Jump to main content

Follow us on Twitter Twitter and Facebook Facebook!

Email bulletin signup

The Abilities Bulletin is free, monthly, and packed full of news and information you can use.


Your account

With an account at abilities.ca, you can join the conversation, and you can use the website to manage your subscription to the magazine. Signing up is free and easy!




Blogs

Photo of  COMMUNICARE - DisAbled Women's Network (DAWN) Canada
COMMUNICARE - DisAbled Women's Network (DAWN) Canada

Our Hidden Reality - Conjugal Violence against Women with DisAbilities



Photo of Raymond D. Cohen
Raymond D. Cohen

A Generation in Motion


People

Higher Calling

Weihenmayer, pictured here atop Mount Everest, has climed the Seven Summits
Weihenmayer, pictured here atop Mount Everest, has climed the Seven Summits  (Photo: Michael Brown)
He is one of the most well-known extreme athletes on the globe. At 43, Weihenmayer’s resumé is full enough to spread over two lifetimes. He is the only person who is blind to ever climb to the highest point on each continent. He has graced the cover of Time magazine, and is the author of two books that have been translated into multiple languages.
By Samantha Craggs
More...

People

Living Large

Image: Living Large The reality-TV stars tend to focus on the positive side being little in an average-sized world. “I’ve learned a lot from it,” says Klein, who stands four feet tall. “I don’t think that I’d be the same person if I was six foot. I don’t take certain things for granted that I think in any other circumstance I might.” Setting a positive example and breaking down barriers are the key messages behind the couple’s hit prime-time TV show, which premiered in May 2009. More than offering a glimpse of what it’s like to be “little,” it’s also a show about a newlywed couple negotiating their first few years of marriage, moving to a new city, building a home, nurturing careers, sharing laughs and dreaming of starting a family.
Read more...

Organizations

Check Out the Newly Revised Directory of Disability Organizations in Canada - NOW ONLINE!

The Canadian Abilities Foundation, with the support of TD, is proud to re-launch the Directory of Disability Organizations in Canada.
Read more...

Travel

Destination: Dolphin Therapy

Image: Destination: Dolphin Therapy While dolphins have fascinated humans for ages (If you’ve ever been part of a packed audience at the Vancouver Aquarium’s shows, you’ve seen their fans), Dolphin Assisted Therapy (DAT), a relatively recent (and somewhat controversial) form of treatment, is showing us that these creatures could be more than just a pretty sight. You don’t have to travel beyond the usual winter getaways to discover dolphins’ therapeutic benefits. There are holiday resorts in Florida, Hawaii, Curaçao and the Bahamas that feature swims with dorsal-finned playmates as part of the adventure.
Read more...

Health + Activity

Resolution 2012: Get Healthy, Get Fit

Image: Resolution 2012: Get Healthy, Get Fit Fitness resolutions may be a New Year’s cliché, but that doesn’t mean that they don’t have merit. They can be helpful reminders of where we are...and where we want to be. People of all abilities need to work towards good health, but fitness can be especially life altering for people with disabilities.
By Kathleen Wilker
Read more...

People

Online to Oprah

Image: Online to Oprah The world was first introduced to 26-year-old Zach Anner via the Internet, when he submitted an audition video to Oprah Winfrey’s competition, Your OWN Show: Oprah’s Search for the Next TV Star. Anner and nine other hopefuls were chosen to be part of an eight-episode reality TV show that premiered in January 2011. The prize was huge: the winner would get a spot on the media queen’s new Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN). Anner’s humour and self-confidence were instantly apparent to audiences, and he quickly won over viewers with his jokes about everything from his condition—“I think cerebral palsy is the sexiest of the palsies”—to failed TV-show formats he had considered for the audition, including fashion and cooking: “Normally, when I cook, I set my pants on fire... The next thing we’re gonna learn how to cook is takeout!”
Read more...

Learning

For Your Information Winter 2011/2012

Image: For Your Information Winter 2011/2012 This past October, Michelle Amerie, a member of our Abilities family, completed the Easter Seals Drop Zone challenge. Casting fear aside, she rappelled down a 32-story building. It was all for a good cause—proceeds from the fundraising event are used to support children and youth with disabilities. Since 2005, the Drop Zone has raised more than $4.8 million for Easter Seals. Click More... to watch a video of Amerie’s amazing descent.
Read more...

Human Rights

Equity In Hospice Care

Image: Equity In Hospice Care The end of life care system is failing many people with disabilities. Hospice Toronto knows that people with disabilities do not typically access end of life care and now would like to know, from them, why. To gather information about this they have posted a survey about their Transitions Project for People with Disabilities on their website (hospicetoronto.ca). They would like to encourage Abilities readers from across Canada to participate. It will only take a few minutes of your time to complete – but the value to Hospice Toronto will be immense - and very much appreciated. Participation is anonymous.
Read more...

People

Painting by Touch

Image: Painting by Touch Throughout most of his life, John Bramblitt, 39, turned to drawing or writing whenever his seizures became too much to bear. Creating something offered him respite from the disruptive convulsions, that were part of growing up with severe epilepsy. But when Bramblitt lost his vision 10 years ago because of damage caused by the disorder, he thought that his ability to create and enjoy art was gone forever. Then one day in 2002, Bramblitt decided to start painting again. He considered doing something that is regarded as visual to be almost an act of defiance—and he was ready to defy expectations.
By Monique Beech
Read more...

Independent Living

A Revolution of the Mind

Image: A Revolution of the Mind The growth of the consumer movement in Canada in the 1980s created a complete paradigm shift for Canadians with disabilities. Out of it developed a new appreciation of people with disabilities as being important citizens with abilities, as well as a new philosophy regarding the role of service providers and of people with disabilities as empowered consumers.
By Independent Living Canada
Read more...

People

Extreme Wheeling

Image: Extreme Wheeling When Aaron “Wheelz” Fotheringham was a little boy, he used to blast up and down the hall using his crutches, pretending that he was a superhero. These days, as a pioneer in the sport of wheelchair motocross (WCMX), Fotheringham flies for real. The 19-year-old made it into the 2010 Guinness Book of World Records as the first person to do a single backflip in a wheelchair. In August 2010, he mastered the double backflip.
Read more...

News, Views and Opportunities

Achilles Canada Partners with Ontario Blind Sports Association
Achilles Canada, in partnership with Ontario Blind Sports Association (OBSA), is promoting the "Shared Vision" project. Their goals are to get people with vision disabilities active, to keep them healthy through sport and dietary education and to help up-lift and empower them through social interaction and personal accomplishment.
Read more...
 

See more News, Views and Opportunities
Promo graphic: Subscribe to Abilities
 
 
abilities.ca services
Directory of Disability Organizations in Canada - Browse or search the most comprehensive database of disability organizations in Canada
Access Guide Canada - Your guide to accessible places in Canada
Donate online - Help support the work of the Canadian Abilities Foundation
Subscribe - Order a subscription for yourself, and a gift subscription for a friend
Write for us - Read our writers' guidelines
Advertise with us - See our rate card
 
Promo graphic: Proud sponsors of the Canadian Abilities Foundation
 
 
 
Landscape of Literacy and Disability (Canadian Abilities Foundation publication) by Ezra Zubrow, et al.

This groundbreaking report definitively shows, using easy-to-read maps, the wide discrepancy of literacy between those with and without disabilities and it provides a critical look at hot-spots across the country. To purchase a copy visit our online store (select Shop online at the top of the homepage).

Landscape of Literacy and Disability
 
 

Your account

With an account at abilities.ca, you can join the conversation, and you can use the website to manage your subscription to the magazine. Signing up is free and easy!




Forgot password? | Create account
 

Email bulletin signup

The Abilities Bulletin is free, monthly, and packed full of news and information you can use.