03/16/2026
Why It Matters Monday: When Systems Rely on Endurance
When access breaks down, the impact rarely lands on the system. It lands on the person. A delayed repair does not disrupt the manufacturer. It disrupts the wheelchair user. A meeting without communication access does not inconvenience the host. It excludes the Deaf participant. A reduction in services does not destabilize the agency. It destabilizes the person who depends on them.
Over time, a pattern becomes clear. Infrastructure is inconsistent. Accountability is diffuse. And the toll accumulates in very real ways. Energy that could be spent working, creating, resting, or connecting is redirected toward troubleshooting. Stress increases. Plans shrink. Hypervigilance becomes normal. Disabled people are expected not only to navigate their bodies and health, but to manage the systems that shape their access to the world.
This raises an uncomfortable question. Why are our systems designed in ways that rely so heavily on individual endurance?
When access depends on who follows up the most, who advocates the loudest, or who can tolerate the longest delay, it is not truly infrastructure. It is improvisation. Reliable infrastructure protects participation. Weak infrastructure shifts the burden.
Throughout this month, we have been naming the barriers and the hidden labor they create. This week, we are also noticing the pattern behind them. If access in a space depends on someone constantly pushing for it, what does that tell us about how that space was built?