
On July 26, 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was signed into law—a landmark civil rights bill that changed the course of U.S. history for millions of disabled people. For the first time, discrimination based on disability was legally prohibited in employment, education, transportation, and public accommodations. But the ADA did more than just open doors and add ramps. It declared something revolutionary: We belong here.
Thirty-five years later, we reflect not just on what the ADA made possible—but what it means to be truly seen.


More Than Compliance: A Promise of Equity
At its heart, the ADA is about visibility. It’s about being acknowledged as a full participant in society—not as an afterthought, not as a burden, but as someone with rights, value, and voice.
Curb cuts, elevator buttons with Braille, accessible bathrooms, and captions on videos aren’t just conveniences—they are lifelines. They represent hard-fought victories led by disabled activists who demanded more than pity or passive inclusion. They demanded equity.
Still, the fight isn’t over. Accessibility is not yet universal, and enforcement of the ADA is often left to individuals who must pursue legal action just to access what’s already guaranteed by law. For many in the disability community, visibility still comes with a cost: emotional labor, advocacy fatigue, and systems that move too slowly.

What Progress Looks Like Today
Progress doesn’t always look like a headline. Sometimes it’s a classroom that finally accommodates a student with sensory needs. Sometimes it’s an adaptive clothing company (like ours!) that listens to real feedback from disabled wearers and makes products that actually fit and function.
At Spoonie Threads, we believe the ADA paved the way for brands like ours to exist—for conversations about medical access, dignity, and fashion to matter in mainstream spaces. We’re proud to be a part of a community that continues to push visibility forward—not just through legislation, but through design, storytelling, and representation.

To Be Seen Is to Be Valued
"Being seen" doesn’t mean being stared at or called "inspirational". It means being considered from the start. It means being included in conversations, decisions, and designs. It means recognizing disability as a natural part of the human experience—not something to be hidden or fixed, but something to be respected and understood.
As we mark 35 years of the ADA, we honor the work of those who made this law possible, and we recommit ourselves to a future where access is not a favor—it’s a fact.
Let’s build that future together.