Wheelchair Quotes

Discover the best quotes about Wheelchair. This collection showcases wisdom and insights on Wheelchair from various authors and personalities.

I am in touch with a company that hopes to replicate my voice. However, they are not replicating my original voice - if they did that, I would sound like a man in his 20s, which would be very strange! They are actually trying to replicate the synthesizer that sits on my wheelchair.
Does anyone know if Lamborghini makes wheelchair vehicles? If not, I want to change that.
People aren't familiar with wheelchair sports. The only film crew in Athens for the Paralympics was the documentary crew.
I can't bear the thought of my mother having to push me around in a wheelchair. I'd rather die quickly.
Towards the end of 2003 it was hard to get through training - and the darkest point was when a doctor told me there was a possibility I could end up in a wheelchair.
The gun lobby finds waiting periods inconvenient. You have only to ask my husband how inconvenient he finds his wheelchair from time to time.
If we do the work that we can do in this country, the work that we will do when John Kerry is President, people like Christopher Reeve will get up out of that wheelchair and walk again.
For me, the wheelchair symbolizes disability in a way a cane does not.
You can really do amazing things in a wheelchair. It's very dangerous if you don't know what you're doing, but you can even go up and down stairs in a wheelchair.
My ideal role would be a baddie in a James Bond film. I think the wheelchair and the computer voice would fit the part.
Only one Member of Parliament left a hospital chemotherapy bed in a wheelchair to vote for the bill that triggered Article 50 and the process of leaving the European Union. That was me.
I was told that I would be in a wheelchair for the rest of my life.
I feel very badly about anybody that's sick and in a wheelchair or not doing well. But you know, you have to go, 'Life is a poker game, and we're going to play our cards somehow.'
I've found that it's actually more of a disability to be tall than short. I have no problem fitting into plane toilets etc, and the adaptations made for wheelchair users - such as the lowering of bank machines - work for me as well.
Every disabled person's experience is different. As a wheelchair user I can experience something different from someone who is visually impaired.
I'm always glued to the Tour de France, with cycling being close to wheelchair racing in terms of technology and how we race.
I was stuck in a wheelchair playing this deranged villain. I felt this mass amount of rage at being so confined. I thought, 'What can I do that is the direct opposite of this situation?' The only thing I could think of was that I could sing and dance.
It was physically difficult, adjusting to wheelchair life, but I remember a great relief and happiness that I was finally getting somewhere, finding musicians to work with that were sympathetic.
There is a good chance that, at 60, I will be in a wheelchair, but hey, I signed up for that. I know that.
My bike is my gym, my wheelchair and my church all in one. I'd like to ride my bike all day long but I've got this thing called a job that keeps getting in the way.