In any functioning society, two professions stand among the most respected:
doctors – who dedicate their lives to understanding the human body and treating illness – and judges – who uphold the law, weigh evidence, and deliver justice.
And yet, somehow, a few of you believe your hallway theories outweigh the combined authority of my physician of 20 years and three Superior Court judges.
Letâs set the record straight.
âïž Three Superior Court Judges. Three Favourable Rulings.
Not one. Not two.
Three separate Ontario Superior Court judges examined my case in detail.
They reviewed the facts, the evidence, and my medical documentation – and each one ruled in my favour.
This isnât a debate.
Itâs the law.
If three independent judges, whose sole duty is to apply justice impartially, sided with me, maybe itâs time to accept that your personal opinions arenât facts.
đ©ș My Doctorâs Expertise Isnât Up for Discussion
For over two decades, my physician – a highly trained specialist – has been treating my condition.
They have my test results.
They understand my medical history.
They know my limitations.
Unless you have a medical degree, my complete patient file, and twenty years of clinical insight, perhaps itâs time to reconsider your self-appointed role as âexpert” and stay quiet.
đïž Invisible â Imaginary
The fact that you canât see my disability doesnât make it any less real.
Invisible disabilities are widely recognized in medicine and protected by the Ontario Human Rights Code.
Dismissing them isnât just uninformed – it is discrimination.
đ Bottom Line
- Doctors and judges hold some of the highest trust and respect in any society.
- I have both medical validation and legal rulings on my side.
- Your opinion, no matter how loudly repeated, does not override science or law.
You donât need to like me.
But facts remain facts – and your gossip doesnât change them.