Walking sticks - not just an ugly necessity
Now here is a which gladdens Lady Bracknell's generally stony heart: CanesCanada.com will be setting up a stand at the Calgary Women's Show. At last - somebody is treating walking sticks as a stylish accessory, not just a utilitarian mobility aid! The owners of the company are aware that the right stick can make a big difference to a sticky crip's self-confidence. They say: "Buy a cane with your style, with a bit of your personality in mind. Then people come up and say: 'WOW, what a nice cane! Whre did you get it?' It gives a very positive response."
I hadn't come across the site before, presumably because I've tended to use search terms - including the word "stick" - which, as I'm finally beginning to realise, appears to be a peculiarly British description for those long sticky things we lean on. Almost everyone else calls them canes, apparently. It's not a particularly straightforward site to navigate, but it's worth persisting. They stock a huge variety of sticks, many of which I've never seen before, including a collection of Norman Rockwell canes. They will ship internationally, but you'd need to email them for a shipping quote.
While we're on the subject, I can't resist mentioning my own . To date, I've bought two of the lucite canes, one in blue and one in green. And I'm definitely going to be supplementing my collection with a purple one and a red one. In my experience, they really do result in complete strangers coming up to you and paying you compliments on your beautiful stick. Which is a blimmin' sight more empowering than complete strangers sympathetically asking you what you've done to yourself, I can tell you.
Comments
In my stand-up set I talk about walking sticks as potential vampire killing tools. Imagine if Buffy was a crip? She'd never have had to have snapped furniture up to ram a bit of wood through a vampires heart if she'd just sharpened the end of her mobility aid.
LOL Lisy Babe, sounds like you have got plenty more where that came from! Unfortunately I am unable to access either of those sites from my current location but thanks for the links, theyre probably very useful. Personally Ive always called it a cane and always get a bit annoyed when people (such as my mum) refer to it as a stick - after all, Im not using a tree!