Showing posts with label Author Heidi Johnson-Wright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Author Heidi Johnson-Wright. Show all posts

Friday, November 11, 2016

MY BEAUTIFUL WIFE

BOLD BEAUTY

Excerpted from the Miami Herald:

Heidi Johnson-Wright, an attorney and adjunct faculty member at UM’s School of Architecture, had a clear idea of how she wanted to be portrayed when she worked with photographer Gil Bitton. “I knew I didn’t want to be a princess in pink because that’s just not me,” she says. “I wanted something edgier, more like a punk rock aesthetic.”

She got that look exactly — and something more.

After the shoot, she felt stronger and more self-assured than ever. “Ebullient, euphoric, I really enjoyed it,” says Johnson-Wright, who was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis at age 8. “It was a little like taking on a different persona. How many women do you know get an opportunity to do something like this?”

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/visual-arts/article113933318.html#storylink=cpy


click to read full story 

If You Go
What: Bold Beauty Project Visual Arts Exhibit
When: Nov. 12-25. Opening reception 6-9 p.m. Nov. 12.
Where: Bakehouse Arts Complex, 561 NW 32nd St., Miami
Info: $20 advance admission, $25 at door. boldbeautyproject.com

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/visual-arts/article113933318.html#storylink=cpy






Tuesday, October 18, 2016

CELEBRATING MORE THAN 110,000 READERS

THANKS FOR READING AND SHARING MY CONTENT


During the weekend, this blog passed 110,000 total readers.

This blog grew slowly, launching more than six yeas ago.

It has featured more than 1,300 posts.

A few dozen have been guest posts from my wife, Heidi Johnson-Wright, from her award-winning EarthBound TomBoy blog.

In the past year, they have been more political -- because the bigotry and anger in America has made it impossible to not use the written word to come to the defense of women, people with disabilities, Muslims, Hispanics, the LGBT community and others singled out by the frighteningly large amount of America that still views diversity through KKK tinted glasses.

We have shared 250,000 words and more than 2,500 images -- almost all my originals shot with my beloved Nikon -- in this blog.

Stay tuned, we have more great things to share through the years.

By the way, the image is NOT one of our cats.

It's a Kedi that greeted me every morning on the bench at the Beyazit Tram station near the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul.

Thursday, May 19, 2016

DISABILITY...



A FATE WORSE THAN DEATH?

By Heidi Johnson-Wright

Step right up, kids. I’ve got something I gotta tell you, and that something it this: drive stupid and you’ll face the worst possible fate you could ever imagine.

What do I mean by “drive stupid?” I mean taking your eyes off the road, especially for stupid reasons. Like to replay that Demi Lovato tune. Or to re-adjust those flesh tunnels in your blown-out earlobes. Or to send a text from your Hushed app to that unwitting recipient who thinks you’re a chick from Barcelona when you’re really a dude from Barstow.

You see, distracted driving can have some mighty brutal results. Like wrapping your dad’s Kia Sorrento around a tree. Think how mad he’s gonna be when it’s totaled ‘cause your leg is now attached to the carburetor. 
 

I know what you’re thinking. You’ve seen the “scare ‘em” movies in Driver’s Ed of real-life crashes. You think I’m trying to frighten you with the specter of death.  Au contraire, amigo mio. I am trying to make you piss your pants at the thought of something much worse than death: being disabled.

Being disabled is way worse than death. At least a corpse is still a full-fledged person. But a wheelchair user? Truth be told, going from “cool to crippled” would drop your value to about six-tenths of a human being. That’s why we’ve placed a non-disabled kid in a vintage wheelchair, told him to hang his head in shame, and put his photo on the above poster.

Being disabled is absolutely the worst thing we could think of. The worst combination of fear and shame imaginable.

Worse than running over a toddler. Worse than doing time for vehicular manslaughter. Worse than being dogged by a felony record. Hell, worse than death itself.
So the next time you text while driving because you figure ending up in a coffin doesn’t sound so bad, remember: you could end up in a wheelchair instead.

For more satire in the name of social justice, visit 

Monday, November 16, 2015

FACE OF FAILURE,




SYMBOL OF SHAME 

By Heidi Johnson-Wright

Back when I was a kid, it haunted me.

It was always lurking in the back of my mind. It weighed on my shoulders and jangled my nerves.
It was the stick with no carrot that my parents used to motivate me. Its sinister proximity was held over my head, the motivation to do 10 more minutes of exercise. To walk 10 more feet. To try just a little harder.

I feared vampires but I was much more terrified of it. Vampires vanished with the sunrise, but this dastardly beast was always just around the corner. 

It was the face of failure and the symbol of shame. A stain impossible to wash away. Once its lamprey-like jaws latched on, it consumed you. It became you. You were marked for life, and what a pathetic life it would be.

You see, my Nosferatu, my demon, the thing I feared above all others was a wheelchair.
I never consciously admitted it to myself, but I think I knew as a teenager that full-time use of a wheelchair would have made my life a whole lot easier, and undoubtedly richer. The precariousness of my walking and the crushing fatigue it caused meant I could expend energy only for essential movement like walking to class.

In high school, I went to the restroom once a day or not at all. I simply couldn’t afford the pain and extra energy needed to make the trip. Holding it was a better option for me, if not for my kidneys. Activities like writing for the school paper or yearbook were impossible. To participate meant more walking. And that just wasn’t gonna happen.

Back then a chair was acceptable only for those labeled “profoundly disabled,” individuals who’d been discarded by society. Even the elderly shunned wheelchairs. My grandma would rather have worn Hester Prynne’s scarlet letter on her bosom than ride in one.

“I hope you at least have two fingers you can still move to run a wheelchair!” my mom once shouted after a therapy session when she thought I hadn’t tried hard enough. (I didn’t know how to break it to her that a power chair is controlled with a joy stick, not “forwards” and “backwards” buttons.)

With adulthood, my childish fears faded. I shook away the terror of needing a chair, but it took much longer to shake the shame. I still believed I was lucky that the non-disabled allowed me into their stores, restaurants and theaters, even if it meant coming in the back door through the boiler room. I should count my blessings that I was allowed to sit amongst them, even if it was in the back row.

It took decades to see my wheelchair as a device of empowerment rather than a burden of failure. It was no longer an albatross around my neck but a raptor that swept me off to college, enabled me to have a career and a meaningful life. 

If you’re young and disabled, don’t let ablecentric troglodytes define your life and how you should live it. Don’t buy into their bigoted ideals. Reject their pathetic need to make hierarchies and pigeonhole you in them.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s this: going through life in an upright position is highly overrated.