"I am a blind man." When people usually hear these words, they tend to feel sick about that person, but this is something Mair does not want. She prefers people to treat themselves so that they are not sick. Throughout the article, Mair publicly discussed her illness. She uses an optimistic tune so that she does not feel sad when she hears about her illnesses and how she talks about how it will affect her life. In the paper "On Being A Cripple" by Nancy Mair, Mair created her optimistic tone throughout the article, using her personal story, vocabulary, and syntactic structure, I will try to connect well.
People with limited mobility often feel compassion and sympathy from others, but are people with disabilities always wanting this? In this article entitled "as a scorpion", Nancy Mas uses an interesting selection of words, repetitions, and satirical tones to make it possible for most middle-aged, noncomplete non-imperfect Americans to fully adapt topics . The word "disability" is "polite" or "politically correct" rather than the usual "disabled person" or "disabled person". According to the exact definition, for society filled with political justification, the use of words considered to be derogatory may be necessary for the purpose of this article by Mairs.
On Cripple is an article by Nancy Mairs suffering from multiple sclerosis. In her article, she self-named himself a "disabled person" and tended to use the term "disabled person" or "disabled person". Mairs did this because she was tired of the people sympathetic as she was sick. She wants to understand her illness from a simple point of view, not to make society think that her body is weak or unhappy.
People with disabilities and people with disabilities are not always the best way to live, but "gifts" are not on you. Because she is already jealous, Nancy Mairs knows this very well. In the article, "Mairs as a nephew writes to the reader whether it is about claudication, regardless of whether it is a disorder.Oh, but it is very pleasant to use this word is.