calranthe
Well-Known Member
My wife is disabled due to a bike accident aged 20. We have a policy of ignoring what's supposed to be able to be done by a wheelchair user. If I can help with adaptions, I'd be happy to. I'm an aerospace engineer.
Oh, and I have cancer too (aged43) so have some sympathy. Mines a wussy cureable one though (thyroid)
Cancer sucks no matter what kind, a Doctor once told us most of our treatments involve one of two scenarios we shoot you with a shotgun (irradiation) and try to do more damage to the bad parts than good or we use chemicals so toxic to kill cancer cells that if we do not rinse them out of your body quick enough it will kill you. How is the treatment going?
I will probably take you up on that, I think a lot of people come into this with a 20/20 vision healthy demeanour and can not envision how an ill person could do this just because they couldn't, its natural we live and learn by experience, my thoughts on this is is very simple my wife shames most of the so called hero's on this planet and deals with things that would crumble most people so how the hell can I not stand up and say "hon you want to be on a boat I will move heaven and earth to make it happen and no one or nothing will get in my way" Other people see problems, I look for solutions.
The only major issue I am seeing is the getting her on and off the boat and a quick release way for her to keep herself steady while sitting in her corner on the boat, in my mind a simple ramp that can attach to the stern or side of the boat collapsible with hand rails, something like that must already exist.
Paola has an enduro manual wheelchair with suspension as long as it can fit width way on the dock I can get her anywhere in that (it goes off road quite well).
Another thing some people have not figured out is Paola is use to being stuck in a house unless we go out so lets say we go down the trent river and come to a marina she can not leave the boat ??? oh noes!! what will she do erm oh yes I know, take over 40% of the saloon with her crafting/drawing/painting equipment and have fun oh and send me off to find anything she could need.
***Now lets get morbid, you have been warned if you read anything else past this point do not come crying to me if it bothers you.***
As for strapping her in *chuckles* firstly I would make sure she had control when to strap in and made sure she practised uncliping until it was muscle memory let me put it this way of all the types of death Paola has coming to her in the future and the "what if" scenarios we face every day, death by drowning would be kinda pleasant alternative (oh boy that may shock some of you and to those I say this as anyone who knows someone who died by cancer, there is that point in certain cancer cases when even the highest grade drugs can't touch the pain) and yes I can say that because when I was 12 I drowned, it was the local swimming baths I was learning to swim and was walking around the deep end of the pool when a boy ran out of the showers and by accident knocked me into the pool, I still remember it, the coming up and struggling and then it all went dark, they only noticed me when my body had settled on the bottom of the pool, got me out and restarted my heart, compare that to some of the scenes I have seen in the cancer wards of hospitals and I know damn well which way I would want to go.