homes are great examples of technology: they are structures that shelter us from the elements and give us space to perform the tasks of living. Technology is good to the extent that it enables us to do what we want to do. I want to draw attention to a weakness present in the design of most homes: they are full of barriers that hamper or prevent use by those of us not fully mobile.
A primer against ableism for the Duchenne parent community
Preface My two sons have Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Since their diagnosis 3 years ago, I have enjoyed the supportive environment of our Facebook parent groups. Continue Reading
Autism and vulnerability
To be human is to be vulnerable? I am in the midst of reading Thomas Reynolds’ “Vulnerable Communion: A Theology of Disability and Hospitality”. His Continue Reading
Everyday Beauty
I am transfixed by a (hitherto) private experience of the beauty of ordinary people. Admittedly, this doesn’t happen all the time and everywhere. The experience Continue Reading
Questioning Modernism
What is Modernism? Modernism is a search for universal knowledge: that is, not only for all knowledge, but also for knowledge viewed from all angles Continue Reading
7 things I learned from “After Virtue” by Alasdair MacIntyre
I recently read Alasdair MacIntyre’s classic work, “After Virtue”. In the spirit of doing important things poorly rather than not at all, here are a Continue Reading
On home and leaving it..
What is home? It is safety, sustenance, and society. It is our first seat at the theater of the world, the first school in which Continue Reading
Thomas Armstrong’s “Neurodiversity”
Thomas Armstrong knows more than most about the strengths of people with “labeled” brain weaknesses. His book, “Neurodiversity”, is an insightful work that offers a Continue Reading
Fear, Hope, and Joy in the Shadow of Brokenness
Fear When I was 16, I watched a documentary called “My Flesh and Blood“, which was about a single woman who had adopted 11 children Continue Reading
What is autism? A personal view
What is autism? It’s probably not what you think. Autism is not intellectual disability. Autism is not speech disability. Autism is not a total inability Continue Reading