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which our contradictory ideology about human ability revolves. For the
might perfect them. It describes disability as what we flee in the past and
make its workings legible and familiar, despite how imbricated it may be
in our thinking and practices, and despite how little we notice its patterns,
more complex than the ideology of ability allows, and these many em-
bodiments are each crucial to the understanding of humanity and its vari-
unfold slowly over the course of my argument for the simple reason that
both involve dramatic changes in thinking. The level of literacy about dis-
a part of every action, thought, judgment, and intention that its hold on
us is difficult to root out. The sharp difference between disability and abil-
strive, including the capacity and desire to strive-in brief, the essence of
the human spirit. It is easy to write a short list about disability, but the list
concerning ability goes on and on, almost without end, revealing the fact
that we are always dreaming about it but rarely thinking critically about
and without the full commentary that they deserve. Some of the bullets