[nagdu] Critical blind people
The Pawpower Pack
pawpower4me at gmail.com
Sun Aug 1 00:25:23 UTC 2010
Hi Cathryn,
Ahhh, someone who is as experienced in the art of getting lost as I
am! Good to know I'm not alone. In addition to being Deafblind, I
have an inner ear/vestibular disorder which makes my life yet more
interesting because at times I can't tell where I am in space. I
can't tell up from down and can, as my husband can attest, get lost in
my house or yard because I literally can't tell where I am. I may
think I'm turning left, may intend to go that way but instead my body
turns right only it feels like I'm going left. This makes things
extra fun, so I've taught my dogs to let me hold their collar and
guide me to a place to sit down. I use a walker in the home but my
dog acts as the walker when in harness-- good thing I have a tall
Doberman! LOL
I'm glad to know others are using the find cue and find it useful. I
have seen this cue misused, as an example, a dog/handler team who
rarely goes out of their home area and they're now at a national
convention. The handler doesn't know where the elevator is, so cues
the dog over and over, "find the elevator."
To the dog, who has only generalized this cue to the one or two
elevators he usually frequents, he can't figure out what to do and the
handler gets frustrated and begins correcting. I think it can be a
valuable cue to teach, but the dog should have a thorough and
systematic exposure to several different types of elevators over a
period of time before the cue should be asked for in an unfamiliar
environment with such high distractions.
To be fair, I get my fair share of ignorance from the sighted as well
who can't seem to figure out that a person can be both deaf and blind
and who stare at me like I'm the star act at the circus. I went to an
outdoor concert with an interpreter and they were interpreting Cheryl
Crow. People had gotten out their video cameras and were pointing
them at me. Between songs, my interpreter said that Cheryl Crow could
walk through this crowd buck naked and nobody would notice because
they're all staring at me. After the concert was over, and I was
trying to find a bathroom, about ten people came up to me and went on
and on about how amazing, inspirational, and just all around beautiful
it was that I could go to a concert and enjoy it. I felt like a
particularly large and interesting specimen of insect that people just
couldn't help staring at and studying.
Everywhere I go, people stare because I use American Sign Language
tactually and have the dog and usually my braille note or a book of
braille crossword puzzles. People just can't figure me out and they
think it gives them the right to stare.
Good thing my friends and interpreters find it as funny as I do. lol
Rox and the Herbal HenchHounds
Bristol (retired), Mill'E SD. and Laveau Guide Dog, CGC.
"It has always been the prerogative of children and half-wits to point
out that the emperor has no clothes. But the half-wit remains a half-
wit, and the emperor remains an emperor."-- Neil Gaiman
http://www.pawpowercreations.com/retreat.html
pawpower4me at gmail.com
AIM: Brissysgirl
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