Some Fred Small lyrics for Ruth
Talking Wheelchair Blues
by Fred Small
I went for a jog in the city air
I met a woman in a wheelchair
I said "I'm sorry to see you're handicapped."
She says "What makes you think a thing like that?"
And she looks at me real steady
And she says, "You want to drag?"
So she starts to roll and I start to run
And she beat the pants off my aching buns
You know going uphill I'd hit my stride
But coming down she'd sail on by!
When I finally caught up with her
She says "Not bad for somebody ablebodied.
You know, with adequate care and supervision
You could be taught simple tasks.
So how about something to eat?"
I said that'd suit me fine
"We're near a favorite place of mine."
So we mosied on over there
But the only way in was up a flight of stairs.
"Gee, I never noticed that," says I.
"No problem," the maitre d' replies.
"There's a service elevator around the back."
So we made it upstairs on the elevator
With the garbage, flies, and last week's potatoes
I said "I'd like a table for my friend and me."
He says "I'll try to find one out of the way."
Then he whispers, "Uh, is she gonna be sick,
I mean, pee on the floor or throw some kind of fit?"
I said "No, I don't think so,
I think she once had polio.
But that was twenty years ago.
You see, the fact of the matter is,
If the truth be told,
She can't walk.
So he points to a table, she wheels her chair
Some people look down and others stare
And a mother grabs her little girl
Says "Keep away, honey, that woman's ill."
We felt right welcome.
Then a fella walks up and starts to babble
About the devil and the holy bible
Says "Woman, though marked with flesh's sin,
Pray to Jesus, you'll walk again!"
Then the waiter says "What can I get for you?"
I said "I'll have your best imported brew."
And he says "What about her?"
I say "Who?" He says "Her."
"Oh, you mean my friend here."
He says "Yeah." I say "What about her?"
"Well, what does she want?"
"Well, why don't you ask her?"
Then he apologizes.
Says he never waited on a cripple before.
We immediately nominated him for Secretary of the Interior.
Well, she talked to the manager when we were through
She says "There're some things you could do
To make it easier for folks in wheelchairs."
He says "Oh, it's not necessary.
Handicapped never come here anyway."
Well, I said goodnight to my newfound friend
I said, "I'm beginning to understand
A little bit of how it feels
To roll through life on a set of wheels."
She says "Don't feel sorry, don't feel sad,
I take the good along with the bad
I was arrested once at a protest demo
And the police had to let me go.
See, we were protesting the fact
That public buildings weren't wheelchair accessible.
Turned out the jail was the same way.
Anyway, I look at it this way--
In fifty years you'll be in worse shape than I am now.
See, we're all the same, this human race.
Some of us are called disabled. And the rest--
Well, the rest of you are just temporarily able-bodied."
-- posted for Ruth at A Different Light



12 comments:
Thank you Kay! Totally enjoyed this after just explaining to someone that a hotel room is not considered accessible if you can't get in the bathroom - to which he replied "but don't most of those people use a leg bag anyways?"
I feel like doing a little racing!
curosity killed the cat.... just wondering how you stumbled across the song and the artist? and i did find the song intresting and and very thought provoking on how i might approch the situation,
just wondering how you stumbled across the song and the artist?
I have a version Of Peggy Seeger singing it that I got from eMusic, but I ran across the lyrics recently when I posted the Ramones lyrics to "I Wanna Be Sedated".
Neat. Although - can anyone explain the Secretary of the Interior reference? (I probably should know this, but I don't.)
You can't tell the age of the song from the cd release because much of Small's work was released in cd format in 1992.
I'm fairly certain the reference to the Secretary of the Interior is about James Watt, who had the job in the early Reagan years and was very controversial because he was in charge of our national parks, etc. but was also rabidly anti-environmentalist. He resigned over this comment about his staff: "I have a black, a woman, two Jews and a cripple. And we have talent." That was in 1983, according to a bit of Googling. I thought the song was older than that. Also, I thought Watt was in office longer than that, but it must just have seemed like forever.
Also on Watt, there's this: On 2 January 1996, Washington lobbyist and former US Secretary of the Interior James Watt pleaded guilty to withholding documents and information from a grand jury in 1990. In exchange for his guilty plea, 18 felony perjury charges against him were dropped. Watt had intentionally concealed documents which had been subpoenaed during a grand jury investigation into the Reagan-era HUD scandal. He received five years' probation, 500 hours of community service, and a $5,000 fine.
Infamously banned women from wearing pantsuits in his department, without success -- the edict was flagrantly violated by all of his female attorneys.
Source
interesting!
Sort of apropos, not to Seeger or Watt but to the whole people not really getting what "accessible" means discussion, a friend just sent me this link:
Making a Statement with Sculpture: Access Denied at the Wooster Collective blog
I object to the bright yellow of the sculpture, otherwise, I love it and I'd like to see it travel everywhere. Like the Stanley cup.
What is the problem with the yellow for you? Does it bear some political nuance of which I am unaware, or do you just think it's ugly?
I think one of the goals in using this color had to be making the statues very obvious. What color(s) would you use instead?
I identify with blue wheelchair guy. I often see it and think "Yay! Access!" I think yellow guy is ugly. It's just aesthetic.
Now plaid guy. He would be cute.
Interesting. Thank you!
(I'm kind of obsessed with color.)
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