Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Couples with disabilities: 5 love stories to celebrate


Reading about couples with disabilities who marry makes me happy, because I get a rush of hope for Max's romantic future. I can already tell he's going to be a ladies' man by the way he flirts with the waitress at the local diner who serves him mac 'n cheese. Although maybe it's the mac 'n cheese. Either way, I have dreams of Max someday finding happiness in love, as he's found happiness in so much in life. (And hopefully she'll know how to make great mac 'n cheese.)

These are a few great love stories about couples with disabilities I've read around the web. Check them out, and have some tissues handy.


Bill Ott, 38, and Shelley Belgard, 36, met at a local social club in Maryland when he was 12 and she was 15. He has Down syndrome and she has intellectual disability, as Ellen McCarthy tells it in her beautiful article for The Washington Post. "I didn't know what love was until I met her," Bill said. He took Shelley to his junior and senior prom, then they lost touch after high school. They reconnected when both signed up for a Caribbean cruise for people with disabilities. They married in September; for their first dance, they chose At Last.


As kids, Lindsey and Nick played together on a Little League Challengers team for kids with special needs; Lindsey has intellectual disability, Nick has Dubowitz syndrome, a rare genetic disorder. They started going out in 2005. "She is a caring, sweet young woman," her mother says. "She once told me, 'Mom, I don't want the same things out of life as you do. I just want to be loved.'" Last spring, Lindsey texted Nick and asked if he'd marry her; they wed last October. "As parents, we hope Lindsey and Nick will keep each other company," Linda wrote on her blog, Out One Ear. "Together, we hope they gain confidence, make wiser (and more independent) 'couple' decisions.... And when all this parental support is gone, they will still have each other. We hope they grow old together." Linda's asking people to send the couple valentines—find out more about her effort here.


A couple with cerebral palsy wed in Israel. If you haven't yet seen the video, you want to.


Nicole Brobeck, who has cerebral palsy, and Curtis Braxton, who has hydrocephalus and a seizure disorder, met at a living skills program in 2007 in Northern California. "I love Nicole because she's so happy and she doesn't let her disability get to her, get her down," he told Today. They got engaged last Valentine's Day, and planned to marry in May. After Nicole's dad died, however, her mother had major medical bills and not much money for a wedding. An organization that was going to throw them a wedding backed out. Then a florist spotted the couple shopping for centerpieces and roped in friends in the wedding industry, and they gave the couple a fabulous wedding. The bride wore a white satin gown decked out with lace, pearls and crystals—and matching white sneakers with lace and rhinestones. Said her mom, "There is no disabled love. There is only true love. And they have it."


And this, a seemingly different kind of story—yet at its heart, it's also about true love. Larissa and Ian Murphy had been dating for 10 months when he suffered a traumatic brain injury in a car accident. She never stopped loving him; they married in August 2010. As she writes, "Marrying Ian meant that I was signing on to things that I don't think I ever would've chosen for myself—working my whole life, having a husband who can't be left alone, managing his caregivers, remembering to get the oil changed, advocating for medical care, balancing checkbooks, and on.... But in light of all the practicals, and emotionals, it was so very simple: We love each other. And we love God."

33 comments:

  1. Love these stories! Thank you!

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  2. Thanks for sharing these stories. This is my first time on your blog. I just wanted to let you know, I am a "normal" person and I married a loving man with cerebral palsy and hydrocephalus who is also a wonderful father to our son who has a rare birth defect. My husband gives me hope everyday that our son will marry and find someone.

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  3. Lovely story Ellen. Thanks for including Lindsey and Nick in this piece. My favorite comment: There is no disabled love, there is only true love!

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  4. I am crying - with joy at the beautiful stories and with hope- that Bethany, like Max will get to experience a love story of her own. Thank you for sharing this! Absolutely Beautiful!

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  5. I've mentioned him before, but my friend has CP and has a live-in boyfriend who also has CP, and they will probably get married eventually (we live in Canada where that's possible). It would be interesting to read some of the perspectives of LGBT people with disabilities, and see how those two identities balance out. Did you ever read any stories like the ones above involving same-sex couples?

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    1. I agree, would love to read about that—have yet to see!

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  6. Beautiful stories, and I love wedding pictures! Best read ever for Valentine's Day.

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  7. How often does it happen that someone with an intellectual disability marries someone who is neurotypical? I see stories about couples where both are similarly disabled, or where one person is physically disabled and the other is typical. But I'm not sure that I've ever seen a story where the couple wasn't at an approximately equal cognitive level before the one you posted about Ian and Larissa.

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    1. While I haven't read about someone neurotypical marrying someone with ID, that doesn't mean it doesn't exist. But I have definitely read about a physically-disabled person marrying someone "typical"—like this couple: http://offbeatbride.com/2012/11/bride-with-disability

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    2. I'm neurotypical and married to a man that is intellectually disabled.

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  8. Love this post! Hopefully one day I will meet a great guy who sees me and not my "disability".

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    1. Nisha , you are very awesome and that guy would be lucky to find you.

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  9. Here is one more couple -- Monica and David Both of them have Down Syndrome and it is about their life and the supports that they need.
    Their documentary is available on Netflix USA.

    http://www.monicaanddavid.com/

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    1. Thank you, Ali! The film looks amazing, I will be renting it from Netflix.

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  10. muchas felicidades a todos!!!
    un saludo de amistad desde hermosillo sonora mexico
    bendiciones para ustedes!!

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    1. Yo recuerdo un pocito espaƱol, para yo entiendo! Si, muchas felicidades a todos.

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  11. Thank you so much for sharing these stories on inter-ability couples! What phenomenal stories of strength and love! I've been married for 8 years, and my husband has Cerebral Palsy. We have had and continue to have an amazing adventure together.

    We recently published our memoir, Ink in the Wheels: Stories to Make Love Roll, in part because there hasn't been many stories about inter-ability couples, and our vision is to inspire others that they can live the life they dream. Thank you so much for making sure these stories are out there!

    ~Megan Cutter
    http://www.inkinthewheels.com

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  12. Maybe Max will find a nice girl.

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  13. Hi its me Shelley. Thank you 4 stating the obvious love is blind and society needs a reality check in all nations. I quote treat others asyou'd like to be treated
    Love shelley

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  14. Thanks for sharing. Love is awesome. Love without limit.

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  15. man great stories.
    think ill add one here
    I met my wife 14 years ago at her high school graduation party. we had a mutual friend that had cp and decided that she needed a "Cheering up" party... see my wife has a moderate form of spastic cerebral palsy that confines her to a wheelchair and adversely affects her motor skills and speech. well after a year of meting at various events within a group of friends we decided that we liked each other enough to be a couple and figured hey lets give dating a shot and see where it goes. Now me i'm perfectly "Normal" but i have a i'm up for anything attitude. she is beautiful, funny, sweet, caring, loving did i say beautiful? anyway after a year i had decided that this relationship was in it for the long haul and proposed to her. she obviously said yes and we married the following year. 11 years and three children later I have zero regrets. Is it hard being with someone with a disability that effects them. people stare, laugh, say highly inappropriate thing but my view is screw them. what other think, say, or do has zero effect on me or how i choose to live my life. I love my wife. is it hard being a full time worker/full time caretaker/full time father of three? ya honestly it is. Is there days i want to pull my hair out and scream. honestly yes. are there things i've had to sacrifice to be with my wife. Yes again however she is worth it. As the old saying goes sometimes to cant help who you fall in love with. I know that to be an absolute truth.

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  16. Hi all the story is nice . I want to share a story of my life with u . I am a boy and I am a handicapped I love a girl since my school time I told her many time about my feelings but every time she reply that she don't want a person who is not perfect and I m very ugly also because I was nominate by some people most ugly person in my college but still I love her . Now she got a job in my office .

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    1. Obviously, honey, she's uglier because she can't comprehend the fact that no one is perfect. Hold out for a girl more worthy of your affections...one with a little maturity and not so closed-minded. I know it must be hard to work with her...especially if you still have feelings for her. :{ I pray you have open eyes for a better girl and that the wounds of this love heal quickly. Bless you. I married an amazing man with a physical disability and have had so many awful people ask "how could you do that?!?" I just ask them how could they not, if they met a man who loved as much as he and had confidence in himself and in us as a couple, shared similar interests, and had joy/love in his heart for God. I don't think I could get any better if I had a "whole-bodied" man. :D

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  17. Hi love you're stories .Its very encouraging .I met my husband more than 20years ago when I was still in school.He was perfectly normal .We got married and have 3 beautiful children .After being married for 8 years he got a accident at work and his right leg was put off till by his knee .Wow ....... what a change of circumstances .At the beginning I felt embarrassed to walk with him to be seen with him as I could not handle people looking and starring at us .Eventually I remembered my wedding vowels ,for better for worse till death do us part .He applied for a false leg and is so full of life .He cooks for me ,assist with the washing ,help with house chores and he does not feel sorry for himself .I admire him so much and now I love him more than ever .What other people think does not matter he makes me happy .

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  18. Love these stories! :) I am a divorced mother and was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis type 1 in June 2013. I met an amazing man with myotonic muscular dystrophy. Never let a disability hold you back! We all need to love and be loved.

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  19. I loved all the stories. I am learning about these experiencies now. I met a man who doens't walk because he got an accident. I met him twice and I feel that I am falling in love. He was my classmate when we were 14 years old, for two years. We met again this year, 30 years after school. I would love to hear some advices. Thanks!

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  20. It gave me hope that one day I'll find someone that loves me.

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  21. As African and physically challenged as I am, I hope to get the love of my life one day. Thank you for the beautiful stories. So inspiring.

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Thanks for sharing!



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