Like
many people with disabilities, she has
spent time in hospitals over the holiday
season.
As
for Christmas 1967, “I was still newly
injured and wasn’t strong enough to
sit up in a wheelchair,” said Tada in
a telephone interview from her southern
California office.
“Although
appreciating the carolers and friends
bringing cookies, I was depressed.”
Her
family tried brightening up her room,
including hanging garland along her
roommates’ beds.
“Then
one day I was strapped face‑down
in a Stryker frame and wheeled into
therapy,” she said. “My occupational
therapist suggested I paint white candy
dishes and make them into Christmas
gifts by holding a paint brush between
my teeth. She gave me the brush, and
I splashed poster paint on the dishes.”
The
occupational therapist baked the candy
dishes in a kiln, and Joni presented
the red, green and gold creations as
Christmas gifts to her family.
“That
meant the world to be able to give something
of myself,
something that I had made,” she said.
In addition, her painting of those Christmas
gifts that day was the beginning of
what would become a successful career
creating high‑detail fine art
paintings.
When
visiting hospitals and healthcare facilities
today, especially during the holidays,
Tada often encourages people with disabilities
there to think of others and reach out
in whatever means possible to roommates,
medical staff, therapists and guests.
In part, focusing on others helps reduce
feelings of loneliness.
Said
Tada, “It’s always good to think of
others this time of year. I remember
painting those candy dishes to give
something of myself in a personal way,
which is not unlike God, who gave us
himself in his son Jesus.”
Tada
and her husband live near Los Angeles.
Her role as a disability advocate led
to a presidential appointment to the
National Council on Disability in the
late 1980s. Learn more about Joni Eareckson
Tada and the holidays in next week’s
column.