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  • J: Hello, lovely people! And welcome to Gem's house!

  • G: Hiiii! J: And my channel.

  • J: This is the first in--we're doing a little collab, so they're all going to be about work and disability.

  • J: This is going to be a kind of spilling the tea/gossiping about -

  • "spilling the tea"

  • (it's not actually something I say, but I saw it on the internet)

  • - gossiping all about the bad working situations we've found ourselves in before.

  • J: And then part two will be on Gem's channel,

  • which will have some actual good advice

  • about working with a disability.

  • J: So, let's begin with a little explanation -

  • a tiny explanation; a brief explanation -

  • about what our disabilities are.

  • G: OK, mine, I can really wrap up in a little nutshell. J: Ooo, go.

  • J: Always impressed when people can do that.

  • G: So, when I was nine, I had major heart surgery that went just a little bit wrong.

  • J: Just a bit.

  • G: I suffered major internal bleeding,

  • and as a result of the internal bleeding and lack of oxygen,

  • I suffered a T10 incomplete spinal cord injury.

  • G: So, I use a wheelchair to get about.

  • J: That was neat.

  • J: I have a genetic--I have two genetic disabilities, one which affects my nerves

  • and the other which affects my muscles

  • and they have various symptoms,

  • including I dislocate constantly;

  • chronic pain; chronic fatigue,

  • and...I'm deaf.

  • J: What was your first ever job?

  • G: OK, so, my first ever job: I have actually worked from the age of sixteen

  • and I worked at my local news agents.

  • Just down the road.

  • G: EVERY Sunday.

  • J: You said that like it was so bad!

  • G: Because it was.

  • G: Yeah, it was really tiny and pokey, but I just about managed,

  • and I couldn't go to the toilet.

  • G: I only did four hours there, so I was like...

  • G: [Mimics straining to control bladder] J: Holding it in!

  • G: When I turned seventeen,

  • G: I also had a job on a check-out. J: Mmhm.

  • G: And that was every Saturday!

  • J: How dare they make you work on a Saturday?

  • G: But, on the Tuesday it was Student Night,

  • (J: Oh, no!) G: so every Wednesday I had to work, so I was hung-over.

  • G: And then every Friday was Rock Night,

  • and then I'd have to go to work on the Saturday, hung-over.

  • J: So you always went to work hung-over? G: Yep!

  • G: And then every Saturday was another Rock Night at another club,

  • so I wold have to go to my other job hung-over.

  • J: I feel like any working problems you had in that moment is nothing to do with disability;

  • more to do with alcohol!

  • G: Yes.

  • G: So, those were those jobs.

  • And it was all--it was not too bad.

  • G: Then I got more of an office role. J: Mmhm.

  • G: I sort of grew up a bit.

  • G: And they were...fantastic

  • for quite a long period of time.

  • G: I found the hours got too much at one point. J: Mmhm.

  • G: So they offered to reduce the hours.

  • G: Which was really nice of them.

  • G: They changed the hours, as well, so that they were more manageable,

  • so I didn't have to be in at like 07:30 in the morning.

  • G: I could be in like at nine.

  • G: Guys from the loading bay would come and help me in and out of the building

  • because there would be fire doors

  • There wasn't a proper lift; it was a goods lift.

  • J: My sixth form had a - I was in a wheelchair at the time

  • for about a year, I think - and they had a lift

  • 'cause they legally had to have a lift

  • but they didn't legally have to turn the lift on.

  • J: And it was an energy drain, so they never turned it on.

  • J: And I had classes upstairs!

  • So they just had to get the strongest people from my class to lift my wheelchair up the stairs, with me in it.

  • G: So they were really, really good in some senses of the word.

  • J: Mmhm!

  • J: Now, now get to the bad stuff. Come on.

  • G: Let's get to the c--I'm sorry. J: It's all we're here for.

  • G: One day--I had the most amazing manager.

  • Most amazing manager.

  • And he was obviously head-hunted and had to go off.

  • G: Then we had...

  • [whispering] not such a good manager.

  • G: We were all having water at our desks;

  • water at our work stations

  • and then a thing came in where it all had to be labelled with your name and it had to be labelled "water,"

  • G: in case anybody drank something and it was... J: Vodka?

  • J: Who was keeping like a bottle of straight vodka at their desk? Like..

  • G: That was that, and then, all of a sudden, there was this big sort of rule that came in

  • that, unless you had a note from your doctor, saying that you needed water...

  • and you couldn't wait for your break,

  • you weren't allowed water.

  • J: Whaaat?

  • J: What? Oh, my God, Clara's dying! G: Clara's freaking out!

  • J: Clara's dying in the corner. G: Do you know what, darling?

  • J: I, yeah...

  • G: Because they said, "Oh, you can go and get a drink of water...

  • but you'd have to go and get it, drink it in the canteen, and then come back to your desk."

  • J: [whispered] No!

  • G: So I'd have to go through four fire doors on--that's just getting there.

  • G: So that's [both] eight fire doors!

  • Then they said, "Oh, well, you can call one of the

  • members from the loading bay and they'll come and open the doors for you."

  • G: And I said, "Don't you think they've got something better to do?"

  • J: Like their jobs. G: "They're short staffed anyway!"

  • G: So, then they said, "Well, just get a doctor's note."

  • G: It's the principle!

  • G: First of all!

  • J: She's not doing it, OK?!

  • J: She's not doing it on principle! G: First of all!

  • G: First of all, I don't want to waste my doctor's time.

  • G: You can see that it's difficult for me to go and get water.

  • G: You know, they could just be like, 'This is the rule, but why don't you just keep,' you know...

  • J: You're the exception, for a suitable, obvious reason

  • G: But that was one of the final things that made me think that this is not...

  • working; where I worked sort of just went down and down and down.

  • J: I see.

  • J: I have had - prior to the job I currently have,

  • as a YouTuber

  • (which always sounds weird) -

  • J: I'm self-employed;

  • freelance.

  • J: I do what I do; I make my own rules - now.

  • J: Which is lovely.

  • But my previous two jobs:

  • one of them, I was thirteen.

  • G: Thirteen? J: I worked there for thr--yeah!

  • J: I was a waitress in a cafe when I was thirteen; it was owned by my mother's friend.

  • I worked there for three days; I got fired at the end of every day.

  • G: You didn't get the hint?

  • J: Every day!

  • J: I trip over when I'm just walking in bare feet around my house.

  • I'm not a great candidate for people who should be holding plates.

  • G: Oh, God! J: I don't hold my own plates!

  • J: My mother had been a waitress when she was a teenager, before she went to university.

  • J: So, she--she's one of those people who can put all of the plates on her arms. G: Oh, no!

  • J: Yeah! G: How do they do that?! It's like...

  • J: Sure, so she thought that magically I would genetically have this skill.

  • So she said to her friend, like,

  • "It'll be fine. Jessica will be great with the plates!"

  • J: So I went, my first day.

  • I...have quite bad hearing loss.

  • So I was taking people's orders

  • ...but I wasn't!

  • J: "Sounded vaguely like, 'Eggs.'"

  • J: Yep.

  • J: I'd be like, "By the looks of this guy, he wants soup. He seems cold."

  • And I tried to get other people to take my stuff out

  • that I had incorrectly ordered.

  • So I got fired.

  • J: My mother phoned her up and was like, "Please just take her back. It's the summer holidays."

  • "She'll be fine; she'll be better, she promises. She'll ask people SIX times what it is they're saying."

  • J: Second day, I poured soup down a man.

  • J: Got fired.

  • And my mother was like, "This is fucking ridiculous."

  • But she phoned up her friend again and was like, "She's really sorry."

  • "She's gonna wear better shoes tomorrow."

  • J: I guess my mother had something on her.

  • J: It was probably some form of blackmail, I'm not sure.

  • But this lady took me back!

  • J: Why?

  • J: And then on the third day,

  • during my break I stood on a bee.

  • J: And I'm highly allergic to bees.

  • G: Are you?! J: Yeah, I took my shoes off.

  • J: My foot swelled up to the size of a football.

  • And I couldn't really fit it back in my shoe.

  • J: And I limped over to the lady and I was like, "I can't work the rest of the day 'cause I can't stand."

  • J: And she was like, "No! You will work! 'Til the end of this day, and then I'm firing you!"

  • "But I refuse to pay you

  • for this morning that you've worked unless you work 'til the end of the day."

  • J: So I-I kept going.

  • J: Because...I did. And so I hobbled around

  • all afternoon;

  • tears streaming 'cause I couldn't stop them because it hurt so much.

  • J: So I was essentially like hopping.

  • J: No one got a good-looking plate of food that day.

  • J: Because I was crying and I looked really sweet - like, I was very blonde, as well.

  • J: I think that helped.

  • J: So I had this long blonde hair.

  • I had like tears trickling down.

  • I think I was probably dressed in something quite sweet.

  • And people took a lot of pity on me.

  • And boy, did I make some good tips.

  • G: Did you?! J: I think I made--yeah!

  • J: Yeah, I was getting paid two pounds an hour(!)

  • by this lady.

  • But I made £30 in tips that afternoon.

  • J: So...

  • J: Yeah, I got fired.

  • J: When I was in university, I set up the university's like first television...

  • station, but it was online.

  • J: It was about three people,

  • doing all the work, and it needed probably FIFTY people.

  • J: But then a local TV station

  • kind of saw what we were attempting to do,

  • thought it was great and offered me a job.

  • J: Yaay! A job!

  • J: So for my last year at university, I worked

  • with them.

  • J: "Worked." I didn't get paid.

  • J: And then after university,

  • I just walked straight into the job that I'd already been doing with them, but they paid me.

  • J: A tiny, tiny amount.

  • J: Not the best. Not the best job

  • that I could possibly have.

  • J: I only ended up working with them for a year and a half, I think?

  • For a number...of reasons.

  • But they weren't top on accessibility

  • ...which is great.

  • J: The amount of time that I spend on crutches;

  • in a wheelchair, blah blah blah.

  • And their only toilet was upstairs.

  • J: They also only had--there was no ramp onto the stage.

  • J: There was a ramp to get into the building,

  • but it was such a kerfuffle that they had to go and get it from somewhere; they had to pull it out.

  • J: They also weren't brilliant when it came to accessibility

  • in terms of deafness.

  • Because everyone who was on stage was supposed to wear this ear piece

  • so that we could hear what was going on

  • in the TriCaster where they'd be controlling all the different cameras.

  • J: Normally, you would have a floor manager,

  • but they were very cheap and they didn't want to hire a floor manager

  • J: And--it was just a hot mess.

  • J: And I got very confused

  • by all of these different...

  • J: things going on. G: Oh, my gosh.

  • J: So that wasn't great.

  • J: I think the main thing, actually, that made me think, "This is just not for me"

  • is that they had a really strict schedule time.

  • J: And I got a slot every week.

  • And I had to film like five different programmes.

  • Because I was doing five programmes for them.

  • J: And if I couldn't make that slot, that was it.

  • J: So, my condition's really episodic, and some mornings I wake up and I just vomit for 24 hours.

  • So, if I'm--yeah, if that happened

  • that morning - boom!

  • Done.

  • That was it.

  • J: It was like, "But, what?" "What--why are you even giving me a slot in the morning?!"

  • "When I told you that I can only do the afternoon."

  • J: Generally better in the afternoon than I am first thing in the morning.

  • J: They were like, "Nope, this is the only slot."

  • G: Did you ever find that sometimes they would do things to suit themselves?

  • J: Oh, yeah.

  • G: Like one day it might be all right for you to come in at two o'clock if... J: Yeah!

  • G: And then, but...

  • G: I always found that with my last employer. They would change some things

  • G: to suit themselves. J: Yeah!

  • J: I always just had this feeling that I was this massive annoyance.

  • J: But I think also the problem is that as disabled people,

  • we are so grateful for jobs.

  • J: And then you're just like, "Please, I don't wanna lose this job!"

  • J: "You don't understand, being disabled is really expensive."

  • J: "I'm just so thankful that you have taken me despite my disabilities"

  • - which is so bad and we're gonna talk about it in the other video.

  • J: Being too grateful is just not a good idea. G: Yeah...

  • J: We are excellent! And they should be grateful they have us.

  • G: Yes.

  • J: Well, obviously we both have physical disabilities.

  • J: So we would love to know in the comments down below whether you have a physical disability;

  • a mental health problem,

  • or any other kind of thing that's holding you back from work.

  • J: Please let us know down below: what is your worst experience of work?

  • J: I ruddy love stories.

  • J: I do get really angry.

  • G: So do I. Mmm. J: But like inside. It's tiny angry flame.

  • J: We're about to make another video that will be on Gem's channel.

  • G: Yes! J: The link will be in the description down below

  • J: where you can go and find out actual tips

  • G: Mmhm. Yep. J: Actual helpful tips

  • J: that we have put together, all about finding a job; keeping a job

  • while you're being in work

  • with a disability.

  • J: Gem is lovely. You should go and follow her channel. She has loads of stuff all about life with a disability.

  • G: Yes. J: Kind of--you do hacks as well.

  • G: I do--yeah, we've got a lot of fashion going on over there.

  • I'm really excited; I've got my autumn fashion video coming up.

  • J: Thank you very much for joining us. See you very soon on Gem's channel.

  • G: Bye! J: Boom!

J: Hello, lovely people! And welcome to Gem's house!

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殘疾員工工作劇透!有了輪子沒有高跟鞋[CC] (Disabled employee work dramas! With WheelsNoHeels [CC])

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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