[nabs-l] the use of sighted guide technique

justin williams justin.williams2 at gmail.com
Sun Aug 11 19:37:29 UTC 2013


I use sided guide if I want to carry on a conversation with the person; my
walking speed, andmy cues are different, and it makes it easier to do that.
I always use my cane unless I am carrying something in my cane hand while
going sided guide.  
-----Original Message-----
From: nabs-l [mailto:nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Steve Jacobson
Sent: Saturday, August 10, 2013 7:39 AM
To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
Subject: Re: [nabs-l] the use of sighted guide technique

One thing I try to do is to not make whomever I happen to walk with
responsible for me.  I use my cane when I am walking sighted guide, and I
try to walk more or less next to the person instead of lagging behind as is
normally suggested.  For me, it serves two purposes.  Walking sighted guide
makes it easier for me to talk with the person, and if it is an environment
where it is hard to hear and I need to follow, it takes care of that as
well.  There is no absolute answer to this question in my opinion, but one
has to judge if using sighted guide prevents one from learning an
environment well enough to travel independently if one has to.  If one goes
to a location often but needs to use sighted guide to get to a restroom,
then one probably should make an effort to know the area better, but that
doesn't necessarily mean never using sighted guide techniques.  The other
guideline for me is trying to use sighted guide because it is more
convenient for some reason and not because I absolutely have to.

Best regards,

Steve

On Fri, 09 Aug 2013 23:06:22 -0700, Carly Mihalakis wrote:

>Hi, Tina,

>Go sighted guide unless you're out to prove some eitherial point, which 
>I highly doubt is the case. You know what you are capable of so why 
>need you prove it to anyone? Take the arm because you're right, of 
>course it's faster for everyone!
>Good luck, Tina!
>for Today, Car
>"That which produces bliss should be used in worship since it ravishes 
>the heart"
>- Tantraloka At 01:50 PM 8/9/2013, Kelsey Nicolay wrote:
>>Hello,
>>I will be joining a women's chorus very soon.  The group practices at 
>>a church in my hometown.  They are on Friday evenings which means my 
>>parents have to wait until rehearsal ends to go down to our camper.  
>>My question is this: I have always just went sighted guide with my 
>>family or friends just because it is faster for everyone.  However, 
>>since I may have to take the transit sometimes or go with another 
>>chorus momber, do you think it is appropriate to use sighted guide 
>>technique with them, whether it be the transit driver or another 
>>person in the group? Or should I arrange for someone to show me how to 
>>get in and out of the chorch independently? If so, if my mobility 
>>instructor cannot do it, how would a family member go about taking 
>>over this role? I used sighted guide with my friends in my college 
>>women's chohus, but I have a feeling that since this group is a 
>>community group, it will be different.  What do you guwiths think?
>>Thanks,
>>
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