A service dog may perform a variety of tasks and fall into multiple categories, these dogs would be called multi-purpose service dogs. This is not an extensive list of tasks and only mention a few ways service dogs can aid their handlers.

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A service dog may perform a variety of tasks and fall into multiple categories, these dogs would be called multi-purpose service dogs. This is not an extensive list of tasks and only mention a few ways service dogs can aid their handlers.
I present to you the (incomplete) user manual for inquiring about people's health:
The✅emoji represents times that it would be considered an appropriate setting to ask someone about their medical condition/medical history or their current symptoms regarding their health.
The❌emoji represents times that it is not considered appropriate to ask someone. And it's usually outright rude, ableist, offensive, bothersome, etc.
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✅ The person you're asking is a patient in your hospital/other medical setting and you are their medical provider. The things you are asking are also relevant to the goal of the patient's visit.
❌ You are a medical professional and the person you're asking is going about their day in a shopping mall.
✅ You are eating common allergens (like nuts) around someone you've only known for a short time and you ask them if they have a nut allergy. You are making a reservation at a restaurant with a group of new colleagues you have never met before and you ask if anyone has any accessibility needs (ramps/accessible bathroom stalls) or food allergies. You are going to bake someone a birthday cake and aren't sure if they (or their family) are allergic or intolerant to any common ingredients used in cake so you give them a call. You are planning to invite someone over at your place but you have pets so you ask them if they are allergic to them.
❌ While you're eating out in a restaurant someone at another table is getting a different version of the dish that you ordered so you ask them about their allergies. (pro tip: If you're concerned about your own order, ask the waiter) You see someone at a large family gathering is not being served any food while their family is eating so you decide to comment on this or assume they are trying to lose weight/tell them they are already skinny and should eat some food. (many reasons why someone might still wanna enjoy time with their family even if they can't eat at that specific restaurant).
✅ You are the owner of an establishment that does not allow dogs and see someone enter the store who is bringing their dog. You are allowed to ask them if this dog is a service dog and what task it is trained to do. You are not allowed to inquire about any other medical details of the owner or ask for some kind of service dog certificate (these do not exist). If the dog is displaying behaviors that are not appropriate for a trained service dog (such as lashing out/growling/loudly barking without it being an alert for the owner/worst case they are trying to attack and distract other service animals) you are allowed to ask the owner to leave. Properly trained service dogs don't behave that way.
❌ You are personally allergic to dogs and someone enters the room with a service dog so you ask this person to leave. Please understand those service animals are equivalent to a wheelchair in terms of not being able to just get rid of them and store them away for your convenience. Those people have every right to enter that public space. If you are allergic please keep your distance (ask the venue to have you be seated further away if it's truly bothering you, or perhaps the person with the service animal has no trouble being seated further away if asked in a polite way) Try to keep allergy medication on hand for unexpected situations like these.
✅ You are a teacher and there is a child in your classroom that requires specific accommodations that you need to provide. You can ask them/their parents about what kind of tasks you're expected to perform and what symptoms you might need to be aware of during class.
❌You are a student and you usually never talk to this classmate and have no intentions to be friends with them but you still want to pry about their medical condition to sate your curiosity.
✅ You know how to perform first aid and you see someone passed out on the floor. When they regain consciousness it would be appropriate to ask for their medical history. Please check for any kind of medical alert bracelets or lanyards that might explain their unconscious state. Depending on the type of condition, passing out could be an every day experience for them and it might not require you calling emergency services. Ask the person what kind of help they might need.
❌ A person in the store you're shopping at was passed out on the floor and is regaining consciousness. They are already receiving first aid from someone/multiple people who seem to know what they're doing. There's no need for you to stand and observe the situation or to try and ask questions about why that happened. Just move on with your shopping experience. If someone is sitting on the floor in a strange place you could ask them if they're okay or need assistance. But please respect it if you're told that they don't need any help. They might just need a couple minutes. Don't try to pry about why they are sitting there.
✅ You're in a setting with a public disabled speaker who is asking the audience (you) if you have any questions. You are in conversation with a friend/family member and they are asking you if there is anything you may have wanted to ask about their disability. In other words: Someone is actively asking you if you want to ask questions. This is your moment.
❌ You see a person who is going about their day and you get the overwhelming urge to ask them why they are using mobility aids/have an abnormal gait/are using an AAC/are wearing protective sunglasses indoors/etc. This is your moment to practice silent thoughts. It's fine to see something that makes you curious but in this day and age the answer to this question can be found on the internet/at the library. Feel free to do unprompted research about different medical conditions and disabilities. You don't have to rely on strangers to provide you with this information. There is also plenty of content creators on youtube and other such social media platforms who happily share about their life and what abled people can do to be more accommodating/make things more accessible. There is so much information available for free.
If you made it this far you are now a little bit more educated on how to be normal around disabled people! Congratulations! Have this star for your efforts: 🌟🎉
Feel free to add on to this btw, there is most certainly a lot more examples.
My service dog's Cars vest came in⚡️
Gear idea for guide dogs/ miniature horses / service animal alterhumans:
Ramble tags!
They are a guidance aid designed by a blind man and his guide person to use instead of arm linking, so that visually impaired people can walk and run whilst being guided. The guide wears the tags and the visually impaired person holds the handle to be led. There are ones for your upper arm and ones for your wrist
This is a much more practical item for being a service animal given a lot of our anatomies and social situations make it hard to use gear for theriform animals.
They come in a few different colours in patterns, many of which are bright neons for visually impaired people to see easily and are therefore very service animal coded since they’re often brightly coloured for similar reasons.
Note that these are not lifting aids and aren’t safe for use on escalators and similar things.
They ship worldwide from the UK. Image by ramble tag. Here’s the link if you want to look into it https://rambletag.co.uk/
Ramble Tag – The Guidance Aid
Daredevil ALMOST had a SATURDAY MORNING CARTOON??? 📺
A typical New York scene on Sixth Avenue, 1959. Two blind pan-handlers on a city street, the man playing the accordion, the woman holding a cup. A dwarf drops a coin in the cup as he passes. A guide dog stands next the blind man.
Photo: André Kertész via the J. Paul Getty Museum
The Truth Can Sound Contrived hits very hard and expresses just. such specific post-trauma stuff it Gets me and I don't know how to cope. god. its like. FUCK. GOD. its very real and cuts deep, and is sweet and hopeful too? idk. god. it hurts me so good. like yeah yea its Stinky's POV this is all a lot for me as an Enjoyer of that Guy, but just personally, man. The phantom pain of losing everything when you haven't yet lost anything until you realise the machinations of life!! the truth can sound contrived sometimes!!! the last verse being like, a general metaphor for feeling isolated in your pain and feeling what you're feeling and that yearning for someone to connect with and suffer with and goddd