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ABILITY House - volunteer: help others, help yourself and showcase employability...

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    [Music]
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    one out of five people in the United
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    States has a disability most
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    disabilities are hidden what we find is
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    that people that have not experienced
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    disabilities in their own life
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    feel that they need to
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    um stay away as much as they can
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    because of the uncomfortable unfamiliar
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    what we're looking to do is make people
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    more familiar with with the concept of
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    disabilities there's been a a big push
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    nationally um to create some resources
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    to to help organizations that use
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    volunteers understand um and and be able
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    to have some tools to um to be inclusive
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    to let everybody be able to come and
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    volunteer and use whatever talents here
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    she
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    has what people in
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    need should understand is that if
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    there's
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    assistance it's about helping not about
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    the person it's about the process it's
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    about the hope that things will get
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    better or easier for those in need
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    despite whatever they are that are the
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    people who are helping out uh just as
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    you have disabled individuals building
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    houses for disabled individuals how much
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    better can that be it's important about
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    giving and taking both ways not about
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    the person the disability whatever it is
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    I'm doing H to assist in terms of the
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    time that I that I give I know that I
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    get back uh the Gratitude the thanks
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    from those who are in need and those who
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    are helped and that's enough for me so
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    each experience is important one of the
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    things we know about volunteering is
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    that the the coming together with the
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    community that it provides that sense of
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    social connection and the opportunity to
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    give back is so beneficial for everyone
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    not just psychologically and spiritually
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    but physically as well people live
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    longer when they join with their
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    communities in activities like
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    volunteering they are healthier they
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    have less pain they have less disability
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    we're here we made it alive beautiful
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    sunny Hawaii I'm ready to pound I'm
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    ready to hammer and I'm ready to work I
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    that uh a lot of times people are
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    apprehensive uh approaching me and
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    talking to me because of my
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    disability uh I think people don't mean
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    to be sometimes people um will talk to
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    if I'm out with my wife they'll talk to
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    my wife instead of me and something just
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    uh happened to me uh when I was at the
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    airport uh getting getting ticketed the
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    guy would never hand me back my tickets
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    he always handed them to my wife and
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    would always ask my wife questions about
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    me and I'm like I'm right here I'm right
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    here I can hear you I know what you're
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    saying you know I think we all get kind
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    of caught up in doing our own thing and
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    kind of step outside
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    and volunteer our time and you know give
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    back to the community you know people
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    think maybe if you have a disability you
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    can't really contribute to the to the
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    volunteer movement or whatever it is you
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    know and I think it's important I just
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    think it's really important to to
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    society that you know people with
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    disabilities are out there making a
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    difference in the world I got pulled
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    over and the policeman instead of coming
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    up to my door like they usually do and
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    saying oh how do you drive and do you
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    have a license and wow Isn't that cool
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    instead he got on his speaker and said I
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    need to see your hands out the window
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    right now and when I
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    shouted I don't have any arms he pulled
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    his gun out and I could see him in my
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    rearview mirror behind his door he was
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    ready to shoot the one thing in the
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    world he was asking of me was the very
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    one thing that I could not comply
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    with as much as I wanted to I think
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    anytime a person with a disability goes
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    out and lives their life unashamed and
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    unafraid then they are in a sense giving
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    a message I find that as people get
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    older in terms of social stigmas
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    they're less uh willing
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    to understand diversity and differences
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    in people historically um there have
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    been misconceptions as any Civil Rights
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    Movement people with
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    disabilities
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    have in large been one of the last
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    Frontiers that still exist I think
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    because of the fear that people have the
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    that they're unfamiliar with certain
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    situations the more familiar we are with
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    every as ECT of life that seems to be
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    uncomfortable then we become more
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    understanding and more
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    compassionate when I was first asked to
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    help with Nancy I kind of I was thinking
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    of what a blind person could really do
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    if you ask them what they need to do a
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    job once you describe what that job is
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    they will tell you what they need to do
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    it or if that's not a good match uh so
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    it's not it's not rocket science you
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    need to deal directly with the person
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    you're trying to engage in a particular
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    task and they will tell you uh if they
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    need an accommodation I was very nervous
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    I didn't know what to expect uh I never
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    hammered
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    Nails especially building a house and I
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    found that with with the guidance from
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    people who knew what was going on they
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    could help line me up everybody was so
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    wonderful being able to work with
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    somebody with that disability has opened
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    my mind on what people with disabilities
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    can really do since I do a lot of work
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    in Corporate America if they have some
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    one in their Workforce that has a
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    disability how should they treat them my
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    response is no differently than you
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    treat anybody else people are are are
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    much more um alike than they are
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    different when you look at somebody who
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    has a visible disability you may have
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    preconceived ideas of what they will be
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    able to accomplish what I would say is
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    try to take those preconceived notions
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    away and look at the possibilities they
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    may bring we can take disability and
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    turn it into possibility differences in
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    life doesn't mean
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    deficit it just means different if I
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    volunteer to help or to do something
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    it's because I want to be a part of the
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    solution or a part of the team or and
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    and I actually want to
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    help when
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    somebody who doesn't know you very well
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    hasn't lived in your skin for your
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    entire life sort of assumes that they
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    have a better idea of what you're
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    capable of than you do is a very common
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    misconception some people have made
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    assumptions when I do try to do do some
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    type of of work and they assume that
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    that maybe I'm not capable of doing that
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    because of my disability the
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    straightforward questions are always the
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    best way then you can kind of take away
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    as much awkwardness as possible
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    accommodating volunteers with
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    disabilities um you usually means just
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    thinking a little bit more creatively
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    about the tasks that need to be done
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    approach the volunteers the way you
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    would approach any volunteer saying this
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    is what we need to be done um how do you
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    think you could do that if we can be
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    open to um suggestions for other ways
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    something can be done then people can
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    come up with um amazingly creative and
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    effective Solutions we hope um people
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    will realize when they're outreaching to
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    to people to volunteer in their programs
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    is
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    to remember maybe not even the word
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    remember but to think about outreaching
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    to volunteers with disabilities in any
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    of their programs it is disappointing if
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    somebody says I don't think you should
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    do that I don't think you can do this or
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    that for
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    example to assume that a person who uses
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    a wheelchair could only do
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    a job on a computer is just false and
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    and to assume that I would be a
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    professional soccer player instead of
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    guitar player
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    is is just it's just a false assumption
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    we we can't judge a book by its cover we
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    shouldn't pick our dreams based on what
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    a perceived limitation is we should
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    decide what we want to do and then find
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    a way to do it and that goes I think
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    across the board for all of us we need
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    to
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    open up our perceptions a little bit
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    [Music]
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    more but you don't know who I am who are
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    you where do you come from and where do
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    you go and if I send an
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    invitation to my world would you come
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    and stare and if I had a chance to sing
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    my
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    song this is what I'd say we all the
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    same then you may think yeah you and me
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    we are the same does anybody really have
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    to take the
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    blame we are the same we more the same
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    than you may think said you and me we
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    are the same and it's a shame to be
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    ashamed you had your head don't hide
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    your heart you turn it off so you don't
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    fall apart when you see that man walk by
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    got his whole life in the shopping C so
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    you side you don't
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    cry then you wonder why you're so alone
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    we are more the same than you may think
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    yeah you me we are the same it doesn't
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    anybody have to take the blame no we are
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    the same we more the same you may think
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    said you me we are the same it's a shame
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    to be
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    ashame I don't want you to look the
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    other way fumble around thinking what to
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    say wouldn't want to be anybody else and
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    I'm okay with
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    myself cuz we all the same
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    [Music]
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    you
Title:
ABILITY House - volunteer: help others, help yourself and showcase employability...
Description:

more » « less
Team:
ABILITY Magazine
Duration:
11:02

English (auto-generated) subtitles

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