Our #Beddingout Competition…it wasn’t how we imagined, and that’s OK. Announcing a winner!

You may recall that as part of ‘Bedding Out’ at Salisbury Arts Center this month we hoped to create a huge visual map to highlight the hidden and private lives of people affected by disability.

We asked for your interpretation of a what your ‘bed-life’ is because it was in context to the work Liz was creating with the live performance from her bed.

When I thought about the idea of a visual competition I thought that for many people the risk of revealing themselves is too great because it’s too personal, too real. Opening a door into your private world, when we are already facing increasing hate crime, and  where internet trolling is rampant, was perhaps too big an ask.

What I can say is that despite not being able to create a huge visual masterpiece Bedding Out reached over 80 countries around the world. We are amazed by that figure and happy to have been involved with chatter on twitter with folks from as far away as Australia and Japan!

However, back to that competition, there were entrants, photos, videos and even blogs… and we have a prize.

Since we can’t decide who should win on the basis of who is better at #beddingout, because that’s just plain weird, we’ve decided we’d go on how someone unaffected by a disability and who had no direct connection with the entrants felt impacted upon them most.

So, as decided by 18 year old student Natalie Miles, and Mr Andrew Carter (Engineer) we have a winner….

Sincere thanks go to Chris Evans (twitter @Onlyfluffyone) for allowing others to see that which no-one usually gets to see … Congratulations! https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=_N7rpizgUL8

We truly don’t mean to sound cheesy when we say we feel everyone who jumped into bed with this idea and the competition is a winner, because you are.

Thank you for continuing to shout, tweet, blog and demand that people listen to the voices of the disabled – you guys rock!

 

 

On #beddingout from @Dr_vole

Dr Vole bedding
“Liz
I’m submitting this photo & short piece of text for your interactive map, or for the roaringgirl website Bedding Out page, or whatever else you want to do with it.
It was inspired by the Bedding Out conversation today. Here’s my blurb:
“I watched the Bedding Out conversation today and then had to go on an errand.
Since the horrendous onset of sciatica a year ago, I’ve changed from a part-time wheelchair user (with fibromyalgia) to a wheelchair user who can’t sit for more than half an hour, often not even that. (And standing for more than a few minutes is not an option.)
So to go anywhere more than a few miles away, I’ve had to ask friends to drive me while I lie in the back of the car.
Today I had to go a bit further, but there wasn’t anyone I could ask… but I reassured myself that at least the weather had got warmer, so I could break my journey & lie down for a while.
Then while I was lying in the back of the car, in the deserted car park of a disused chapel, it occurred to me:
Bedding Going Out.
This is pretty much the only way I can go out now.
I take a folding sun lounger (er… rain lounger) with me to local events, so that if I have to get off my twingeing backside I can lie on it – if there’s room for the lounger. (Much thanks to the people who put on a music festival here recently, who were incredibly helpful.)
And that’s how I got through the two-hour Atos Stories event we put on this week.
Dr Vole”

Live Stream


‘Reminding myself why’ by Liz Crow #beddingout

On the eve of Bedding Out, there’s mounting excitement in the twittersphere and my stomach is looping the loop. Will the work do something? (Will my body do what’s needed?) Will people join in and make the project work?

I am back at the eve of my Fourth Plinth performance in Trafalgar Square. Then, it was the uncertainty of performance that proved its power. Then, it created a starting point, a moment, where the onlooker was confronted with questions and a place where other campaigners and activists could gather and usethe opening it provided.

I remember then, as anxiety created its own momentum, stopping it from running out of control depended on my returning to the why: the absolute essence of what I am doing. It was there that clarity lay, and the guts to see it through.

So here’s is the why of Bedding Out:

  • It is the peddling of myths about disabled people and those in poverty that bear no relation to our lives as they really are. It is the notion of us, in and out of paid work, as feckless and shiftless, fraudster and scrounger, as workshy and morally bankrupt that ignores the many influences of a person’s capacity to work and sets us aside as ‘other’.
  • It’s the use of those myths to justify cuts and introduce a system of benefits that ensure those who most need support are most likely to fall through the gaps.
  • It’s the way those myths link to soaring hate crime, distress and even suicide, and yet are exploited for political gain. It is the way we must edit ourselves to stay safe.
  • It’s the lie that austerity is caused by us when it comes out of inequality, and it’s the way that inequality only magnifies with government policies like these.
  • It’s the way disabled people were the first, virtually unreported for the first two years, but we were never going to be the last. Now it’s unemployed people, poor people, single parents, immigrants, the under-25s; next it is to be people deemed to be earning too little.
  • It’s the way that even as the poor are punished by income cuts, the rich are rewarded with income tax cuts and corporations with tax evasion condoned.
  • It’s the way that good people are swayed by lies, or distracted by their own struggles, or silenced from speaking out for fear they could be next, or intimidated by increasingly aggressive suppression of protest.
  • It’s the way that government policy, and the absence of opposition, threatens our futures, the way that it confines and divides and degrades us all. It’s the way that it punishes non-conformity, says we are motivated only by greed, unravels 30 years of disability progress, undoes democracy. It’s the knowing that there are better ways of working and contributing and living alongside each other if only we care to look.
  • And it is the way some of us have banded together – in Disability People Against the Cuts, Spartacus, Black Triangle and more – in a sustained campaign of answering back. It’s about the awe I feel at the strengths that have emerged: the skills and strategies, alliances formed, deep compassion and resilience, and at new ways of campaigning from home and sofa and bed.
  • It’s about the possibilities of all the different individuals and groups joining forces to create an opposition. It’s the way that a gathering momentum could yet create a collective and unequivocal cry of ‘Not in my name,’ until politicians of all parties realise they have no choice but to heed us. Which is also about hope and becoming part of a much bigger decision to shape a future that is so much better.

So that’s why. In Bedding Out, I am portraying a human story in its broader political context. It’s about combining with all the other voices to create a very different story of what it is to be us and to feed into the debate about what kind of society we want to be.

In the words of John Lennon, adapted, let’s start a revolution from my bed.

Join me. Read full article: http://www.disabilityartsonline.org.uk/liz-crow?item=1769