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Mermaid in a Wheelchair

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Mermaids, like most aquatic creatures, are more mobile and graceful when in their own element. On land, if they can't grow legs, their choices are either to drag themselves around or use a wheelchair.

If they have to disguise their nature for whatever reason, merfolk can hide their tails under a blanket.

Mermaids can be an outright metaphor for or commentary on disability,note  perhaps implying that someone who seems disabled/hindered in a conventional environment might flourish under the right conditions. But just as often the work doesn't explore that and merely uses the wheelchair as a prop for the character to be able to move around on land.

Compare Bathtub Mermaid for a less mobile example of mermaids on land, and Mobile Fishbowl for another way for aquatic species to move around. For other creatures with fantastic anatomy's varying uses of human furniture, see Human Furniture Is a Pain in the Tail. Contrast Tailfin Walking.


Examples:

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    Anime & Manga 

    Comic Books 
  • Amazing Fantasy: An early issue has an elderly couple (named May and Ben, and looking very much like the better known Amazing Fantasy characters by those names) who live by the sea with their neice, who is confined to her wheelchair. The couple talk about how she'd leave them and return home one day. The story ends with the couple waking to find the tracks from her wheelchair leading to the ocean. They find the wheelchair overturned at the water's edge. The last panel showed the neice was actually a mermaid, swimming away from shore.
  • Aquaman: On the cover of one issue, a mermaid named Sheeva uses a wheelchair.
  • Meat Cake: Effluvia the mermaid travels usually about on land with a wheelchair.
  • Superman: Superman's ex, Lori Lemaris, is a mermaid (it's... complicated) who lives on land by using a wheelchair and keeping her tail covered. Eventually she is magically given the power to turn into a human (any contact with water changes her back, though.)

    Fan Works 
  • A Fistful of omake (by metroanime): Chapter 29, "The Tendo Bunch", revolves around Soun Tendo having adopted twenty-two daughters from across the multiverse after his wife left him and took their three birth daughters. One of them is Ariel, who's still in her mermaid form and, though she spends most of her time in the expanded koi pond or other water, has to use a wheelchair to get around on land.
  • Harry Is a Dragon, and That's OK: When Tiobald the merman enrolls at Hogwarts, he uses a magical wheelchair to travel around. It can even climb stairs by itself. He still needs a translator, though. Notably, having non-human students is normal enough by then that the news of a student in a wheelchair spreads faster than the news of a merfolk student.
  • Resonance Days: Oktavia, a mermaid-like Witch, is usually in a wheelchair on land and has to be wheeled around by the other characters. The rest of the time, she's being carried around.

    Literature 
  • Aquamarine: Human girls Claire and Hailey borrow a wheelchair from Claire's grandfather so Aquamarine can leave the pool and go on a date with human boy Raymond. Notably, this was absent from the adaptation, where she could grow legs.
  • October Daye: Dianda Lorden, like most merrows, can transform her tail into legs, but that doesn't mean she wants to. When she meets Toby privately for the first time, she's in a wheelchair with no human disguise.
  • River of Dancing Gods: After one of the characters gets body-swapped with a mermaid, she gets the ability to transform into a human when she's dry (because the wizard who transformed her had recently seen Splash). However, her human legs are extremely weak so she needs a wheelchair to get around.
  • Rubber Girl: Selina Gill uses a wheelchair for her on-land dates with her human boyfriend, Arthur Fisher. Katie Elaz and Robert Patrix go on a double date with Selina and Arthur at the restaurant McDaffy's. Her wheelchair has a bucket and water tubes so that her gills can stay wet.
  • Well World: On land, the mermaid-like Umiau move using electric wheelchairs unless they wish to crawl about.
  • Xanadu (Storyverse): Most of the people transformed into mer by the Change are permanently stuck in their forms. As such, they mostly use wheelchairs to get around on land.

    Live-Action TV 
  • H₂O: Just Add Water: Emma's first moonspell renders her unable/unwilling to change back to human form, which means the others have to hide her from her extended family. Lewis manages to get ahold of Emma's grandmother's wheelchair, while Cleo and Rikki cover her with a jacket and blanket, and they wheel her into her room.
  • Round the Twist: In the final scene of "Nails", Andrew is now stuck in a wheelchair as his father takes him to the harbor, at which point he jumps into the water, revealing his Slow Transformation made him a merman.
  • Invoked in Season 10 of RuPaul's Drag Race. For one of the runways, the queens were tasked with dressing as mermaids in wheelchairs (wheeled onstage by one of the Pit Crew members), as an homage to Bette Midler mentioned below.

    Manhua 
  • Old Master Q: In one strip, Master Q sends a mermaid in labor to the hospital in a wheelchair.

    Music 
  • Bette Midler, in her 1978 world tour, introduced the character Delores De Lago, the "Toast of Chicago," a mermaid who would come out onstage in an electric wheelchair (though she didn't always stay in it).

    Toys 
  • Monster High: Finnegan Wake is a merman who attends the land-based Monster High by using a wheelchair.

    Webcomics 
  • This comic by Molly Ostertag has a selkie using a wheelchair to find her human lover on land.
  • Bubbly Parfait: Bunny girl Casey helps Juliette the mermaid out of a bathtub and into her wheelchair.
  • Pet Foolery: A normal-looking young woman approaches a werewolf who's holding a Monsters Anonymous meeting. She claims that she's the daughter of a mermaid/minotaur romance who got the human half of both. After the werewolf chews her out for mocking their problems, she tells him she's just here to drop off her brother. Cut to a bull-man with a fish tail, sitting in a wheelchair-like contraption and looking unhappy at the werewolf bothering his sister.
  • Tinder Skitty: Primarina, a Pokémon with a mermaid motif, is presented in a wheelchair whenever he appears.

    Western Animation 
  • American Dragon: Jake Long: One mermaid goes undercover at Jake's school for several months as his principal, using a wheelchair. Justified by the fact that she doesn't know how to use her legs in her human disguise.
  • Disenchantment: Mora uses a steampunk wheelchair, a pedicab, and even a baby carriage to get around in Steamland.
  • Supernatural Academy: Opal, one of the students at the titular academy, is a mermaid who uses a wheelchair on land, though she prefers being in the water.

 
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Andrew Shelford's Heritage

Alan Shelford, a one episode love interest for Linda Twist, discovers his own ancestry.

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