[Blindtlk] FW: Awareness was the Main Course
Graves, Diane
dgraves at icrc.IN.gov
Fri Mar 12 13:33:12 UTC 2010
I'm afraid I have to say here that I don't believe it is the rest of us who need a reality check.
Diane Graves
Civil Rights Specialist
Indiana Civil Rights Commission
Alternative Dispute Resolutions Unit
317-232-2647
"It is service that measures success."
George Washington Carver
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-----Original Message-----
From: blindtlk-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindtlk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Ray Foret jr
Sent: Thursday, March 11, 2010 9:51 PM
To: Blind Talk Mailing List
Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] FW: Awareness was the Main Course
That is so completely backwards. Clearly, I can see that no matter what we say, you will not listen. So far as I am concerned, this discussion can serve no further purpose. I'm done with you!
Sincerely,
The Constantly Barefooted Ray!!!
E-Mail:
rforetjr at comcast dot net
On Mar 11, 2010, at 8:09 PM, Steve P. Deeley wrote:
> I think it gives sighted folks a greater found appreciation of what it is like to be blind. They are not looking down their noses at blind folks.
>
>
> Steve
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Cindy Handel" <cindy425 at verizon.net>
> To: "Blind Talk Mailing List" <blindtlk at nfbnet.org>
> Sent: Thursday, March 11, 2010 8:08 PM
> Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] FW: Awareness was the Main Course
>
>
>> Wow! There was nothing positive at that dinner. Everyone talked about the
>> negatives they see in their own experience or that of loved ones. So, it
>> seems all they were there for was to pretend they understand what it's like
>> to be blind and to be thankful they aren't blind. Not a good thing to
>> thrust on people.
>>
>> Cindy
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jewel S." <herekittykat2 at gmail.com>
>> To: <blindtlk at nfbnet.org>
>> Sent: Thursday, March 11, 2010 5:48 PM
>> Subject: [Blindtlk] FW: Awareness was the Main Course
>>
>>
>> Here is the original St. Petersburg article. I think the Letter to the
>> Editor was a bit harsh, but does hit on some very good points,
>> including the fact that Foundation Fighting Blindness uses blind
>> people to create pity from sighted people to raise funds. It's a sad
>> state when a blind person has to talk about how depressed and angry at
>> the world they were when they went blind to raise funds. Of course,
>> they don't -have- to, as NFB chapters all over the nation raise funds
>> by showing people what we -can- do. Our local chapter is doing a
>> Pancake Breakfast with Applebee's, and I am going to suggest that we
>> not be so wary about being the servers...take the plunge and serve the
>> breakfast. We -can- do it, and the sighted people who attend will be
>> impressed and pity us, but maybe it'll teach them that we can do
>> anything a sighted person can do, sometimes even better, because we
>> use more than one sense to do the task.
>>
>> Without further ado, the original article:
>>
>> Awareness was the main course.
>> By LAURA Reiley Times Staff Writer ST. PETERSBURG You knew your plate
>> had been set before you only by sense of smell. It smelled like beef,
>> something braised and hearty. On your right a voice asked what you do
>> for a living. You turned and lobbed an answer in that direction.
>> Tuesday night was the Foundation Fighting Blindness's first Tampa Bay
>> Dining in the Dark event at the Renaissance Vinoy Resort & Golf
>> Club. More than 200 people, dressed fancy and sipping cocktails, took
>> seats in the main ballroom and eventually donned something called a
>> Mindfold face mask, impervious to light and lined with foam. The
>> lights dimmed and as emcee Dick Crippen of the Tampa Bay Rays goaded
>> the crowd, the group endeavored to enjoy "the first meal you will
>> never see. Other senses were heightened, texture became paramount. But
>> more important, it gave all of the assembled a greater window into the
>> world of the sightless. Many had come because their lives had already
>> been touched by degenerative retinal diseases. Briana Pompilus , 24,
>> was there as a volunteer with her mother Veronica Floyd, 44, who was
>> diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa at age 22. Still driving now,
>> eventually her vision will close up as if looking through two drinking
>> straws. One of the evening's speakers, April Lufriu, a former Mrs.
>> Florida America pageant winner and president of the Tampa Bay area
>> chapter of the foundation, spoke of her sister's retinal disease and,
>> more haltingly, about her two children's recent diagnosis.
>> Degenerative retinal diseases affect more than 10 million Americans.
>> As keynote speaker James Minow described it, the foundation's aim is
>> to put an end to retinal disease by replacing defective cells in the
>> retina, replacing defective genes and by developing new treatments to
>> protect degenerating retinas. The obstacle? As is so often the case,
>> it's money. According to Kim Marlow, regional director of development
>> for the foundation, the evening in St. Petersburg will raise $100,000
>> for the cause. The most successful Dining in the Dark event to date,
>> in New York, raised $500,000 in a single evening. The evening's
>> honorees, doctors James Gill and Stephen Klasko, were feverishly
>> optimistic about conceivable cures for blindness. For those assembled,
>> a half hour in the dark was a humbling, and bumbling, reminder of the
>> magnitude of the gift of sight..
>>
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>
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