Actor and activist Liz Carr has given a powerful interview to The Big Issue, out today (Monday 13 May), reflecting on how she came to terms with the life-changing disability she developed at the age of 7.
“From my appearance most people will think I was born disabled, but I wasn’t, so I understand what becoming disabled means,” she writes in the Big Issue, out now. Carr was disabled from age seven, owing to arthrogryposis multiplex congenita, and has used a wheelchair since she was 14.
In her Letter To My Younger Self, Liz Carr shares how her mother recently found a “harrowing” diary entry which detailed how her younger self “wanted to die” when she was 12.
“During lockdown, my mum would ring most nights… She’d go through old diaries and call with the most harrowing bits. It would be, “What did you have for your tea? Did you know you wanted to die when you were 12?” Now, I knew I was miserable but to say I’d rather be dead? It hurts me to hear that my younger self didn’t see a future.
“I would love to tell her you’ll fall in love, have mates, travel the world and do a job people can only dream of. She wouldn’t have believed any of it.”
A vocal opponent of assisted dying for more than a decade, Carr has now created a documentary for the BBC which explores how changing legislation could affect vulnerable or disabled people.