Alex Johnson, in black, talks with Tennessee lawmakers who participated in his "Spend a Day in My Wheels" challenge. |
The
Tennessee eighth-grader convinced a group of state lawmakers to spend a
day in wheelchairs earlier this month, so they could experience those
challenges for themselves.
"I
could talk to you for hours and hours about the difficulties people in
wheelchairs face on a daily basis," Johnson said in a speech to
lawmakers, CNN affiliate WSMV reported. "Until you actually sit in a chair, you'll never fully understand."
The 14-year-old actually came up for the
idea for the "Spend a Day in My Wheels" challenge when he was in the
fifth grade, to help his classmates understand things from his
perspective, according to a news release from the Tennessee House GOP. He attends Friendship Christian School in Lebanon, Tennessee.
Johnson has a form of skeletal dysplasia, which affects the growth of bones and cartilage, and he told WSMV that he was able to walk when he was little, but has used a wheelchair since the second grade.
State Rep. Clark Boyd, who represents Lebanon, helped organize the bipartisan event.
He told WSMV that he didn't have any previous experience with wheelchairs.
"Even
in a building that is handicap accessible, still you bump into doors.
You bump into walls. Some of the doors become very heavy for someone in a
wheelchair. Opening a refrigerator door, doors seem to be a pretty big
challenge," he told WSMV.
The Permobil Foundation supplied the wheelchairs, which the lawmakers used to attend meetings, work at their desks and do other regular activities.
Boyd
said in a statement that the experience was eye-opening and that he had
no idea how frustrating it would be to get around in a wheelchair.
Johnson said he hopes the experience will inspire the lawmakers to help make the world more accessible.
"They can influence things," he told WSMV. "They can help people achieve more independence."
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Tennessee 8th-grader challenges lawmakers to spend a day in wheelchairs
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