The northwest corner of First and Jackson can be tricky. During rush hour, traffic whizzes by, despite the fact that there’s only one block of street left until you hit Elliott Bay. In places, cracks in the tarmac reveal old bricks underneath. The curb cut is make-shift. With the Mariners playing the Jays today and fans spilling onto the street, the crossing was even more hazardous.

I was going one way with Gus, and she was going the other. There was barely enough room to pass. She telegraphed disgust and sneered. Seriously. Sneered. I leaned forward and spoke to her, “Too many people, not enough room.” Her gaze remained high, no recognition of my words. I shifted to catch her eye. “Everywhere you go in Seattle,” I tried, “traffic!” Nothing. She was directly in front of me, her frown unaltered. Unmoved. Unmoving. Part of me wanted to escalate the confrontation. I looked down and muttered softly to Gus, “Can you believe this crap?” He pushed forward, and she gave a slight side step.

I am an expert in recoil. It’s a sad by-product of my disability. I notice a pitying glance that drops or a sharp intake of breath or a dead stare. I can feel the palpable annoyance and discomfort that I cause others by my sheer existence. And despite countless initial, hurtful responses to my physical being, to my obvious paraplegia, I choose to engage, to lean in, to make contact. My go-to strategy is disarmament. Take away that negative power. Work for recognition of common humanity. Some days I wonder why I try. Today was one of those days.

It was a rough start. I slipped while transferring to my chair. (Picture a slow slide rather than an abrupt drop.) Then, later, after heaving my chair into the trunk of my car, I lost my balance and wrenched my arm grabbing for the roof rack that serves as a kind of hand rail so that I can negotiate my way to the driver’s side. Like many other souls in this city, I had dozens of reasons to be surly and unforgiving and judgey. But I was fighting it because there were just as many reasons, if not more, to be hopeful and loving and at peace. Wasn’t the September light piercingly beautiful? Didn’t I enjoy the most amazing pastry from London Plane? Weren’t the students I met eager and enthused?

Today I was tired enough and sensitive enough that I felt slightly more broken by this short, chance, unpleasant encounter. I got thrown off my game. Just like the Blue Jays. But the season isn’t over. Yet.