TRUTH FROM THE EARTHBOUND TOMBOY
BY HEIDI JOHNSON-WRIGHT
I get oodles of inquiries
here at the EarthBound TomBoy and in the everyday world, asking me
questions about gimp life. Many of my gimp friends get similar questions. So,
it seems we gimps have an opportunity -- nay, a responsibility -- to educate
you curious souls who want real insight into how we roll. So, I'm going to run
a feature from time to time called "Ask a Gimp Girl!" And away
we go...
Q. Aren't you really in it
for the parking?
A. Wow, your insight has
laser-like accuracy! Incredible! Now that I've been found out, here's the scoop. I was a
precocious kid. Many years before I learned to drive, I knew close-in parking
was the key to happiness and success in life. So back in the summer of 1972, I
had my parents send me away to a medical experimentation laboratory. (We told
everyone I was at church camp.) The chief doctor -- who bore a striking
resemblance to Marty Feldman -- re-programmed my genetic material to ensure I
would contract an autoimmune disease. And, golly gee wilikers, if I didn't come
down with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis a year later, and a particularly wicked
case at that. The disease ravaged my joints from head to toe leaving behind
catastrophic permanent damage. I was using a wheelchair in no time!
Flash forward to my thirties
when I bought my first wheelchair-lift van. That's when my "get crippled
to get parking" scheme really paid off. I would drive to fun destinations
on a whim (i.e., supermarket, doctor, my workplace) and search for accessible
parking (called "handicapped parking" by you outsiders). I made sure
to have lots of music cassettes with me, so I could listen to my favorite tunes
as I circled and circled, scouting for a parking space unoccupied by weekend
athletes who'd borrowed their Great-Aunt Tessie's placard.
I recall one particular
reconnaissance run when I explained to a motorist that he'd inadvertently
parked in the access aisle between two spaces -- the area I needed to deploy my
ramp and exit the van. He screamed and called me a word I first heard on my
grandpa's Redd Foxx comedy album. That's the day I knew I'd finally arrived
into the upper echelon of the parking elite.
Q. Can you have children?
A. So glad you asked. Honestly, there are few
things I'd rather do than talk to a complete stranger about the parts of my
life that the US Supreme Court says are protected by the First Amendment
penumbra of privacy. Why? Because like all gimps, my duty to educate the
general public on what it's like to be one of "them people in a
wheelchair" trumps all of my personal feelings and needs as a human being.
Now, on to the question.
Before I can answer it, however, I have to consult my gimp question de-coder
ring. (I got it in a box of Peanut Butter Captain Crunch back in 1976 and it
hasn't failed me yet.) Okay, I'll give the ring a spin...Hey, wait just one
darn minute! "Can I have children?" is not really the question at
all! What you're really asking me is "Can I carry out the act that has
been the traditional way of conceiving children?!" Ah, you're a sly one,
Mr. Question Asker, that you are.
Okay, I get it. Gimps are
not exactly held up as society's ideal of sexual attractiveness -- Push
Girls and the occasional fashion model aside. Most of us are pretty much
sidelined as benchwarmers in the Big Game of Slap and Tickle. At least that's
how you outsiders see it.
Let's see...how can I put
this politely? How can I satisfy your longing for knowledge without
compromising the gentility of the EBTB blog? Okay, here goes...
If I "can't have
children," -- as you put it, Mr. Question Asker -- then I sure have wasted
a king's ransom on contraceptives over the years.
http://earthboundtomboy.blogspot.com/2015/05/ask-gimp-girl.html
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