[nabs-l] People are weird when it comes to blindness

Sarah Alawami marrie12 at gmail.com
Tue Jun 23 19:34:39 UTC 2009


I'd rather have people help  me too much then try and lead me astray. I hear
a talk I think, Can't remember what it was called, about throwhing a nickle
or something along this conversation. I might get tomatos thrown at me for
these comments but ah well.

-----Original Message-----
From: nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of sarah.jevnikar at utoronto.ca
Sent: Monday, June 22, 2009 8:08 PM
To: nabs-l at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [nabs-l] People are weird when it comes to blindness



Hi Jim,
Abso-flippin'-lutely people are weird. A cane brings out the best, and the
worst, in people. Just learn to smile and be polite (unless you feel in
danger) and you'll be all good. I'm sure we all have many stories of the
oddballs we've met along the way. Bear in mind that most people are
well-intentioned, and will more than likely help you too much than try to
lead you astray.
Happy travels,
Sarah



Quoting Jim Reed <jim275_2 at yahoo.com>:

> Hey all,
>
> Me and my cane took a walk last night, and my walk just happened to   
> coincide with the end of a festival at the park, so allot of people   
> were out.
>
> First, I was working on non-visual travel, and as usual, I got   
> myself lost, so I st oped where I was and I was trying to listen for  
>  traffic or anything else that might give me a clue, then this guy   
> started yelling from his porch "are you OK, do you need any help, do  
>  you know where you are, where are you going..." I yelled back that   
> "I was fine, that I did not need any help, and that I was trying to   
> figure it out for myself". I continued to stand there, trying to   
> figure it out,  and trying to listen for traffic, and this guy   
> continued to stand there and yell. It got to the point where he was   
> being so distracting that I just said "F This",  and moved on, thus   
> a learning opportunity was lost.
>
> Then, a little later, I was crossing the footbridge that borders   
> campus, and I stopped walking because I thought I heard a footstep,   
> and I did not want to whack anyone with my cane. Then, this lady   
> approaches me, introduces herself, shakes my hand, tells me that she  
> had been following me for a block or two, and then she tells me that  
> "you are doing great", and that "I admire you". I politely said  
> thanks; I didn't have the heart to tell her that I really wasn't  
> blind (in the way she expected me to be blind, anyway). But really,  I 
> was thinking, "First of all, why is this lady admiring me? All I  am 
> doing is taking a walk, which nearly every human on the planet  can 
> do." Then, I thought, "how does this lady know I am "doing  great"? 
> She has no clue where I started, or where I was going. She  has no 
> clue if I am lost two miles in the wrong direction, nor does  she know 
> whether or not I fell off of half a dozen curbs in the  process of 
> getting to school."
>
>  I guess I should be proud of the fact that after only one or two   
> weeks of cane travel experience, that I already put off a vibe that   
> tells others "I know what I am doing".
>
> I guess this lady struck me as odd because her views on blindness   
> are so much different than mine. This lady is willing to assume,   
> after observing a blind stranger travel two blocks, that I am fully   
> competent and capable. I would not be willing to make that   
> assumption. Why is this lady making such assumptions about me? I am   
> not complaining that this lady thinks I am capable,  I am   
> complaining because this lady feels she has all the information she   
> needs to make such a decision after watching me walk only two   
> blocks. My point is, by walking two blocks, I have not proven   
> anything, this lady has no basis by which to judge me, be it   
> positive or negative judgments. Let me prove myself, let me earn   
> your complements and your admiration; don't just give them to me.
>
> Thoughts?
> Jim
>
> "From compromise and things half done, Keep me with stern and stubborn 
> pride, And when at last the fight is won, ... Keep me still 
> unsatisfied." --Louis Untermeyer
>
>
>
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