Parents Cross the Street to Ask Me About This Stroller

Choosing a standard stroller can seem like wading through an infinite array of options to pinpoint the perfect mix of quality, style, portability, and price. But when kids with disabilities grow too big to fit in a standard stroller, parents often encounter the opposite problem: a maddeningly empty marketplace in which it is difficult to find even one acceptable option.

My daughter, who was born with a genetic condition linked to severe disabilities, is very social; she needs and deserves to be everywhere other children are. Until she was 5 years old, I got away with using standard strollers to transport her to school, friends’ houses, or the grocery store, or to take her on the subway in New York City, where we live. I relied on our super-compact yet stable Babyzen Yoyo2 stroller or, in snowy weather, a used jogging stroller I had found on Craigslist. The two strollers — combined with my daughter’s wheelchair — covered most of her day-to-day mobility needs, but I felt low-key stressed knowing that as her body continued to grow, I would eventually need to find a different option.



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