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The superpower of diversity: What animals reveal about barriers

A black dachshund wearing sunglasses is holding a smartphone and looking at it. The background is light with a yellow semicircle behind the dog.

"You are not disabled, you are disabled by your environment."


This sentence sums up what the social model of disability expresses: it is not the physical or mental abilities that make a person disabled - but the circumstances, in particular the lack of adaptation of the environment to individual needs.

A look at nature shows how relative the term "disability" is - and how impressive adaptation can look. Animals that appear limited at first glance have developed skills that make them real survival artists. What initially appears to be a deficit can often turn out to be a strength.

Orientation without sight - blind animals and their strategies

Bats - precision through echolocation

Bats are probably the best-known example of animals that hardly rely on their eyes. Many species can only see dimly or not at all. But that doesn't make them disoriented. With the help of echolocation, they emit ultrasonic sounds and perceive the echoes that are reflected by objects in their environment. This not only allows them to move safely, but also to hunt flying insects in the dark with the utmost precision. Their "blind flight" is in reality a highly developed navigational feat - and in a way a sense that humans do not even possess.

Naked mole rats - life in the dark

Naked mole rats live in underground tunnels where hardly any light penetrates. Their eyes are greatly reduced. Instead, they rely on their sense of touch, vibrations and chemical stimuli. They are perfectly adapted to their environment - in a habitat where good vision is of little advantage, their supposed "lack" is not a disadvantage, but a useful specialization.

Cave fish - seeing through movement

Some fish species that live permanently in lightless caves have completely lost their eyesight in the course of evolution. Instead, they use special sensory organs along their bodies to perceive water currents and movements. This gives them a kind of "sense of touch at a distance", which allows them to orient themselves precisely.

When the environment determines what a "disability" is

So what do these heroes of the animal kingdom show us?  Disability does not exist as an absolute characteristic - it arises in context. No bat would be considered disabled in the dark - in fact, it is superior. A cave fish does not need eyes to survive. If all our lives were underground, we would probably apply different standards of "normality".

What does this have to do with us?
For us humans, too, it is usually not physical limitations per se that are disabling - but a lack of consideration from the environment. The problem is not the wheelchair, but the building without an elevator. It is not blindness that excludes people, but the website without barrier-free design. The actual barrier is often created by a lack of flexibility in the system.

Digital accessibility: technology creates participation

Modern technologies can help to break down barriers - especially in the digital space. Tools like the ones we offer at Eye-Able® make it possible in many ways to make websites more accessible and easier to use for people with individual needs. Simply because digital services should be accessible to everyone.

It is not about adapting people to a rigid system. It's about designing systems in such a way that they take the most diverse needs into account from the outset.

Diversity is not a weakness

Nature teaches us that diversity is not a burden, but a strength. It is an expression of adaptability, innovation and survival intelligence. What we call a "handicap" is often just a different way of functioning - a unique set of skills that becomes an advantage under the right conditions.

Instead of asking what someone can't do, we should ask ourselves:
What does this person need in order to develop their potential?

Because accessibility doesn't start with the restriction - it starts with our attitude.

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A man and a woman look at a monitor and laugh