For Gini Thomas, advocacy begins with showing up as herself and inviting others to learn, listen, and engage.
By Rick Bontkowski
Advocacy rarely begins on a stage. More often, it starts quietly, in lived experience, in unanswered questions, and in the decision to speak when silence would be easier. For Gini Thomas, advocacy has become both a responsibility and a calling.
Gini is an amputee, educator, and content creator who has built a meaningful platform by sharing the realities of limb loss with honesty, humor, and courage. Her work focuses on visibility, showing what life with a prosthesis actually looks like, not filtered through inspiration clichés or pity narratives, but through daily experience.
Rather than positioning herself as an expert looking in from the outside, Gini leads with authenticity. She speaks openly about recovery, adaptation, body image, and the emotional terrain that accompanies limb difference. In doing so, she gives others permission to ask questions, to learn, and most importantly, to feel seen.
Advocacy, in Gini’s world, is not about shouting. It’s about consistency. It’s about showing up, educating patiently, and correcting misconceptions without losing compassion. Through her digital presence and community engagement, she has become a trusted voice for people navigating limb loss and for those seeking to better understand it.
This kind of advocacy matters, especially now.
As conversations around disability evolve, there is growing recognition that representation must be shaped by those living the experience. Advocacy is no longer confined to institutions or formal organizations. It lives in personal storytelling, in transparency, and in the willingness to engage with curiosity rather than fear.
Her advocacy also challenges the idea that strength looks a certain way. It can look like vulnerability. It can look like humor. It can look like answering the same question for the hundredth time because someone else might need to hear the answer for the first.
I had the pleasure of exploring Gini’s journey more deeply when she joined me as a guest on The AMP’D UP211 Podcast. Our conversation moved beyond surface-level narratives and into the heart of what advocacy really requires: patience, resilience, and an unwavering commitment to truth.
As we move through February, Gini Thomas reminds us that advocacy doesn’t require perfection or a platform handed to you. It begins the moment you decide your story can help someone else and choose to share it.
Rick Bontkowski, a Chicago native and amputee, is the host creator of The AMP’D UP211 Podcast. A drummer, cyclist, and advocate, Rick shares the stories of people with limb differences to inspire, inform, and challenge perceptions worldwide. Contact info: Ampup211@gmail.com, ampup211.com, youtube.com/@theampdup211podcast6, instagram.com/rick_bontkowski.
{Discover additional stories from Rick’s podcast on our website at thespringsmagazine.com/category/health-wellness/ampd-up211/.}





