feelings with his artwork and his writing. He made himself completely independent and reliable just on himself and it was extremely empowereing