 Mae cyfnodd wedi bod yn ystod o'r 11 o'r 12 oed yn ymgyrchol, ond nid yw'n mynd i'w dweud o'r ddweud o'r 10 oed yn ymgyrchol. Mae'n ddweud o'r pwyllfa ar gyfer yma, ac yn mynd i'r gennaeth o'r dweud, o'r dweud o'r dweud. Felly rydyn ni'n cael ei fod yn ei hwb i'n holl. Roedden ni'n cael'u marathyn, rydyn ni'n gweithio'r band hynny. Fent i'r wneud hynny yw'r ymddangos y cyntaf. Rydyn ni'n gwrs i'ch ddweud y band hynny'n hynny. Felly rydyn ni'n ceisio'r hynny i'r hynny'n holl. Rydyn ni'n ceisio'r hynny i'r hynny i'r hynny i'r hynny i'r hynny. Rydyn ni'n ceisio'r cyntaf yn ei ddwylliant. I've progressed from walking sticks to walking frame to my friend here, the mobility scooter. It became more and more difficult for me to get out of the house. I've always driven and the impact on it was I could no longer drive a manual car. I had to source an automatic vehicle and it almost became impossible for me to actually stop anywhere to go shopping and I was having to work on the good greases of relatives to actually assist me with getting the family shopping to the point where I just asked them to go for me because it's almost too embarrassing to go up myself. Obviously I was aware of the blue badges but I was unaware of how you went about it and I didn't know if I would qualify. But somebody suggested to me that I applied for the Disability Living Allowance and after some convincing I applied for it and it was eventually successful in getting it and as part of that of the documentation that came out with that being approved for the allowance one of the things you qualify for automatically is a blue badge and wow. The blue badge has been part of my life as long as I can remember. It's been a very integral part of my outdoor activity if you like because it's crucial and quite essential to have if you wish to travel, if you wish to park, if you wish to go shopping to the theatre or to the cinema. It's an essential part of my mobility if you like. I drive a high performance car and one of the issues that often come up is the double take and that's always quite amusing so I quite like that. It blows expectations and attacks stereotypes. The difference is amazing. I'm able to stop somewhere with the blue badge, plenty of room for me to get out of the vehicle to unload my baggy from the vehicle using the hoist. It's allowed me to actually meet friends in the coffee shop who I hadn't been able to see because accessing their own homes was difficult and the simpler things that people miss like taking the nieces and nephews to the cinema which I hadn't been able to do or needed assistance to do, I can now do by myself. Having the blue badge spaces and the scheme there, without it I would still be trapped in my house. My life would still be in the dark days of depression when it couldn't go anywhere. It has given me a life which I didn't have. It's something which I'd lost, mis-terribly and now I'm getting back thanks to the availability of parking through the blue badge scheme. Without the blue badge my lifestyle would be seriously curtailed. Even just going to Tesco's would be far more difficult because of course being a wheelchair user I need to have extra wide doors on my car so therefore most of the bays are very narrow and as narrow as they are means the door doesn't open sufficiently so I won't be able to get in out of the car. So I guess I'd have to use taxi so my lifestyle would be much poorer. The key issue for me is not so much the distance from the entrance of any facility or any service I want to use, it's the actual being able to get in and out of the car and that's really crucial. To people who do not have a badge and parking blue badge spaces and they think it's a bit of a luck or they think why shouldn't I? I'd ask them to think how inconsiderate they're actually being. I would even say that to family members who have blue badge holders in their families but they think, but they go out, they don't have them and they think why doesn't matter, I've got a badge. No, you can walk that extra 30 seconds, that extra minute. People who genuinely need the badge need it for a reason. It's not because it's a fad, it's a cultural thing, it's not the next iPhone or anything, it is something we actually need to live. Without it, you are robinous of something you take for granted.