[nabs-l] Grabbing and streetcrossing help

Ashley Bramlett bookwormahb at earthlink.net
Fri Nov 11 00:17:11 UTC 2011


Hi,
I kind of said the same thing. Interesting to walk about independently. Like 
if I take the metro and exit the station and get to a corner, and someone 
shows up wanting to help. Wouldn't they think that we're okay if we just 
came from the station or wherever and to corner A alone?
I just accept or decline it accordingly.

In my area there are confusing lights or if you're around mid day, I don't 
hear enough traffic. I don't find street crossings straightforward 
especially the ons with the push buttons.
So, I might want help.

I find if I want help or need to ask something, sighted people are not 
around, or I cannot get their attention.
Yet, when I'm fine, they show up in numbers.

Oh well, that's the world for you. People are so busy on their cell phones 
or Ipods that its hard to get their attention.

Ashley
-----Original Message----- 
From: Bridgit Pollpeter
Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2011 11:22 AM
To: nabs-l at nfbnet.org
Subject: [nabs-l] Grabbing and streetcrossing help

I can kind of understand how those with little to no exposure to
blindness may be concerned and curious as to how we do something like
cross a street, but, and this may be my naivety talking, when a person
sees a grown person walking about on their own, does common sense not
dictate that perhaps, while not fully understanding it, that person is
probably okay? Maybe they can ask if we need anything, but it's a little
difficult for me to understand how we can obviously be doing things with
no help, but when a sighted person is around we suddenly need their
help? I guess I'm still acclimating to stuff like this.

In crowded situations, I'll take sighted guide sometimes, more so, so I
don't lose whoever I'm with, but I think it helps when we do as much as
possible independently. I also suffer episodes of extremely low blood
pressure which makes me dizzy, weak and can affect my balance. On days
like these, depending on what I need to do, I may take more assistance
than on good days, but I try to be as independent as possible even on
these days, but this also is just because of my personality as much as
it is related to blindness! Smile. While going to school, classmates
became accustomed to me doing things and getting around without help,
and I led the way when it came to when and if I needed assistance. When
classmates would see me around campus, they eventually stopped asking if
I needed help and would just approach me like they would anyone else.
They let me do the asking, and instead, we were able to cultivate
relationships.

The positive energy and confidence we put off helps as much as our
actions. If we present ourselves in as confident of a manner as possible
in any given situation, people will pick up on this and respect us as
people. The more we work on our confidence, the more people will take
note, and more importantly, the better off we feel about our
independence and capabilities.

Sincerely,
Bridgit Kuenning-Pollpeter
Read my blog at:
http://blogs.livewellnebraska.com/author/bpollpeter/

"History is not what happened; history is what was written down."
The Expected One- Kathleen McGowan

Message: 21
Date: Tue, 8 Nov 2011 23:10:14 -0500
From: Patrick Molloy <ptrck.molloy at gmail.com>
To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
<nabs-l at nfbnet.org>
Subject: Re: [nabs-l] Grabbing etc.
Message-ID:

<CAN+-G_CeC3zdSdX+TEE1od6936YObAZRvSXG9KXQg2eKU2Ba+g at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

I find it quite ironic that, in trying to help us, sighted people
often cause more of a problem with regard to street crossing. Again,
they really do mean well, but their method of help still leaves a lot
to be desired (if desired at all.)
Patrick


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