[Blindtlk] Oops Subject was Intro and a Question
justin williams
justin.williams2 at gmail.com
Mon Dec 1 20:35:06 UTC 2014
As long as the sighted person in question could show you what you needed;
remember, you want to control the interaction. I've found that only a few
sighted people can really be of any assistance; I've used them just as a
guide, and oriented the way I needed to without telling them what I was
doing.
-----Original Message-----
From: blindtlk [mailto:blindtlk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Marci
Carpenter via blindtlk
Sent: Monday, December 01, 2014 3:31 PM
To: Szostak, Christine; Marion Gwizdala via blindtlk
Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] Oops Subject was Intro and a Question
Hi Chris,
I think I understand your question. I believe it would be the most helpful
for you to get some help from blind travelers and not from sighted people.
Sighted people would, I believe, be of little or no help as they would have
all of the stereotypes about blind people traveling. Is there an NFB chapter
in your are> If not, you could contact the President of the NFB affiliate in
your state. Feel free to contact me off list if I can help get you in touch
with some of these folks.
Marci Carpenter, President
NFB of Washington
mjc59 at comcast.net <mailto:mjc59 at comcast.net>
Phone: (206) 604-5507
> On Dec 1, 2014, at 11:00 AM, Szostak, Christine via blindtlk
<blindtlk at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> HI All,
> I am new to this list and also have a question.
>
> First, for those who do not know me, my name is Chris and I am totally
blind. I lost my vision completely as a young adult (I was born visually
impaired with usable vision in one eye). I lost my vision about 14 years
ago.
>
> My question relates to traveling.
>
> I am a long-time guide dog user. I received my first guide when I started
to lose my remaining vision in 1999 and have had continuous dogs since then
with no breaks longer than approximately 1 week between dogs.
>
> For various reasons, I am seriously considering switching to a white cane
and this is where my question comes in.
>
> Although trained on the basics (e.g., I know the basic techniques such as
how to move the cane while in general motion, roughly how far to swing it,
how to deal with things like steps...) I have had only very limited use with
it.
>
> I was considering something like Leader Dogs O/M program since our O/M
services here where I am living are aweful. However, there are some really
frustrating obsticals (e.g., the closest airport for me is around an hour
away and I live alone and do not want to ask someone (family do not live
near me) to drive me that far simply to board a plane).
>
> I should say that I have had a lot of O/M training throughout my life so
know how to safely cross major streets independently... so can safely
travel.
>
> Thus, given the above, I have been considering just getting myself
up-to-speed with some help from sighted folks I know without being in a
formal training program. DO others here think this is doable based on what I
have said? I feel like I could do it, but would really appreciate advice
from those who are experienced in cane travel as I really would value your
thoughts and opinions. Any advice, suggestions... would be sincerely
appreciated.
> Have a wonderful afternoon!
> Chris
>
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