PORTRAIT THIRTEEN: Compassion (Solo voice)I'm appalled at myself. How could I think such a thing, especially confronted with her presence. But I did. Luckily later, thinking about degrees of intelligence I recognised how stupid I'd been. But I had thought it. With other disabled people I've met the mind's life is not an absence: it's different, but vital. Not here, not her. I sensed a vacancy, tinged with suffering: a mind that knew something was wrong with its self and its body. . . . No, not "knew". A mind only just aware of itself cannot be said to "know" - it sensed, somehow, its failure. She sensed she suffered. But though abortion on diagnosis seems an appalling suggestion to make, is compassion any better. . . more appropriate? Most of my best disabled friends love the life they've got - a physical and socio-political struggle, but fun. Her terrible void. . . her uncomprehending dread. . . They don't share it. They don't need compassion. She can't use it. |
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