When Montana Whiteley and her brother Jamieson were young, they both had Fragile X syndrome, a genetic condition that causes a change to one of the genes on the X chromosome.
It can make everyday tasks difficult, and the prospect of career pathways "almost insurmountable," the siblings from Melbourne, Australia, tell news.com.au.
But that's not stopping the 25-year-old and her brother, 26, from taking part in an eight-week cooking class run by All Things Equal, a social enterprise that provides paid employment and training for people with disability.
"It's important to make new friends, learn new things," Whiteley says.
"It's really enjoyable."
The siblings are getting "that solid, foundational understanding" of what it's like to be in a "proper industrial work environment," General Manger Bianca Stern says.
The unemployment rate for people with disability has not changed in 30 years, she adds, noting that young people with disability are more than twice as likely as those without disability to be unemployed.
All Things Equal also runs a cafa place where customers can go for great food and coffeethat has hired 28 people with disability since it opened three years ago in Balaclava, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reports.
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