[Blindtlk] Best places to live

Cherylandmaxx Cherylandmaxx at hotmail.com
Thu Oct 31 12:58:53 UTC 2013


Many of us. That are blind that were not born blind like myself, finding a place to live might be due to medical issues. From either veterans, accidents, health issues such as diabetes and other health issues, you may not want to focus on the blindness issues that Julie mentioned.  Finding the best doctors and hospitals would be a big issue to me.  Nelson and myself are trying to sell our home and move out of NY.

We have been many places in recent years with owning a travel agency.

Most recently being in Utah. We loved it for the weather, the medical facilities as well as knowing people who live there, even transportation wasn't an issue.

Try to remember transportation may not be the first thing to think about,if we can afford it and we work or looking for work the answer might be just hiring a driver.


Sent from my Samsung Galaxy S®4

-------- Original message --------
From: "Julie J." <julielj at neb.rr.com>
Date: 10/31/2013  8:45 AM  (GMT-05:00)
To: Blind Talk Mailing List <blindtlk at nfbnet.org>
Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] Best places to live

I think this topic is quite interesting.  The thing that fascinates me the
most is this concept that there is a best place to live and that somehow
blindness figures into that equation.   I think individual preferences are a
much greater predictor of happiness with your living arrangements than some
survey with scoring based on things that may or may not matter to you.

I live in a very small town, less than 8,000 people.  I am probably the
happiest I have been in my whole life.  I grew up in a large city of perhaps
400,000 people and have lived in a tiny town of about 500 people.   There
have been good points and bad to each.

What I'd suggest to anyone thinking of relocating for whatever reason is to
list what is really important to you, not what blind people are supposed to
find important.  Then look at the possibilities that meet your must have's
and would like to have lists.

I like the ability to walk most everywhere I want to go.  I like fresh air,
a slow pace, small family owned shops, very low crime and space, lots and
lots of space.  Things like buses and advanced medical facilities are not
all that important to me.  If they were, this town would be a misery.

I guess I'm just saying to put more emphasis on what is most important to
you as a person and less on what someone else has decided should be
important to you because you're blind.

Julie





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