Jump to main content

Follow us on Twitter Twitter and Facebook Facebook!

Technology

Cane Quandaries

...Not Exactly Putting on a Top Hat!

By Linda Ironside

Having a disability is not much of a problem on my scooter. In fact, it can be fun passing able-bodied "walkers" on the sidewalk with a friendly little beep... although sometimes, I must admit, I am tempted to invest in the kind of air horn used so effectively by 16-wheelers when they want a little attention. But in general, on my scooter, I get quite a lot of joy from showing off for young children, who are always enthralled with what must look to them like a super toy.

My cane, though -- now, that’s another story.

I used to associate a cane with Fred Astaire, so nimbly drifting across my screen. He was using a walking stick, of course, but from my child’s perspective it was a cane.

I also watched the elderly gentleman down the street going for afternoon walks, always with his cane. He walked purposely strode, actually, back straight, eyes fixed just ahead. He didn’t use his cane so much as flourish it. It was an accessory, part of the image he created on the street. I couldn’t imagine him without it.

What a disappointment it was, therefore, when I started to use a cane myself. And still now, years later, I have failed to copy the Fred Astaire look: the grace, the artistry, the flair.

They both made it look so easy, Fred and the dignified-looking neighbour. But it turns out it’s not that simple. I don’t walk tall. I lean. I wobble. And I still occasionally plant the cane tip firmly on someone else’s foot, or whack a person on the shins (crowds are a challenge!).

All in all, the world’s a much safer place with me on my scooter rather than prowling around with a big stick.

The problem is not the cane itself. It’s my hands -- namely, the fact that I have only two. The cane takes one, leaving only one other for the many, many things I cannot do with my teeth, knees or other parts of my body that occasionally hold things.

Like when I get in the car in the morning. With a purse, keys, cane and briefcase, I am completely overwhelmed by baggage, feeling more like a world traveller than a woman off to tutor a student. What does one do with a cane while unlocking a car door? At that point, it’s just an impediment. No one needs a cane to open a car door -- what one needs is hands, of which I find myself in short supply!

I’ve tried leaning the cane against the car. I have even placed the cane on the ground or car roof temporarily, but that seems to lack a certain "je ne sais quoi."

I invariably end up using a tactic I call the BPM, or "body pressure manoeuvre." It’s simple enough, if a bit lacking in the style department. I sandwich the cane between my body and the car, with one hand hanging on to the baggage and the other free to do the key work. This is only successful, mind you, if I have remembered to make my "sandwich" against the back door, leaving the front door accessible.

I wonder how the man down the street did it?

Another place I always run out of hands is a cafeteria. I’ve seen kids deftly carry their tray in one hand and fish for money with the other. How do they know where their centre of gravity is? (Physics students, all?) Maybe I just eat the wrong kinds of foods -- a little on the heavy side? Sadly, I cannot carry my tray with one hand and, again, I find I have just too much baggage for only two hands.

The scooter is definitely more appealing. It has places to PUT things. And it’s classier. A scooter has wheels and a motor -- a big attraction with anyone over the age of two. A cane tends to make people think of ski accidents and hospitals.

For me, though, a cane will always evoke the image I have failed so miserably to recreate: Fred Astaire, complete with top hat.

But I take some solace in remembering Ginger Rogers. She didn’t need a cane. But, as I’ve heard it, Ginger could do everything Fred Astaire could do -- except she did it backwards and while wearing high heels.

There may be hope for me yet.

(Linda Ironside is a freelance writer living in Vancouver, British Columbia.)

Share with us the lighter side of living with a disability! Send your contribution (600 words) to: The Lighter Side, ABILITIES, 489 College St., Ste. 501, Toronto, ON, M6G 1A5; or fax to: (416) 923-9829.
 
Cover: Winter 1997-98

This article originally appeared in the Winter 1997-98 issue of Abilities Magazine.

Comments



You must be logged in to add a comment. Log in
Promo graphic: Subscribe to Abilities
 
 
abilities.ca services
Directory of Disability Organizations in Canada - Browse or search the most comprehensive database of disability organizations in Canada
Access Guide Canada - Your guide to accessible places in Canada
Donate online - Help support the work of the Canadian Abilities Foundation
Subscribe - Order a subscription for yourself, and a gift subscription for a friend
Write for us - Read our writers' guidelines
Advertise with us - See our rate card (PDF)
 
Promo graphic: Proud sponsors of the Canadian Abilities Foundation
 
 
 
Landscape of Literacy and Disability (Canadian Abilities Foundation publication) by Ezra Zubrow, et al.

This groundbreaking report definitively shows, using easy-to-read maps, the wide discrepancy of literacy between those with and without disabilities and it provides a critical look at hot-spots across the country. To purchase a copy visit our online store (select Shop online at the top of the homepage).

Landscape of Literacy and Disability
 
 

Your account

With an account at abilities.ca, you can join the conversation, and you can use the website to manage your subscription to the magazine. Signing up is free and easy!




Forgot password? | Create account
 

Email bulletin signup

The Abilities Bulletin is free, monthly, and packed full of news and information you can use.

 

Article Tools

Send a letter to the editor

Share this article through email or social networks