DeafBlind SA

Escape is Possible: Building a Future Beyond Survival

People cannot move toward a different future if survival is all they have ever known.

When daily life is focused on getting through the next day, the next week, or the next financial crisis, long-term planning can begin to feel impossible.

For many people, especially those living with poverty, disability, exclusion, or financial instability, survival consumes energy.

And survival changes how people think.

It can create fear.

Scarcity.

Dependence.

Exhaustion.

A belief that there are no other options.

But empowerment is not built in one moment.

And change rarely happens through one dramatic event.

More often, empowerment is built layer by layer.

Step by step.

Choice by choice.

The Multi-Layered Nature of Empowerment

Empowerment is not a single action.

It is a process made up of connected layers that build over time.

These layers include:

Identifying harmful patterns and recognising barriers that limit safety, participation, or opportunity.

Recognising value in lived experience, including caregiving, support work, advocacy, emotional labour, and survival work — even when it is unpaid or overlooked.

Planning through small, practical steps such as gathering information, learning skills, building support systems, accessing opportunities, and improving financial awareness.

Understanding financial abuse and harmful dependence, including situations where money, access, or fear is used to control or restrict choices.

And finally, internal shifts in perspective — especially for those who have lived in long-term survival mode — where a person begins to recognise that their needs, dignity, and future possibilities matter.

These layers do not happen in order.

They interact.

They build on each other.

And they strengthen over time.

What Small Steps Can Look Like

Sometimes empowerment begins very quietly.

It may begin with:

asking questions

learning about available support

speaking to someone you trust

keeping better track of finances

learning to use an adaptive tool

joining a support network

setting one boundary

or simply recognising that your needs and safety matter too

Small steps may not feel powerful at first.

But over time, small changes can begin creating stability, confidence, and new possibilities.

From Survival to Participation

Empowerment also involves recognising that human value is not defined by income, productivity, or independence alone.

A person’s worth is not erased because they need support.

Contribution takes many forms.

Participation takes many forms.

And empowerment takes many forms too.

For disabled persons, empowerment may involve:

accessibility

communication support

adaptive devices

digital inclusion

training opportunities

community support

entrepreneurship

education

advocacy

or simply being included in decisions about their own lives

No single pathway fits everyone.

And that matters.

Because true empowerment is not about forcing people into one model of success.

It is about creating conditions where people have greater access, greater safety, greater participation, and greater choice.

When these conditions exist, financial empowerment becomes more possible — not guaranteed, but possible.

The Financial Layer of Empowerment

Financial empowerment is not only about wealth.

It is about the ability to participate in economic life in ways that increase stability, reduce vulnerability, and expand opportunity.

Participation itself becomes a financial factor.

When people are excluded from education, work, or systems of opportunity, they are often excluded from economic power and decision-making as well.

When participation increases, so do possibilities.

Africa Day and the Reality of Layered Change

Africa Day also reminds us that empowerment is rarely built all at once.

Across the continent, change grew through many people, communities, and movements working toward greater freedom, participation, and self-determination over time.

Empowerment at a continental level did not emerge in a single moment.

It was layered.

Built through struggle, organisation, vision, and collective action.

In many ways, personal empowerment follows a similar path.

Layer by layer.

Support by support.

Opportunity by opportunity.

Conclusion: The Foundation for Change

Greater change becomes possible when people begin building foundations that support stability, dignity, and opportunity.

Sometimes that foundation begins with support.

Sometimes with awareness.

Sometimes with one skill, one connection, or one small shift in perspective.

And sometimes empowerment begins with the simple realisation that survival is not the only future available.

Financial empowerment is not only about wealth.

It is about building the conditions, skills, support systems, and self-understanding that make greater safety, participation, and possibility achievable over time.