Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Maybe I'm a jerk?

Okay, maybe this makes me a jerk?



Today on Facebook, CrossFit.com posted a video of a guy named Tod doing some burpees. Go Tod! First, can I just say I think it's awesome Tod is doing burpees. Frankly, I think it's awesome when anyone does burpees.

The post goes on to claim this video is "the most motivational 8 seconds of your day". Hey, I get you. Burpees can kind of suck and it is motivational watching someone duke their way through a set. However, it wasn't the burpees, per say, that were considered most motivational but more so the fact that the person who was doing burpees had legs that ended somewhere around the knee cap.

Why do we make the assumption that physical fitness is the sole-purview of the able-bodied?

In the comments, many people posted how inspiring and amazing it was that Tod would engage in physical activity because he's got a physical disability. While I think it's lovely that people felt inspired by him, it also demonstrates that most people have made assumptions about physical disability that maybe it's time to let go of. Is it really so completely and totally amazeballs for a person with a disability to workout? I don't think so.

While our bodies might work in a different way, the vast majority of people with physical disabilities certainly can (and do!) work out. It's not like our responsibility to care for our physical selves magically absolves the moment we take on the additional adjective "disabled"? And how do you know that we don't make the same damn excuses as the rest of you for occasionally skipping going to the gym or not eating healthfully or whatever? And who's to say that the barriers some able-bodied people face with getting fit aren't as or even more challenging than whatever accommodations may be required for the physical disability.

You know what would be really awesome? I'd like it to just seem completely and totally normal for everyone and anyone to be physically active - old, young, skinny, heavy, light, tall, short, disabled or able-bodied.

2 comments:

JBuell said...

LOVE this post Leya, especially your very last paragraph. I think you're bang on the money.

Chris said...

Well said. I imagine most of those people would rather not have the adjective attached and rather be seen only as different as somebody with a different hair color.