MoNSTerBlog – August 15, 2006: Dare To Dream

Dare To Dream

“What have you been doing?” An acquaintance whom I have not met for several years asked me when we met last Sunday.

I told him I am involved in Independent Living projects.

“Ah, so you are living by yourself now,” he responded.

But Independent Living is not about rehabilitating people with severely physical impairments to achieve sufficient motor functions and skills to live by ourselves. More than that, it is a holistic approach to resolve many of the challenges that we are facing.

It all began in 1962 when a young man by the name of Ed Roberts enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley. It was an extraordinary milestone for Ed. He was severely disabled by polio and needed a respirator. He was the first such person to be accepted by the university despite his condition.

Subsequently, the university accepted fourteen more quadriplegics. All of them lived in the campus hospital. Through Ed’s effort, the university was awarded a grant called the Physically Disabled Students’ Program (PSDP), the first for a university anywhere in the world.

The PSDP provided a host of support services that was unprecedented during that time. It included attendant referrals, housing referral, benefits counselling and peer support, among others. With those support services, students with severe disabilities could live in the community instead of in the campus hospital.

In 1972, the first Centre for Independent Living opened its doors in Berkeley. It was established to provide services similar to the PDSP. However, its services were available to everyone who needed it as opposed to the PDSP which was mostly for students of the university. Through advocacy by the Centre for Independent Living, Berkeley became the most accessible city in the USA by the mid-80s.

That is a brief account of how the Independent Living Movement began. The most important aspect is that it illustrated how severely disabled persons can work towards self-determination if we put our hearts to it. Independent Living is about having choices and to be responsible for our own needs and decisions.

It certainly is not about living alone, being able to perform household chores or being financially independent. Contrary to that, many severely disabled persons practicing Independent Living have discovered new leases of life with the help of personal assistants. With this kind of support, they did things that they could only dream of previously. Some have even gone on to be gainfully employed.

Personally, I still need some forms of assistance although I can perform most tasks unaided. What is the point of spending three hours cooking when someone can help me accomplish that in thirty minutes? In Penang, I live alone not by choice. There are no support services that I can rely on to assist me. Like many of my severely disabled friends, I dream of the day when I am able to practice independent living in its essence.

Nevertheless, here in Penang, we have set the wheels in motion. I have conducted Independent Living and Peer Counseling courses. This is the foundation upon which we are building our Centre for Independent Living on. There will be a half-day seminar on Independent Living for People with Disabilities this Saturday. Our target groups are severely disabled persons, their families, caregivers and those who are interested to know more about Independent Living. Details of the seminar are here and here.

Seminar on Independent Living in Penang

The Sin Chew Daily, through its Wishing Tree Programme, is organising two half-day seminars on Independent Living for People with Disabilities. The seminars will be held in Penang and Kuala Lumpur respectively. The four topics that will be covered are:

  1. Introduction to Independent Living
  2. Practice of Independent Living in other countries
  3. Effect of Independent Living on Disabled Persons and their families
  4. Independent Living in the Malaysian context

The main target audience are disabled persons, especially those who are severely disabled, and family members who are acting as carers for disabled persons. The practice of Independent Living empowers disabled persons to take charge of their own lives. At the same time, it would lift the burden off the carer and family.

The Independent Living Movement has long taken root in the USA. The first Centre for Independent Living (CIL) was established in Berkeley in 1972. In the Asia-Pacific region, the first CIL, named the Human Care Association, was set up in Tokyo in 1986. From Japan, it has spread to South Korea, Philippines, Thailand, Pakistan, and now to Malaysia.

It is still in its infancy stages here. My goal, which is also the common goal of all my colleagues in the Society for Independent Living in Penang, is to set up a CIL to support severely disabled persons desiring to practice Independent Living. This seminar and the ongoing courses that I have been conducting in Penang will one of several steps that we are taking to promote our vision.

Here, I would like to extend an invitation to everyone who is interested to learn what Independent Living is all about to the seminar in Penang. We would like to work with the community to dispel misconceptions about disabled persons and work towards a goal that is mutually beneficial for all.

Seminar on Independent Living for People with Disabilities
Date: August 19, 2006 (Saturday)
Time: 2.00-5.00 pm
Venue: Sin Chew Media Corporation’s Hall
67, Jalan Macalister, 10400 Penang (Opposite UMNO Building)
Tel: 04-2226666
Language: English and Hokkien with Mandarin translation

Details of the seminar in Kuala Lumpur on August 27 will be published later in this blog and in the Centre for Independent Living Penang Forum. For further information on the seminars, I can be contacted at 013-340 3728.

Follow-Up Peer Counseling Course #1 – July 2006

July 2006 Follow-Up Peer Counseling Course at Bandar Baru Sentul
Photo by Wuan.

Andrew Hee and I were Resource Persons for the follow-up training on Peer Counseling at Institut Latihan Majlis Kebajikan dan Pembangunan Masyarakat Kebangsaan, Bandar Baru Sentul today. Eight Peer Counselors participated in the one-day event funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency. Kenji Kuno, the JICA Expert/Advisor for this project was with us throughout the entire day. I covered two topics – History of Peer Counseling and The Promises of Peer Counseling. It was a good learning experience, not only for the participants, but for me as the questions posed allowed me to understand Peer Counseling on a deeper level. The next training will be on September.