Tricky one this subject.
In the past I have worked with disabled people for a number of years.
From this experience I could see how different people have differnt approaches to their disability and how they choose to deal with it.
I am not saying there is a right or wrong. There are many aspects and many answers.
I am also aware that there are forumers who themselves have a good deal of first-hand experience of living with disability.
But I choose just to look at one aspect of it.
I have known people who have desperately wanted to overcome their disability, to be regarded as just another ordinary person, to integrate if you like into society and merge as much as possible into society. (And yes, society itself does
not make this easy to do.)
I have also known people who resented their disability. For whom it was such a blow that the stuffing was knocked right out of them. A life of resentment cannot be too happy.
I have also known those who decide to make their disability work for them rather than against them.
And it's this aspect I have in mind here.
You see the trouble I have seen people who 'use' their disability for attention, to make themselves feel noticeable and special. A danger is that they may be identified by their disability and little more.
Another danger - and I have seen numbers of examples - is that it can easily lapse into self pity. Now that attitude to a disability is the one I find very sad. By definition doomed to be unfilfilled.
I promise you that I am not being contentious. I am simply musing over what may be Steve's true attitude to his disability.
It was suggested very early in the series that he would get some sort of sympathy vote.
Is he defying it, integrating himself and playing it down as far as is possible?
Or is he using it to gain acknowldgement, fame, attention or even pity?
As I said, a tricky topic. And one I suspect with no "right or wrong" answers, but one with a different answer for each individual.
Please don't argue about it folks.
(I'm sorry for the length of the post - I know that is often off-putting.)