arts&life fashion Perfectly Imperfect A local mom has launched a blog for fashionistas with invisible disabilities. ABOVE: Lainie Ishbia. 42 March 1 • 2018 JENNIFER LOVY CONTRIBUTING WRITER M ost of Lainie Ishbia’s friends and acquain- tances knew noth- ing about her struggles with certain daily tasks like holding a pen, putting change in a park- ing meter or opening a packet of sugar. They didn’t know that under her cute jeans and chic shoes were a pair of leg braces she needed in order to walk. It wasn’t a secret. It’s just that her degenerative neuromuscular disease typically didn’t come up in conversation. “I didn’t think my invisible disability should define me or be a part of how I introduce jn myself,” she said. “I didn’t hide it but there was no point in tell- ing people about it either.” Until now. A few weeks ago, Ishbia, a 47-year-old Huntington Woods wife and mom, decided to pub- licly share her condition along with her passion for fashion, a heavy dose of inspiration and all her favorite lifestyle hacks for successfully navigating life with an invisible disability. Her plat- form for sharing — the internet. Her website — trend-able.com. Trend-able is about empow- ering women with invisible physical disabilities to look and feel their best, said Ishbia, who maintains that people feel bet- ter when they look better. “Fashion for people with invisible physical disabilities is nearly nonexistent. There are some brands designing for dis- abled people, but their focus is on visible [wheelchair-depen- dent] disabilities,” Ishbia wrote on her website. “As an AFO (leg brace) wearer, the shoe cata- logues geared toward people ‘like me’ feature smiling gran- nies on the cover, wearing ugly black Velcro ‘comfort’ shoes that are definitely not my style. I started to wonder if there are other women out there with invisible disabilities who want to look and feel their best but settle for shoes or clothing just because they fit.” When she introduced her new venture in late January, she did so by posting the following on Facebook: “I’m sure many of you didn’t know until now that I have a slowly progres- sive neuromuscular disorder called Charcot Marie Tooth (CMT) Disorder. Since CMT is not life-threatening and cur- rently untreatable, I have never felt the need to show the world I need leg braces to walk and