[nagdu] From Cane To Dog

Larry D Keeler lkeeler at comcast.net
Mon Aug 25 13:08:38 UTC 2014


Think she lives in Victoria down there. I've travelled so many ways that a 
cane or a dog is just another method. Pilot did ask us to put our canes up. 
I did and it didn't make any difference to me! I'm pretty used to finding my 
way round inside without canes or dogs.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Buddy Brannan via nagdu" <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
To: "Cindy Ray" <cindyray at gmail.com>; "NAGDU Mailing List,the National 
Association of Guide Dog Users" <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Monday, August 25, 2014 8:31 AM
Subject: Re: [nagdu] From Cane To Dog


I think, though can’t recall for certain, that Steph is in the land of Oz. 
Well, I thought either UK or Oz, but the UK has gone to training from hotels 
or from the student’s home as I recall, so I’m pretty sure it’s Oz.

—
Buddy Brannan, KB5ELV - Erie, PA
Phone: 814-860-3194
Mobile: 814-431-0962
Email: buddy at brannan.name



> On Aug 25, 2014, at 8:10 AM, Cindy Ray via nagdu <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> Really, Stephanie, they told you to put the cane away because you would be 
> learning the layout of the building without a cane? The first time I went 
> to my school, I had heard this was what they did, and I had made up my 
> mind I was going to refuse to do that. When I got there, the instructor 
> said, “I see you have a cane. Good. Use it.” Then during the period when 
> we were heeling the dog places, I knew the building and I could operate 
> more efficiently. I thought maybe all of the schools used this approach 
> now. For people who did not have canes, there were loaners at the school.
>
> Cindy
> cindyray at gmail.com
>
> On Aug 25, 2014, at 3:33 AM, Stephanie via nagdu <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>> I have to write on this, because I can relate. I used my can since I was 
>> young. I am mid 30's, it it was a problem. First of all, I went through a 
>> grieving process as I realized that soon I was going to be with out the 
>> cane. I even doubted if a dog was for me. I did not get a dog for many 
>> years, because I thought I could never trust an animal to guide me. But I 
>> heard about the benifits and decided to try for a dog.
>> The first day of training, I was told to put my cane away, and that we 
>> would be learning the lay out of the building with out my cane. I felt 
>> dread and wondered how the hell I was going to do this. I got lost a lot 
>> those first few days.
>> But soon, I found my dog was guiding me, and I didn't feel so lost. There 
>> were some things that really puzzled me though. Obstacle work caused a 
>> real problem to me. I kept failing the obstacle work because I just 
>> couldn't understand how I could tell the dog to find my way around 
>> something when I had no idea what, or where the obstacle was. After a 
>> frustrating time of it, I told the instructor my issue and that she would 
>> have to show me how to do this because I just couldn't get my mind around 
>> it. So we worked through each obstacle and I was able to work out how to 
>> use my feet, hands etc instead of a cane.
>> The other thing I found was trying to work out why my dog stopped some 
>> times. And thefeeling the loss of land marks that I'd gotten used too.
>> Now, I'll never go back to the cane. I don't have to count steps, work 
>> out land marks as much. I can just remember the turns and how to get some 
>> where. I can go straight across streets, no more indents or anything like 
>> that. No more having to find a pole to tell me we were close to 
>> something. No more having to stress about an open space because Gypsy 
>> guides me through all that.
>> Last christmas, I used my cane for the first time since getting my dog 15 
>> months ago. I got to the shops ok, but my mind was telling me where the 
>> counter was, but I forgot the obstacles in my road. I also nearly crashed 
>> in to some one on the way out, and couldn't find the door. Like I 
>> couldn't glide gracefully to the door. I was so thankful for my dog!
>> Anyway, it will take time to trust the dog. But if you give it time, and 
>> you want to, you will never look back.
>> Steph
>> '
>>
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>
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