[nagdu] mobility-the deciding factor?
Albert J Rizzi
albert at myblindspot.org
Sat Mar 27 21:47:32 UTC 2010
I agree there marc, often projection is at the root of judgment and others
opinions of short comings in people they observe. I have to agree with you
on that one. Peace.
Albert J. Rizzi, M.Ed.
CEO/Founder
My Blind Spot, Inc.
90 Broad Street - 18th Fl.
New York, New York 10004
www.myblindspot.org
PH: 917-553-0347
Fax: 212-858-5759
"The person who says it cannot be done, shouldn't interrupt the one who is
doing it."
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-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of Mark J. Cadigan
Sent: Saturday, March 27, 2010 5:28 PM
To: NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: Re: [nagdu] mobility-the deciding factor?
Hay Julie, in that case, you are a chicken! LOL I also find it difficult to
know if chicken is completely cooked. I have decent cooking skills, but by
no miens am I an expert chef. But the fact that I am not a 5 star chef, does
not make me les capable than the next guy.
I think the reason that this list focuses so much on mobility is it is a
mobility oriented list. On other lists the deciding factor seems to be
reading ability. In reality there is no good litmus test for competency in
blind people. I can travel around for what I have to do, but I am not
confident enough to go across the country on my own. Note I said confident.
If I had to, I could probably make it there in one piece.
I am also a slow Braille reader. I would like to be faster, but for what I
do, it is sufficient.
In my decidedly uninformed opinion people declare other people as less
capable, because they are insecure about there own abilities.
Mark
----- Original Message -----
From: "Julie J" <julielj at windstream.net>
To: "NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users"
<nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Saturday, March 27, 2010 4:27 PM
Subject: [nagdu] mobility-the deciding factor?
Some of the recent discussion got me to thinking about how we, as blind
people, perceive independence or who is more capable than who. It seems
that we always use travel to judge who has better skills than who. I know
we have discussed this before, but I still have no clue why we don't use
Braille or cooking or something else to base our judgments on. I'm guilty
of it too. I've caught myself thinking if not actually saying that so and
so isn't as well adjusted as they could be because they are always needing
help to get places.
I happen to be a very good traveler with cane or dog. But you know what?
I read Braille at about 40 wpm. By any measure that's slow, like
incredibly, snails pace slow. But no one has ever said to me, "You know,
you should really attend a center where you could get better Braille skills
so you could be more independent."
Then there is the kitchen...I really like to cook. Generally I'm okay in
the kitchen. I cook most meals from scratch. But, getting the meat,
especially the chicken, thoroughly cooked is a constant stress for me. I'm
frequently freaked out about whether or not there is any pink in the meat.
I know the skills. I know how to check nonvisually, but I totally and
completely lack chicken confidence.
Am I crazy? or don't you think that blind people always judge other blind
people on the basis of travel skills and virtually nothing else?
Thoughts?
Julie
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