[Blindtlk] Loud Places

Judy Jones jtj1 at cableone.net
Mon Apr 6 00:21:05 UTC 2015


Good sane skills plus awareness of the people and environment will bring those incidents to a minimum.


(Judy

Sent from my Samsung S5 Mini Galaxy smartphone.


-------- Original message --------
From: Carly Mihalakis via blindtlk <blindtlk at nfbnet.org> 
Date:04/05/2015  1:09 PM  (GMT-07:00) 
To: robin.beautifullyblind at ymail.com, Blind Talk Mailing List <blindtlk at nfbnet.org>, Blind Talk Mailing List <blindtlk at nfbnet.org> 
Cc:  
Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] Loud Places 

Good early afternoon, she who is beautiful-in-her blindness, Robin,

As  I am seeing it, spontaneously bumping into someone with your 
stick or even your body  seems like something that comes with the 
territory of blindness and is not meant to be "changed" or "eliminated."


" I can assure you that those into whom you bodily collide probably 
won't think anything of blind chicks bumping into them. Perhaps, 
then, you might let that anxiety go, for actually, it has no purpose, 
other than to cause your feeling abominable within your very skin, 
like blind people themselves might be the lowliest critters ever for 
actualizing ohmagod, blindness BEHAVIORS?
Car At 11:12 AM 4/4/2015, robin.beautifully blind--- via blindtlk wrote
>Hi Carly,
>      The problem I have with loud places, is not being able to tell 
> if someone is in front of me without hitting them with my cane. I 
> will try the pencil technique, and not trail the wall like I usually do.
>
>           Robin
>
> > On Apr 4, 2015, at 11:53 AM, Carly Mihalakis <carlymih at comcast.net> wrote:
> >
> > Good morning, my blinded ever so completely and beautifully
> > Robin,
> > ,
> >        I don't know if it's been your experience, for 
> echolocation's being perceived sort of internally, that is, you 
> need not an unobstructed sound field to glean information about 
> your environment from feedback generated by echolocation. For me, 
> this  remains absolutely the  case, and is a large part of 
> perceptual understanding of particularly loud environments. :18 AM 
> 4/3/2015, robin.eautifullyblind--- via blindtlk wrote:
> >> Hello everyone,
> >>    I am in need of any suggestions about traveling in places 
> where there is a lot of noise, and sound can't be relied on for 
> clues. I was in Starbucks last week, and there was a lot of people. 
> I trailed the wall from the cash register to the place where I 
> needed to pick up my coffee. There was a little girl in my path, 
> and I didn't realize it. Her mother got mad, and told her daughter 
> to move. I want to avoid this from happening again. So, I am in 
> need of some tips. Thank you in advance!
> >>
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>
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