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Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Sometimes The Bad Guy is Pious

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Originally Posted November 17, 2013


I think one of the biggest tools we can develop as a disabled person, is the ability to read people. Since we have trust them with so much, it would be so easy to get hurt. I am not just talking about financially, as far as that is concerned we are a perfect mark for an identitay thief. for me they only need to make a mess up X, or get a hold of my stamp.
Over all I am saying when you are disable, you have enough problems so why keep toxic people in your life. I started to have this ability as a young man, I would even rather go without help, than knowing it came from someone that I did not really like. To me, this was a way to protect myself from opening myself to the wrong people. I really think my art help me develop this tool as I spent so many years painting portraits and studying people faces. I always took pride that I could count my friends and people in my network on my hands.
As an single guy, it was easier to weed out people in your life as I wanted. In addition, I never had to voice opinion, or explain my feeling about people they just stopped coming around. This job is much harder to do as your family and friends expands, because there is a fine line being protective and seeming as an asshole! You want your feelings to be heard, if you express to much, people will stop listening and put blinders on.
Does anyone remember the Confucius justice act VS. pious? it was a diagram set up as a bulls eye and I think he was stating that every action might not be just, but one should make sure that their action were pious. A pious action is more important then a just act.
Even when you are trying to do the right thing, you might turn into the bad.

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

From CheckMate to Check

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Note to self: the genie can grant heaven, or hell!!!

January 28
Yesterday I had a meeting to renew my Self Directions plan and budget. It was me, Dena, Ayana (Support Broker) and Vanessa my Service Coordinator. We were all done, until we told Vanessa about Dena and I needing some time apart. This led us onto another conversation, they all agreed most people in my situation would not speak up if something is wrong, since I am so dependable on Dena. Really most people would not understand how reliant Dena and I are on each other. I looked down at my plan and said this means more than a marriage license, it is a road map of how we have taken care of one another. I told Vanessa the next few months will let us know if we get one big house or live across from each other as Freddie Mercury and his Mary!

January 19 at 4:16 PM
Thank you all for the good birthday vibes, they are much appreciated. We just had a home cooked meal by Wifey with Super Son and Daisy. They are the best kind of Birthdays, simple and fun!

January 1 at 4:23 PM
So Wifey and I had already made plans for New Years Eve last week. The past two days we did not know to keep them, or not and she kept looking at me for guildance. Yesterday morning I said why not go with our plan, it is what Bipolar people do. Really it turned out to be a wonderful night, just what we needed to remind us why we have been together for so long.
People often forget that relationship are master pieces that never end, they are always a work in progress no matter what. Sometimes noise is needed to be made to break a routine that may be comfortable for some, but really it not benefiting all parties.
I love you and thanks for a wonderful night Wifey!

December 31, 2019 at 11:02 AM
Dena Huggler-Keplinger and I would like to thank everyone for all of the support they have shown us in this time of sadness and change. We both agree maybe this process can show people it is still possible to be respectful to each other even when people disagree. We agree changes are needed in our lives, but did i really take the right path to enlightenment?

December 30, 2019 at 6:00 AM
This was not the easiest decision to make, nor I do not know if it is the the best one. I was at a speaking engagement and was asked "what was your greatest accomplishment", I looked over to Dena Huggler-Keplinger and said being with her.
I still feel that way to this day, although Dena and I will not being entering the new year as a couple our love is strong and will always be so. In this time of sadness and change, I ask everyone to be respectful and supportive to both of us. We both take credit for our successes and failures.
I view love as a butterfly: if you hold too tight you might crush it, but most of the time you need to let it go so it can thrive.
I will always love you, my Queen!

Friday, January 17, 2020

The Parents Coner

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Feb, 25,
The Burnout that Special Needs Parents Experience
I think most parents probably feel burnt out at some point while juggling all of the responsibilities that parenthood brings. It seems there is always a never-ending list of things to do, but never quite enough time to get it all done. Parents of special needs children have lists that are a bit longer, but still have only 24 hours in a day.


Jan, 17,
Parents of Kids With Disabilities Are Hard to Get Along With
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Tuesday, December 24, 2019

I Am Thankful...

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Originally Posted November 18, 2015
I have been asked by Autism Speaks to post about what I am thankful for. Really that is a quite easy question to answer.

I am thankful for the networks that I developed in each stage of my life to help me achieved the successes. They range from being fully educated to having a thriving career as an Artist. With their help and believe in me, I have been able to show the world that people with disabilities can do anything that we want to.

I can still call the producers of King Gimp and tell them I am a bit stuck with something and we will figure it out. I can email my professor at Towson University for advice, or to get help on my latest projects.

Then you have the people as Smoot, Brianna, and countless others who support me during the studio madness. Most viewers look at my artwork and see what I created, but not the assistants who help in the studio. Sure they help with mixing paints, prepping the canvas, but also snacks and hydrations. Then there are the days that the magic is not happening, so we go do something ridiculous to recharge the creative batteries.

Although I will keep reaching for my next stage of life, there will always be a team of ninjas supporting me.

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Funding and Grant Ideas "UROs! (Unidentified Resource Opportunities)"

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May 11,
The Alliance for Citizen Directed Supports is proud to launch our Full Inclusion Fund today! The Full Inclusion Fund offers microgrants to people with disabilities who are either self-directing their services or working towards self-directing their services. We are offering microgrants to disabled people for up to $500 each to help them with expenses related to self-direction.


Nov. 20,
Maryland Developmental Disabilities Council and Maryland Works partner for the Fourth Round of TIP Grants.
The Council, in partnership with Maryland Works, funded seven service providers licensed by the Developmental Disabilities Administration to obtain customized technical assistance to improve services so more people with developmental disabilities are supported to obtain and keep the meaningful work they want in their communities, and to have meaningful days when not working.
The seven service providers that received funding are: Chesapeake Center, Chesterwye Center, CHI Center, Harford Center, St. Peter’s Adult Learning Center, Scott Key Center, and Star Community.
A total of 40 service providers have received technical assistance throughout the four rounds of Transforming and Improving Practices (TIP) grants.
To learn more about the Council’s current initiatives, please click here.

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Monday, October 14, 2019

Disability and Visual Culture

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My name is Dan Keplinger. I was born with Cerebral Palsy and I have been painting since I was 16 years of age. Many years ago (2000), I was the subject of an Academy Award winning film entitled King Gimp filmed by William A. Whiteford and Susan Hannah Hadary, and was written by me was made about my life. It showed my struggles, especially my desire to become an artist. I feel that my life with a disability and my mainstream education as an artist has allowed me to explore the disability visual culture from both vantage points, those of an insider and outsider.

I had my first gallery show at the Phyllis Kind Gallery in New York City in 2000. I have had two additional solo exhibitions since then at the same gallery. (Figure 1.) This portrait was done during my Senior year of high school, when I was experiencing a lot of turmoil, like most other teenagers. My first solo show consisted of mostly self-portraits, but they were done in away that was not expected from a person with a disability. They were dark and thought provoking; the viewer could see that I tapped into raw emotions.

When installing this show, Phyllis took into account that I was in a wheelchair and that this fact would attract other wheelchair users to her gallery. So the paintings were hung at eye level for people in wheel chairs, rather than the usual 60 inch midline. Many people with disabilities came to see the exhibition.

A few years into my art career, I began to have problems with my feet that kept me from working on my art for weeks at a time. Since I produce my art kneeling on the floor, my podiatrist said a permanent solution would be foot surgery. I put it off until 2004 for fear that it would change, or end how I produce my work. However, this fear has led me to new imagery. I started to re-invent my visual vocabulary. For example, I began to morph my foot into the front wheel of my chair. My current work is comprised of both painting and printmaking and in these concurrent bodies of work I explore this new foot/chair iconography (Figure 2.). Also the idea of the places I cannot physically get to, would they be better places or not?

Also, during this time I had to switch to a new doctor who did not know anything about me, or my success. She suggested that I try drug therapy to help control my movement. I refused to take the medicine because it would not only have changed who I am but my artwork as well. I am happy with who I am and what I am able to accomplish. My ability, the way the world perceives me, and the unique way in which I produce my work are an integral part of my artistic identity and vocabulary.

My work is deeply personal. Everything I create is an attempt to convey my experience to the viewer. I want the viewer to understand my physical as well as psychological experience in the world. I might paint a wheelchair climbing a set of stairs in an attempt to reveal some of the physical barriers I encounter in everyday life. In other words, I incorporate the image of a chair, which I anthropomorphize by giving it hands and feet. This image is meant to impart some of the psychological aspects of my life. Most people upon first seeing me do not see me as an individual but rather see only my chair. Although my work is about my own experience, I feel that it deals with the challenges in life, which can be experienced by anyone, regardless of his or her physical or psychological realities.

In the painting Who’s Town 2006 (figure3.), I become the architect of my own town, to make it more conforming to my needs. Everyone always talks about taking control of their lives, they should be disabled for a week. Then they would really get since of lack of control.

Monday, October 7, 2019

Symbols, Symbols Every Where Symbols

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The other week my friend asked me to help her think of some emojis kids could design during class. Really it is ironic that we are going back to communicating as they did in the caveman days. I also thought about this blog I wrote a few years ago.
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Symbols, Symbols Every Where Symbols
The other day I was thinking how I always said I was born at the wrong time, because my life keeps getting a bit easier as the technology improves. Maybe the field of Speech Pathology was ahead of the rest of society. When I first started to use a communication board, they were hand drawn symbols with words on it, so other people knew what the symbol meant. As my vocabulary grew, they would just add another symbol to the board.

I find it interesting that most of the same communication symbols are in use today even thou that devices have become digital. This takes the fun away from watching your speech therapist messing around with the contact paper and getting the bubbles out of it. Do not forget the fading from repeated used or rearranging when adding new symbols. Out of the blue I came up with this phrase to add on my board, “You rabbit you”. Nobody could figure out where it came from, but a few years later, Mrs. Peterson found it. She did not say where she found it, maybe it came from Bugs Bunny.
The reason why I had these thoughts, it is that symbols have become mainstream vocabulary. All of our social sites are just known as symbols, or on any electric device a symbol opens an application. Talk about different worlds colliding!