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In this episode of Pilates Perspectives, Joy has an open conversation with Stephanie Comella (Co-Founder & CEO of Zebrafish Neuro) and Vanessa Cameron, PhD (nurse and disability advocate), about ableism in healthcare and movement spaces. Vanessa shares what it was like to become a wheelchair user and the ostracization she experienced, highlighting the subtle ways bias shows up in clinics, Pilates studios, and “helping” professions within the wellness industry.
Together, they explore how to support disabled clients with more respect and better outcomes: ask what they need instead of assuming, shift from being the “authority” to being a collaborator, and move away from the mindset of trying to “fix” someone. You’ll also hear nuanced guidance on person-first vs. identity-first language, why word choice matters in accessible fitness instruction, and how floor-based programming and adaptive Pilates can expand access and confidence for wheelchair users and those with limited mobility, without sacrificing challenge, skill-building, or autonomy.
This essential conversation addresses disability inclusion in Pilates, accessible movement education, and creating welcoming spaces for diverse bodies in wellness environments.
This special release episode is also available to watch on YouTube.
This episode is powered by Balanced Body®.
By Balanced Body5
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Send a text
In this episode of Pilates Perspectives, Joy has an open conversation with Stephanie Comella (Co-Founder & CEO of Zebrafish Neuro) and Vanessa Cameron, PhD (nurse and disability advocate), about ableism in healthcare and movement spaces. Vanessa shares what it was like to become a wheelchair user and the ostracization she experienced, highlighting the subtle ways bias shows up in clinics, Pilates studios, and “helping” professions within the wellness industry.
Together, they explore how to support disabled clients with more respect and better outcomes: ask what they need instead of assuming, shift from being the “authority” to being a collaborator, and move away from the mindset of trying to “fix” someone. You’ll also hear nuanced guidance on person-first vs. identity-first language, why word choice matters in accessible fitness instruction, and how floor-based programming and adaptive Pilates can expand access and confidence for wheelchair users and those with limited mobility, without sacrificing challenge, skill-building, or autonomy.
This essential conversation addresses disability inclusion in Pilates, accessible movement education, and creating welcoming spaces for diverse bodies in wellness environments.
This special release episode is also available to watch on YouTube.
This episode is powered by Balanced Body®.

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