[nabs-l] question about independence

Carly Mihalakis carlymih at comcast.net
Mon Mar 3 18:45:23 UTC 2014


Good morning, Antonio,

         I'm glad you shed that chip from your shoulder, too! In my 
experience, sighted people are most impressed by what they see 
and  not so much by what someone is lecturing them about regarding 
their particular special interest. So, I tend toward yes, accepting 
more help from sighted people than probably do you and your 
Federationist peers.
Also, Antonio, in the end, someone's actual means of achieving don't 
matter to l' Sighty. I feel the Federation loses sight of this, as 
well. Ol' Sighty cares not how we do something. All that tends to 
matter to them is that we do it. If you have a sighted person help 
you, then so be it It doesn't matter, in the end.
    It's okay for me, though. I am a people person, finding it much 
more fulfilling to interact with people than try proving some usually 
abstract point about what blind people are able or unable to do. In 
this way, blind person can just recruit a shoulder (I walk sighted 
guide simply by grabbing a shoulder. This way, you glide seamlessly 
over that awkward moment in which ol' Sighty and you try to figure 
out who is supposed to grab who's arm.) I appreciate how you said 
people need to travel in whichever way works best for them. It is not 
only about blinks. There are others inhabiting this earth, with their 
own special interests and philosophies. I feel like those wrapped up 
in Federationism lose sight of this reality.
loving, for today, Car08:58 AM 3/3/2014, you wrote:
>Our opinion matters a great deal, since we are a Community that 
>talks about independence as a core of our philosophy.
>
>What I think about another's approach to independence, and how they 
>deal with the public will very likely determine how we interact, how 
>close friends we are, and how highly we might regard that person in 
>our social groups.
>This is an interesting question that bears no right answer. We may 
>choose to refuse help in such a way that puts people off. That is 
>okay at times if that is how we feel at the time, as Arielle said. 
>If I feel like taking someone's arm to deal with navigating through 
>tight quarters, that is my own call to me. Instead, if I feel like 
>dealing with the same environment on my own, independently if you 
>will, someone will have a perception of that.
>
>As a matter of fact, someone will have a perception of everyone know 
>matter what they do. If one day I want to deal with airports on my 
>own, and another day I choose to accept more assistance, there is 
>nothing wrong with my approach on either day.
>
>If sometimes a stranger grabs me by the jacket to guide me down the 
>stairs, you bet I will do something about it. I don't want to lose 
>my footing, and tumble down because this person is dragging me over. 
>I may not want help, need help, and so I will refuse it, turn it 
>down, and will do so very firmly.
>
>If someone offers me to guide me by the cane, yes by the king, 
>pulling it I had of me, I may turn this scenario into a great 
>opportunity to educate someone about proper techniques of sighted guide.
>
>Most likely I will ask to follow the person by the elbow not because 
>they need to learn something, but because I need to get somewhere, and quick.
>Most times I will be put off, and endangered by losing control of 
>how I interact during travel, and keep myself safe.
>
>But there have been a handful of times when I was cool with 
>traveling a short distance guided by the cane direction.
>
>If there are no steps to worry about, and I am not worried about 
>safety, I will be guided by Cain.
>
>Mostly when this happened, there work some cultural differences 
>between me, and the guy.
>
>Consider the Muslim woman who could not have contact with males. She 
>offered to help me, and explained her situation. She guided me by 
>Cain, and I got to where I was just fine. And she wasn't in any 
>spiritual trouble from that.
>
>We are always being observed by the public. How we behave matters. 
>How we feel very safe from time to time, they today, situation to 
>situation. It changes with time also.
>
>But even if you have a day when everyone is doing what you think is 
>the right way to interact with the blind, you could be annoyed with 
>something or another.
>
>I remember one day traveling in the city, and being asked over, and 
>over, and over by different people at different places at different 
>times if I needed help getting somewhere. I wasn't sure how to think 
>about this after the 20th time. Do I look that lost?
>
>That day, I had the choice to be stern, say no, and turn away from 
>help, or I could smile, say no, and continue on.
>
>I'm glad I chose to take the chip off my shoulder that day.
>
>Antonio
>
>On Mar 1, 2014, at 2:15 PM, Jamie Principato <blackbyrdfly at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > If you didn't need his help and didn't really want it, then what 
> you did is fine. Why does our opinion matter?
> >
> > Sent from my iPhone
> >
> >> On Mar 1, 2014, at 8:45 AM, Mohamed <malhajamy at gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi all, I have a question about independence.  Earlier, someone 
> brought up the what is independence thread.  That reminds me of 
> something.  So, this friday, I was in a cab.  I go to school by 
> taking cabs.  So, this driver in  particular, he wanted to help 
> me  with practically everything.  Putting my stuff in, opening the 
> cab's  door, getting into the school, everything.  This is what I'm 
> wondering.  When is it best to not accept help, and when should I 
> ask for help? In this situation, should I have accepted help? Or 
> should I have done what I did, and politely said no?
> >> Thanks.
> >>
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