Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I got a temporary one when I went on bedrest for DH to use for our hospital visits.
lol no because that's illegal.
Anonymous wrote:I think I got a temporary one when I went on bedrest for DH to use for our hospital visits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I got a temporary one when I went on bedrest for DH to use for our hospital visits.
I hope you’re misremembering. Your DH wasn’t disabled!
NP, since the PP was on bedrest, she would not be able to drive, therefore her DH would need it to get her to the hospital.
Or DH could drop her off at the hospital door and then park wherever he can find a normal spot.
Someone on bedrest needs to be up and out for the shortest period of time. So, waiting for someone who drops her extends that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I got a temporary one when I went on bedrest for DH to use for our hospital visits.
I hope you’re misremembering. Your DH wasn’t disabled!
NP, since the PP was on bedrest, she would not be able to drive, therefore her DH would need it to get her to the hospital.
Or DH could drop her off at the hospital door and then park wherever he can find a normal spot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being pregnant is not a disability. Get over it.
Wow - you must be a real peach. While it's not a disability, I would gladly allow a heavily pregnant woman the ability to park close to a store for her convenience. I see it as a gesture of goodwill and respect.
Um, that’s not how it works. Those aren’t “goodwill and respect” parking spaces. They are reserved for people with disabilities who NEED them. If pregnant people without disabilities take them, then wheelchair users won’t be able to park close to the store.
If a pregnant person has a disability because of the pregnancy, then of course she should be able to get a handicapped spot, just like a non pregnant person would who is suffering from the same pain or injury. But not for goodwill and respect.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone remember the special parking spaces that some stores used to have for pregnant women? I seem to remember Harris Teeter having signs with a stork on them. I thought they were also for mothers but may be remembering wrong.
I was long past the time of needing them but remember thinking it was goo
d for those in need.
I think they also had special spaces for Veterans as well.
Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one who thinks the Illinois law makes sense?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being pregnant is not a disability. Get over it.
Wow - you must be a real peach. While it's not a disability, I would gladly allow a heavily pregnant woman the ability to park close to a store for her convenience. I see it as a gesture of goodwill and respect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I got a temporary one when I went on bedrest for DH to use for our hospital visits.
I hope you’re misremembering. Your DH wasn’t disabled!
NP, since the PP was on bedrest, she would not be able to drive, therefore her DH would need it to get her to the hospital.
Anonymous wrote:No but I should have, if I got pregnant again I would. By the final trimester I was using a cane. For people who are saying pregnancy isn’t a disabled event. Good for you that isn’t true for everyone, and when we reach 100 degrees outside a pregnant person shouldn’t be walking from the back of a parking lot. They can’t regulate their temp and can get over heated
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When my preemie twins were discharged after a long NICU stay they automatically gave me a handicapped permit, valid for 6 months which was as long as they expected them to be on tubes and o2 and things. I never used it once bc it wasn’t like the twins were walking and needed to be close. It seemed selfish to use when I was an able bodied person who would be taking them to all of their appts, but it was definitely part of their discharge packet
I think they gave you that pass because the preemie twins were considered temporarily disabled people, with the tubes and o2. I don't think it would have been selfish to use the pass, because you had to get the temporarily disabled passengers (the twins) into wherever you were going.
Yes that's why they gave it to me but it seemed stupid b/c whoever was going to be taking them in was not disabled so seemed selfish to take a parking spot (primarily at the hospital) from someone else who was.
Anonymous wrote:I had such severe sciatica pain that I was barely able to walk at times during one of my pregnancies. I was not driving at the time (different city), so I cannot offer advice, OP, but I do sympathize. Different bodies can experience pregnancy very differently.