Feb 27, 2024

Stroke survivor and journalist, Cam Wells, discusses his mission to change the way disability stories are portrayed in the media.
Cam also discusses his work in the disability community, including his involvement with the Italian Canadian HandiCapable Association, which provides sports and recreation opportunities for people with disabilities.
Cam believes that disabilities and rare conditions affect everyone in some way and advocates for inclusivity and respect. #RareDiseaseDay
My
name is Cam Wells. I am a stroke survivor and I hold four diplomas
from St. Clair College. After getting the first one, which is
journalism, I came to realize there's a great imbalance in the way
disability stories are typically portrayed in the media. Portrayed
as either really bitter or really inspirational. You don't often
see the middle ground. I figured after graduating, I could set
myself the task of trying to change all that. I've been actually
doing a show [Handi Link].
for 15 years now. As
a person with a disability myself, I've come to appreciate that
there are so many beautiful shades out there to be appreciated.
I've actually been honored both locally and nationally. I'm a
nominee for Canada's Disability Hall of Fame. God willing, I'll
actually get it sometime.
I've interviewed everyone from a cast member of TV's Breaking Bad
to a couple from Corner Gas, but really the best stories are the
ones that come totally out of the blue. Like during the opening of
the pandemic, there's a quadriplegic pilot, a friend of mine who
had lost I think it was his home and his vehicle to a fire. The
health restrictions didn't allow people to do very much, but this
town got together and they said, "We want to rebuild for this guy.
He's part of our community." So they took it upon themselves and
did what they could to help him out.
I was your typical kid. I didn't know much about the world beyond
just your typical kid. You go to school, you spend time with your
friends and family. That was my world. September 29th, 1995, I was
eating a can of frozen juice, I remember. I was at school having
lunch and I thought I was having a brain freeze. Must've been the
world's biggest brain freeze, because it resulted in a first round
of neurosurgery and six days in a coma, which is I might add, the
only time in my whole life I got enough sleep, but I couldn't move
my left side.
For 35 days, I was in the hospital and went through various rehab
procedures only to find that part of the anomaly in my brain had
been left behind. They couldn't get it. I had what was essentially
an experimental procedure at that point. I was the youngest kid
they had ever done it on at this hospital. It wasn't available
where I was, so thanks to a long and tedious insurance battle,
ultimately, we were able to get what was called gamma knife surgery
and successfully remove the anomaly.
I came back a different person. The truth is, I would not change it
for anything. I basically discovered who and what I am spending
time among people with disabilities and various rare conditions. In
an academic sense, yeah, you can learn the medical model of this
condition may be this or that, but you can't learn the strength
factor. For every condition out there, there's always that one
unaccountable person who's defied the odds. The best way of
learning about such people, just spend time with them. Share a
meal, share some time, tell them a bad joke, what have you.
Probably the biggest moment for me was... and I’m not real proud of
this, but I chose entirely the wrong program my first year of
college, entirely the wrong thing. I figured because I was working
in a job related to the field, I'd be good at the academic side. I
was not. I actually found myself academically dismissed from the
college. Through various acts of misunderstanding, I was basically
forced out and spent an entire summer begging to get back in. But
when I found myself doing the correct field of study, something I
could do, a journalism scholarship was granted to me by a
disability group that I now work for. That's where I met Egidio
Novelletto, a man who was advocating for his people.
I grew more and more fascinated by the work they were doing, and I
started writing articles on the subject and even did a field
placement doing public relations materials for them. I realized
that so many stories are just not shared. You look at a traditional
sports page and you'll see some great athletics, but every night of
the week, there's disabilities athletics. There's people who
medically complex. They're out there doing it. They're putting on a
great show, playing a great game, but where is the representation
of that?
Now, it was a long gap between my years in elementary school, which
I was in when I had the stroke and my years in college, but the
funny thing is the reporter who did the story on the experimental
surgery I alluded to was actually later one of my professors. As a
graduation gift, I gave her what may be the only surviving copy of
that footage.
I became more and more fascinated by the world of disabilities, and
since I was doing PR for them, I wasn't able to do anything with
the radio station at the time, but the program director, she left
the door open. She basically said, "If ever you want to do
anything, come and pitch a show for us." Basically upon graduating,
I went to them and I said, "Hey, can I do something on disability
issues?" Well, the rest is history. However, I realized that there
were others involved in similarly interested stuff.
I actually worked with a team in 2013 to release a guide for radio
stations on accessibility. Some of the things people don't think
about like adapting your physical space, or some of the language
you use. Even things as simple as the lighting for people with
seizure disorder. I'm coming to realize that I wasn't the only
person who actually wanted to see the best in people, wanting to
see them living up to their own strengths. It was really an
eye-opening experience.
One thing I always have maintained, when a person with a disability
gets up and they make toast, that is not inspirational per se. That
is called breakfast. That is a very human thing. But really people
with disabilities, they do what they do just to live the best life
they can. That is the principal reason behind my work.
As a trained reporter, I love a good story. I love hearing tales of
what society doesn't think is possible. I thrive on that. But yeah,
in a way, owning it for myself is part of the process. One thing
that I've shared any number of times, I had a childhood bully,
horrible, horrible experience, I might add. He used to try and
stick magnets to my leg to see if it was real, and as I do the show
sometimes when I'm interviewing somebody working with younger kids,
I think to myself, "I don't want anyone to have those feelings that
I experienced in my own youth. I don't want anyone to ever ask the
question, am I good enough?" Knowing that you're rare, knowing that
you're unique is a way of owning it.
I have a friend, Daniel Brenner, great, great guy. He's actually a
robbery survivor. He was shot as a child and witnessed several
people in his family being essentially murdered in front of him. He
was told he'd never walk again, but he picked up a guitar and he
used a form of self-healing. He actually gets by just fine now. In
fact, I have another friend named Renee who runs a music studio,
and she was looking for a teacher, so I introduced them and now
they're working together.
One of my primary roles in the disability community is working for
the Italian Canadian HandiCapable
Association, which is an organization that does sports and
recreation for persons with disabilities. It's my honor to work
alongside them as they provide things like yoga, tae kwon do,
soccer, all manner of things for people with disabilities who might
not necessarily have any other athletic opportunity. Fact is, when
you're out there and you're an athlete with a disability or
anything medically complex, you're not thinking about the factors
that might hold you down. You're not thinking about somebody
telling you you're not good enough or you'll never do that. You're
just living in the moment and enjoying the game. The ICHA was
founded by a man named Egidio Novelletto, whose son wasn't allowed
to participate in a traditional soccer program, which was a very
eye-opening experience for him. He decided to found a charity, and
working with various levels of government, he was able to build a
complex and establish something meaningful for persons with
disabilities to be a part of. Normally, that's where it comes from.
Having somebody personally connected, it's usually the gateway.
Truth is, when it comes to disabilities, rare conditions, they
affect us all. There's a term I heard in my work once, not disabled
yet, meaning we prepare terms of respect and inclusion. We're only
making our own futures better in so much as we're all affected. If
you pass 10 people in the street, somebody's got some factor that
makes them unique. Somebody has a mental health concern or an
emotional disability, or maybe somebody in a wheelchair.
One of my primary sources of information is NORD, the National
Organization for Rare Disorders. I consult them on an almost weekly
basis to reach out to disability and rare disease groups around the
world. My thinking is if it's affecting one person here, it's
affecting others out there. I figure it's a universal concept, or
rather a series of universal concepts. Yeah, you can solve the
problem for yourself at home. That's great, but if others around
the world don't have the same access to medical information or
don't have the same resources or even wherewithal to ask those
questions...
A few years ago, I actually interviewed an accessible theater in
China and I might add I had a very difficult time placing that call
due to various satellite connections, but they actually have this
great thing where they have a sign language interpreter in stage
productions. However, they're an acknowledged character. They're
part of the show. Are they providing a service for the audience?
Sure they are, but they're actually included. It's shown me what
the world really is, if that makes any sense. I've met people and
learned things I never would have otherwise.
Honestly, one of the greatest people I ever knew, Dr. Marcia Rioux,
she was the head of Disability Rights Promotion
International, God rest her soul. She introduced me actually to
one of the UN Representatives who was involved in writing some of
the disability legislation that has now been embraced pretty much
the world over.
The work I do, there is no end, honestly. It's a stepping stone,
but it's incumbent on everyone to try and take that step forward. I
always say on the air, it's not about an immediate cure, but it's
about the work towards getting there and disability, rare
conditions, they affect us all. Maybe you're not the one affected
directly. Maybe you're friends with a caregiver, or maybe you just
happen to have a friend of a friend. It's the degrees of
separation.
You can't look at any family. You can't go back all the way or as
far back as humanly possible and not find some factor that makes a
person unique or rare. As we go, we gain understanding. Look at
things like chronic fatigue syndrome. That's a big one. 20 years
ago, doctors would argue, "No, that's not a thing. You're just
getting old. Just go home, get some sleep. These days, we look at
it and we recognize this is a condition. It's about taking the next
step forward. It's not about listening to anyone who says, "There
is this glass ceiling. This is as far as you can go." Progress is
built on the idea that a person will test it for themselves.
I had a professor once, a lady I actually have a lot of respect for
now who told me it was physically impossible for me to pass some
speed drills in my college days, because I only type with one
finger. My exact response, "Watch me." And I got through it.
There's one story I would like to share as a shout-out to some of
the people that I've had the pleasure of meeting over the years.
You never know who's going to be connected to who, so keeping an
open mind and supporting others.
27 years prior to this, I remember there was a cartoon I loved
watching. After the stroke, it was part of my rehab. It was my one
half-hour during the week that I didn't have to think about the
rehab or the pain. An organization I worked with provided some
promotion for Easterseals. They happened to
have two of the voice actors from that show speaking at an event in
Windsor. So I called in a favor, got photos with them, autographs,
and just got to share a little bit of their story. After all those
years, I was able to say, "Your show saved my life, so thank you
for that." It was actually the 90s X-Men. I was a bit of a comic
enthusiast. I actually got to meet Gambit and Rogue, nicest people
in the world. They were so kind to me, I cannot stress that enough.
But the fact that I had a chance to actually tell them what their
work had meant to me.
It's important in any condition, any rare disease, just to
acknowledge when somebody is there, when somebody does some good.
Yeah, there's a lot of hardships people have to endure, but there's
always support and if you find the right people and you show them
that you appreciate what they do, it just stays with them.
My name is Cam Wells and I'm aware that I'm rare.
@RareDiseases @DRPI_global @EasterSeals @CJAMFM
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