Things Disabled People Would Love to Hear:
Things Disabled People Would Love to Hear For many disabled people, inclusion is not measured by grand gestures, expensive policies, or awareness campaigns. It is measured by the small moments. The everyday interactions. The conversations that either remind us we belong, or remind us that the world was never designed with us in mind. As a disabled advocate, ambulatory wheelchair user, and someone who has spent years navigating inaccessible systems, I can tell you that the words people remember most are often the simplest. Not because they are extraordinary. Because they are rare. "What are your accommodation needs?" This question immediately shifts the focus from assumptions to understanding. Too often, disabled people are expected to fit into environments that were never designed for them. We are expected to adapt, struggle quietly, or repeatedly explain ourselves. When someone asks what adjustments would help, they are sending a powerful message: "Your participation ma...