5 Tips For Writing Amputees - Disability Rep 101

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 18 ก.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 17

  • @BarefootDani
    @BarefootDani 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Thank you for this video, it was very educational and answered some specific questions I had. One of my main characters is a below-knee amputee, and I'm doing my best to try to represent her as fairly as possible

  • @londoncintron680
    @londoncintron680 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This is a really neat video! I've got this ongoing passion project and several characters are amputees. The main protagonist is missing both her hands and two other characters are bilateral above knee and below knee amputees respectively. It's a sci-fi series revolving around robots and technology so their prosthetics and assistive tech play a fair part of the story. The main protag has these claw-type hands (I've read that many hand amputees prefer these since they've got less moving parts, making them lighter and less maintenance heavy), the below-knee amputee as athletic style legs, but the above-knee amputee prefers using a wheelchair and even has special customization made to it!

  • @spacecat85
    @spacecat85 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    that was really helpful, thanks!
    I have a unilateral above-knee leg amputee character who usually wears a prosthetic. so, in light the shenanigans I put my characters through, one question I have right now is, with a leg prosthetic about the same technology as yours (it's scifi, but not everybody wants robotic prosthetics either) how difficult would it be to repair (temporarily, with limited tools), and what parts are the most vulnerable?
    also, any further tips / info in general, and good places for research that you (or others in the comments) happen to have are most welcome.
    (on a sidenote, I saw some really nicely decorated leg prosthetics years ago, that stuck with me as a great idea to help with characterization, too.)

    • @Cy_Cyborg
      @Cy_Cyborg  ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Thank you! Im glad you enjoyed it!
      For makeshift repairs, It depends what part broke. Most modern prosthetic legs are modular, so the socket, knee, pileons (the poles) and the foot can all be taken apart and swapped out for temporary parts (technically, in the case of emergency anything sufficiently strong enough be used as a part, as the connectors for each are a vice-like structure. I once used a broken chair leg as a temporary peg leg lol). If it's the foot or pilons, those are usually pretty easy to fix/replace with just an Allen key. The knee is a bit harder, since it's a lot more complicated but I havent personally tried messing around with that sorry. Sockets are custom made to fit, you could hypothetically fix a small crack with some silicone sealant or tape but anything bigger would be tricky. They're also typically the most vulnerable too. The knee is not as vulnerable but it's temperamental lol.
      As for other general advice, if you want to go with a lot of realism, google "ottobock" and "össure" they're the biggest producers of prosthetic components in the world and they have detailed instruction manuals for all their parts on their website that you can download. Most go over how to do repairs/installation etc for the more complicated bits!

    • @spacecat85
      @spacecat85 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Cy_Cyborg awesome, thank you! gonna check them out, manuals will defo help me understand the technical side better.

  • @AmbrosiaMooshine
    @AmbrosiaMooshine วันที่ผ่านมา

    I have a couple of character with missing limbs, and I haven't written much about them yet but this has helped - :)

  • @smiledude1538
    @smiledude1538 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Currently writing a quadrilateral amputee, so im currently doing research how to write them, ty for this video!

  • @izabelamisiak
    @izabelamisiak ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Thank you, that was very helpful and informative! There are things I didn't even know I should think about. You made me a better writer and human today - I really appreciate that. Have a great day!

  • @LucasDarkGiygas
    @LucasDarkGiygas หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks for the video

  • @neptune0740
    @neptune0740 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hi Cy,
    I wanted to say this video gave me a lot of ideas to consider for my amputee character. I found you through TikTok first and I was excited to see that you posted a TH-cam video.
    I have an oc with a double unilateral shoulder disarticulation (left arm) and a hip disarticulation amputation (right leg). I don’t know if that’s the right terminology so please lmk if it’s not.
    A big thing in his story is that he had to come to terms with his amputations and how differently he would have to function and learn to accept that it’s a new part of his life. That’s not all of his story, there’s definitely a lot of other shit that he has a character arc in but for my questions on amputation, that’s the main thing I want to discuss.
    A part of him coming to terms with his amputations is him realizing he needs to use a wheelchair sometimes as an ambulatory user instead of just using prosthetics exclusively bc the energy it takes to use them is incredibly draining to him. He’s also coming to terms with the prejudice from others and barriers he would have to face with using a wheelchair vs using prosthetics since his wheelchair would be more showing of his disability than his prosthetics would. He usually wears them under his clothing since he gets cold very easily, especially in his stumps and bc he can physically walk in them and like you said, people see prosthetics as a cure for amputation all together. As the story goes on I plan to have him use a wheelchair more because he’s learning to slowly accept that using a mobility aid like a wheelchair instead of almost always being exhausted on prosthetics is perfectly okay and that the barriers with using a wheelchair are sometimes more worth it than being exhausted and using nicotine to cope with it. Before the story starts and in the first few years of it, he used his prosthetics and the only reason he’s coping in the first part of the story is bc he smoked cigarettes to cope with the physical pain and energy deficiency he had. He was smoking before he became an amputee as well but only sparingly.
    I guess the main question I have is that I don’t want to write this part of his character as a pity story but rather a part of his character that shows him caring for himself more and being okay with sometimes using a mobility aid that causes more barriers for the sake of his own well-being.
    Also I’m so sorry this comment is as long as it is. I just wanted to make sure I articulated everything about this question and his character correctly. Thank you for reading this.

  • @andeeharry
    @andeeharry 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    thanks for sharing

  • @IridescenceStudios
    @IridescenceStudios 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Interesting! I enjoyed that, thanks for sharing. :)

  • @shroudstov.e
    @shroudstov.e 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I needed this video so much, thank you!! My protagonist is a double below knee amputee and as you mentioned, finding resources to cover the finer details like this has been a mess 😭 thank you so much omg 🧎‍♂️

  • @Saphimau
    @Saphimau 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I want to talk to people with disabilities to understand their experiences, where should I start in finding them online?

  • @andeeharry
    @andeeharry 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is helpful and since my stories take place in the far future where magic and technology is combined as society has reached type 3 on the scale...how would magic fused robotic tech limbs sound?

  • @Sly-Moose
    @Sly-Moose 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ty! Gonna search for an amputee YTer with an above the elbow cut
    My amputee character is a Puerto Rican grandma :)