04/07/2026
April of Advocacy: The Moment It Changes
Yesterday we talked about turning awareness into action, but how do we get there?
Awareness is noticing something isn’t working. Advocacy is deciding you’re not okay with it. And that shift doesn’t always look dramatic. Sometimes it’s quiet. It’s the second or third time something happens and it stops feeling like a one-off. It’s realizing you’ve been told to “be patient” more times than you can count, that the delay isn’t unusual, that the barrier isn’t accidental. It’s the moment where it stops feeling personal and starts feeling like a pattern.
That’s where advocacy begins. Not when everything is figured out. Not when you have the perfect words. But when “this is just how it is” stops being a good enough answer. And from there, it can take a lot of different forms.
For many people with disabilities, advocacy starts with self advocacy. Speaking up in a medical appointment. Asking for what you need at school. Setting boundaries. Naming when something isn’t working, even in everyday conversations. Those moments matter. And it can grow from there.
Advocacy can look like sharing your experience so someone else doesn’t feel alone. It can look like sending an email, making a call, or responding to a Call to Action. It can look like showing up in community spaces and connecting your experience to something bigger. It can look like organizing, planning, and pushing work forward behind the scenes. It can look like testifying, meeting with legislators, or working toward systems level change with organizations like DPC. It can be personal. It can be local. It can be systemic.
None of these are better than the others. All of them are part of how change happens. Because advocacy isn’t one moment or one role. It’s built from many different actions, layered together over time. Because once you see it, it’s hard to go back to not seeing it.
What’s something that shifted for you from “this is frustrating” to “this needs to change”?
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