[nabs-l] Blindness versus other minority groups

Ashley Bramlett bookwormahb at earthlink.net
Sat Nov 19 01:00:06 UTC 2011


be more blind people should be self employed

-----Original Message----- 
From: Arielle Silverman
Sent: Friday, November 18, 2011 7:33 PM
To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
Subject: Re: [nabs-l] Blindness versus other minority groups

Hi Mark,
First of all, your view makes a lot of intuitive sense to me. I like
it, and find it refreshing. It is radical, and most members of the
blind community will probably not agree with it, but it is worth some
consideration. I can definitely relate to the frustration of being
expected to conform to a set of nonverbal customs shared by the
sighted. I agree that expecting us to put forth extra effort to adopt
the customs of the sighted is an unfair burden.
However, it is worth noting that just in terms of sheer numbers, the
blind is much smaller than other minority groups, such as racial
groups. I have been told that only .1% or so of the U.S. population is
legally blind. Because of our small numbers, it is difficult if not
impossible for the blind to avoid judgment or evaluation by the
sighted, or even for us to set up a viable shared culture. The sighted
still control access to resources, such as jobs, educational
opportunities etc. Part of this is due to unjust power hierarchies,
but much of it is due to sheer numbers, which is not something we can
change. So, as a matter of pragmatics of survival, conformity is often
the best way. In other words, if we are applying for jobs, the vast
majority of employers out there will be sighted and will have certain
expectations about how their employees dress and look, so it is in our
best interest to try to meet these expectations.
I also agree with you that "isms" such as rocking are not inherently
wrong or harmful. Again, this is an unpopular view among our
community, but I think it has merit. The only reason that these "isms"
cause us grief is because they stand out and differ from the means of
nonverbal expression shared by the sighted majority. Just to share a
brief anecdote: When my (sighted) boyfriend and I first started
dating, the first time we had a chat while I had my arm around him, he
was gesturing with his hands while talking and I thought it was weird.
It took me a little getting used to because that's not how I
communicate, and I had never been intimate with a sighted person
before and paid that much attention to their hand movements. Of course
I got over this, but this was my initial reaction. Similarly, many of
us get weirded out by rocking and the like, in part because these
behaviors aren't shared by the sighted public, and also because they
tend to remind people of cognitive disorders such as autism. People
who have difficulty imitating the body movements of others because of
brain disorders, like autism, also display behaviors like rocking etc.
So when people see us with "isms" they associate us with mental
disability (and many blind people do too, because they have learned
these associations as well). Unfortunately, blindisms have a meaning
beyond kinky hair or other features distinctive of certain racial
groups. I don't think it's right, but that is what it is.
I don't think there's an easy solution to this problem, but in
general, I think we need to evaluate how we act in different
situations and match our behaviors to those situations. In situations
where we are being evaluated by the sighted (job interviews, dates,
etc.) I think conformity is important to maximize our chances of
attaining opportunities. In other situations, such as when we are
alone or with people we trust (close friends, etc.) I'd say do what
you want, so long as your behavior is not harming or inconveniencing
others. It's not right for us to be constantly monitoring ourselves
and aiming to conform to sighted norms all the time. But nor is it
good for us to miss out on opportunities because we failed to give our
self-presentations enough attention.
Best,
Arielle

On 11/18/11, Ashley Bramlett <bookwormahb at earthlink.net> wrote:
> Your comparing apples and oranges. Blind people can act more graceful, 
> have
> expression, wear nice clothes, be competent with the alternative skills, 
> and
> more showing that we can fit in. A minority like being say black cannot be
> changed.
> We cannot change blindness but we can and should stop rocking, eye poking
> and other things. There is someone in our nfb chapter who looks gross; I 
> see
> him do this as I have tunnel vision. He moves his head up/down, side/side
> like an amimal, rocks his head, opens his moutth, making weird 
> contortions,
> picks his nose, and just doesn't look good. Now other men are well 
> dressed,
> have a still head, look at the speaker, and act more socially appropriate.
> Frankly, I'm embarrassed to be around someone like this in public; whether
> sighted or blind, but particularly blind person since its creates a
> steretypical image!
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Marc Workman
> Sent: Friday, November 18, 2011 3:26 PM
> To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
> Subject: Re: [nabs-l] Blindness versus other minority groups
>
> Carly wrote,
> How can facial expressions and other body language convey meaning if they
> are not naturally, ocuring? For this reason I don't see a reason to sort 
> of
> put on nonverbal, expression if, behind it there is little, meaning?
>
> I want to take Carly's point further and suggest that pressuring blind
> people to look and act like others is in itself wrong.  I'm not suggesting
> there is no value to it, nor am I saying it should never be done, but it
> makes me uncomfortable.
>
> The subject of this thread is comparing blindness to other minorities.  I
> think there's a parallel between pressuring blind people to look and act
> like everyone else and things that some minorities used to do and still do
> for similar reasons.  In the past, among African Americans, there existed
> the practice of skin bleaching and hair straightening for the purpose of
> appearing less black and/or more white.  I can't give evidence to show how
> common this was, but Malcolm X talked about trying to remove the kink from
> his hair himself and finding it a physically and emotionally painful
> process.  There are also surgeries performed to give people of East Asian
> descent more "white looking" eyes and Jews more "white looking" noses.
> These are just a couple of examples.  Pressuring minorities to adopt the
> dominant group's style of dress, gate, diction, body language, etc also
> often happens.
>
> I hope we can agree that this is at the very least unfortunate.  There may
> be psychological and other explanations for why this occurs, but feeling
> pressured to get a nose job or to bleach your skin so that you look more
> like one particular group in society is problematic to say the least.  So
> what's the difference between these cases and pressuring a blind person to
> adopt the behavioural habits, facial expressions, body language etc of 
> some
> sighted people?
>
> You might say that we live in a sighted world and so we have to adapt.
> There is something to this, but I wonder if it would be equally acceptable
> to say we live in a white-dominated world so non-whites have to adapt.  It
> may be the case that blind people who don't "look blind" are more 
> successful
> and integrate better, and it also may be that non-whites who look and act
> white are more successful and integrate better, but in neither case is it
> just that the minorities need to assume the dominant groups 
> characteristics
> in order to be successful.
>
> What ultimately needs to happen is not that blind people begin to look and
> act like sighted people, but that we all become more accepting of
> differences that are arbitrary and irrelevant.  Most, if not all, so 
> called
> blindisms are irrelevant, and I see no more reason to stamp them out than 
> I
> do for trying to eliminate various differences in behaviour and appearance
> possessed by other minority groups.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Marc
> On 2011-11-18, at 6:40 AM, Carly Mihalakis wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> Good morning, Arielle,
>>
>> I know I tend to use such gestures as a quick shrug of the shoulders to
>> express nonchalantness since such a nonverbal expression seems to come
>> naturally to me so I hope is somewhat believable. How can facial
>> expressions and other body language convey meaning if they are not
>> naturally, ocuring? For this reason I don't see a reason to sort of put 
>> on
>>
>> nonverbal, expression if, behind it there is little, meaning? What's the
>> point? I Tara and all,
>>> You make a good point about nonverbal communication. I agree that it
>>> behooves us as blind people to actively use nonverbal communication to
>>> express ourselves. However, I wonder how skilled someone can become at
>>> this who has been totally blind since birth, even with practice. In
>>> particular, I am thinking about deliberately using nonverbal signals
>>> in emotional or stressful situations, like eye-rolling or looking
>>> annoyed when a stranger says or does something obnoxious. I imagine we
>>> can practice certain gestures or facial expressions, but would they
>>> ever become automatic enough to appear without much conscious effort,
>>> as they do for sighted people? Of course some things, like facing a
>>> conversation partner, are easy and don't require much thought, but
>>> other expressions are a lot more nuanced. I'm curious if any of you
>>> who have always been blind really feel like you have developed good
>>> control over your facial and body expressions, or if any of you have
>>> made attempts to get better. I really do think that focused lessons
>>> about body language should be taught to young blind children, but I
>>> think that realistically, the task of getting someone who has always
>>> been blind to adopt culturally shared facial expressions and gestures
>>> routinely is a lot harder than just a simple explanation. Then again,
>>> if this kind of education were treated like a dance or acting class,
>>> with as much discipline and structure, maybe it could work.
>>> Incidentally, I have noticed that if I find myself thinking about
>>> something funny, I will pop a big smile and people will ask me what's
>>> so funny. I'm curious if this happens to anyone else? I get the
>>> impression that this doesn't happen to sighted people and I assume
>>> that sighted people find themselves thinking about funny things too,
>>> but that they just hide it better. Often I am so distracted by the
>>> funny thought that I don't even realize I am grinning until my
>>> attention is called to it. This is often quite awkward and
>>> embarrassing, especially since most of the time, the funny thing I am
>>> thinking about is just a stupid joke or something from a TV show and I
>>> don't really feel like explaining it out loud. Can you think of a
>>> graceful way to handle this, or to prevent it?
>>> Best,
>>> Arielle
>>>
>>> On 11/15/11, Andi <adrianne.dempsey at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> >      I agree nonverbal comunication is so very important and I think 
>>> > it
>>> > should be included in the curriculum that VI's and training centers
>>> > use, not
>>> > only what we want to say but also avoiding the nonverbals that say 
>>> > what
>>> >
>>> > we
>>> > do not want to say.  I use to work at a summer camp and I notice a big
>>> > difference in the social lives of the blind kids and teens who had an
>>> > understanding of nonverbal comunication versis the blind kids and 
>>> > teens
>>> >
>>> > who
>>> > were not taught nonverbal comunication.  Part of the reason sighted
>>> > people
>>> > think so badly and incorrectly about the blind is because sometimes
>>> > blind
>>> > people do not allways look compatent even though they are.  I am not
>>> > saying
>>> > that all blind people look this way, nor am I saying that blind people
>>> > who
>>> > look compatent are never faulsly judged.  I know that the sighted are
>>> > largely ignorent to the truthe about blind people, but I think blind
>>> > people
>>> > also need to present themselves in a way that portrays them how they
>>> > want to
>>> > be seen.  I know that you shouldn't care to much what other people
>>> > think of
>>> > you, because you can not please everyone, and you should always be 
>>> > true
>>> >
>>> > to
>>> > yourself; however all people especially people who are already dealing
>>> > with
>>> > stigmas such as the blind should care to a sertain extent.
>>> >      Many blind people have atrophy in the muscles in their face. 
>>> > This
>>> > means that many facial expressions are hard or in some cases 
>>> > impossible
>>> >
>>> > to
>>> > make.  When people have a blank look on their face it looks to the
>>> > sighted
>>> > like there is nothing going on upstairs.  Even other sighted people 
>>> > get
>>> >
>>> > this
>>> > blank look on their face sometimes but it is usually when they are
>>> > dazing
>>> > off or falling asleep.  When a person has that look all the time it
>>> > looks to
>>> > sighted people that the blind can not have an intelligent conversation
>>> > because you can not talk to someone who is off in space.  Some Blind
>>> > people
>>> > go to physical tharipy to remedy this, but that is not necessary just
>>> > some
>>> > exercises at home can fix it.  Also eye contact is a big part of
>>> > nonverbal
>>> > comunication.  Many blind people keep their eyes closed, or look at 
>>> > the
>>> > floor, or look up in the sky.  That to a sighted person shows
>>> > disinterest,
>>> > bordom, or again the off in space thing depending on the rest of your
>>> > body
>>> > language accompanying the lack of eye contact.  Even though we can not
>>> > see
>>> > the person we are talking to we should make eye contact.  Isms such as
>>> > rocking, poking, spinning, or flicking, are not exceptable ever as 
>>> > this
>>> > looks like a cognitive impairment.  At the camp their were blind kids
>>> > with
>>> > no other disability, and blind kids who also had cognitive 
>>> > impairments.
>>> >
>>> > I
>>> > had my sighted sister come to the camp and help teach a weekend dance
>>> > camp
>>> > as she is a very skilld dancer.  One teenager who is very smart by the
>>> > way
>>> > and has no other disabilities was rocking and poking while singing
>>> > loudly at
>>> > dinner.  My sister had not yet met him and asked me how old he was
>>> > mentally.
>>> > Once she met him and realized he was mentally a normal teen she felt
>>> > bad for
>>> > asking the question, but that is how the sighted world looks at isms.
>>> > The
>>> > placement of your hands is a simple but often socially faital thing if
>>> > placed oddly.  Also the way a person stands or walks is importaint.
>>> > Many
>>> > blind people move stiffly, I am not talking a robot, but still stif
>>> > movements can tell a sighted person something you are not trying to
>>> > say.
>>> > Depending on what you are doing with the stiff movement you can look
>>> > either
>>> > angry, nervous, or mocking.  This is just the tip of the nonverbal
>>> > icebirg,
>>> > and it can make a huge difference in the way we as blind people are
>>> > viewed.
>>> >      Also you are right about understanding the body language of
>>> > others, and
>>> > even though we can not see it there are ways of telling what is being
>>> > said
>>> > silently.  Some actions make noise, while others have a different
>>> > energy
>>> > feel.  I was told that only 7 percent of all comunication is what a
>>> > person
>>> > says, 32 percent of all comunication is tone, and 61 percent of all
>>> > comunication is nonverbal.
>>> >
>>> > -----Original Message-----
>>> > From: Tara Annis
>>> > Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2011 10:20 AM
>>> > To: nabs-l at nfbnet.org
>>> > Subject: [nabs-l] Blindness versus other minority groups
>>> >
>>> > I think the first step in helping blind people to get their feelings
>>> > across
>>> > to the sighted is  to understand what is considered ignorance and what
>>> > is
>>> > considered outright teasing and cruelty in public.  Many of the 
>>> > meanest
>>> > things are just said with one word    and a lot of body language. 
>>> > Many
>>> > people who hate blind people speak in a nice manner, but  exhibit
>>> > cruelty in
>>> > their body language. I do think a lot of blind people, not all, but
>>> > some, do
>>> > lack discernment in this area, especially if they are blind from birth
>>> > and a
>>> > sighted person  does not take the time to explain nonverbal
>>> > communication.
>>> > I think the first step would be for an honest sighted person to follow
>>> > a
>>> > blind person around and interpret the visual elements to the blind
>>> > person,
>>> > so that the entire picture can be analyzed for both parties.  I think
>>> > one of
>>> > the best ways to respond to those who are ignorant, who are not
>>> > attempting
>>> > to be mean, but make offensive remarks is through body language, like
>>> > rolling one's eyes.  Most sighted people use   nonverbal communication
>>> > to
>>> > show  when they are irritated by another person.  If the person
>>> > continues to
>>> > be annoying, the person will then use verbal communication.  That is
>>> > why
>>> > sighted people think blind are mean for actually verbally stating 
>>> > their
>>> > anger, instead of visually displaying it.  I would like to see a class
>>> > where
>>> > advanced nonverbal communication is explained, since    currently it
>>> > seems
>>> > there are just the basics  taught, like  facing the person you are
>>> > talking
>>> > to and shaking hands. There is not a class in how to display   the
>>> > various
>>> > ways of shooing levels of discomfort, from   annoyed, slightly
>>> > irritated,
>>> > somewhat irritated, to angry. Blind people need to know that sometimes
>>> > it is
>>> > necessary to actively create facial expressions and body movements, as
>>> > opposed to letting one's body language depict their true feelings.
>>> > Personally, I was surprised at the amount of communication that is
>>> > displayed
>>> > nonverbally, that sighted people watch me from across a large college
>>> > campus, or from way down the street, and are making judgments about me
>>> > from
>>> > my appearance. Once this was explained to me, I do feel that I am more
>>> > comfortable around sighted people, and am  in   control of  getting my
>>> > feelings across.  The great thing about learning all this stuff is 
>>> > that
>>> >
>>> > I
>>> > have seen the amount of ignorance I faced by sighted people diminish
>>> > significantly.  It is a 50/50 situation: blind people need to do their
>>> > half
>>> > of    helping get rid of ignorance  and sighted people need to be
>>> > willing to
>>> > do their half.
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