Introduction: A disabled account of flourishing
The experience of disability: the journey we would not have chosen
Disability, theodicy, and the problem of pain: why me, God?
Disability, virtue, and the meaning of happiness: a disabled reading of the virtue tradition
Disability, advocacy, and the good life: Mark Tonga's story
Disability, psychology, and the science of happiness: measuring happiness in hedonic science
Profound disability, independence, and friendship: practical reasoning and moral agency
Disability, sexuality, and intimacy: happiness under the covers
Disability, limitation, and the positivity myth: Sara Chesterman's story
Disability, grace, and the virtue of letting go of control: wild and unruly currents
Conclusion: A disabled account of faith.