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Belonging

Ginette's Story


By Brian Smith

Ginette's story is borrowed from Everyone Belongs...


Ginette is a young woman with a moderate disability who had been extremely frustrated with her life at the sheltered workshop.She hated getting off the train with 60 adults who have developmental disabilities (many more austerely disabled than herself) every morning, doing make-work every day, and facing this as the sum total of her future.She knew that society values a good job, wealth, physical beauty, self-worth. In society’s eyes, she felt she was inferior and fell short. She was frustrated, angry, had poor self-esteem, no friends, and was prone to angry emotional outbursts when frustrated.

Ginette was placed at the Gap where she began in a janitorial position and eventually had a position created for her taking care of stock.Today, five years later, she is a completely different person.She looks confident, dresses beautifully, and has developed social abilities she did not have before.

She has friends and when staff members go out for a beer, Ginette is invited along. Managers have noticed that staff are different when Ginette is around.They treat each other with more respect, are kinder and more accepting with each other when Ginette is around.




Comments

I very much relate to this story! The isolation experience can be tolerated, but I must admit it does not make one feel or act very approachable. I am pleased that others can positively understand that everyone should belong.
Posted by: girlsforscience | Friday September 29, 2006, 1:15 am

I very much relate to this story! The isolation experience can be tolerated, but I must admit it does not make one feel or act very approachable. I am pleased that others can positively understand that everyone should belong.
Posted by: girlsforscience | Friday September 29, 2006, 1:14 am

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