[NFBF-L] Why I Identify as Blind When I Can (Kinda) See | by Lisa Ferris | Medium

Mark Tardif markspark at roadrunner.com
Sun Oct 18 22:25:15 UTC 2020


As someone who has some light perception in my left eye, I have actually been accused of faking my blindness.  People automatically assume that you are totally blind if you say you are blind.  For practical purposes I’m almost there, but I still identify as blind, because there is no way I’m anywhere near being a high partial.  And my right eye is a prosthetic eye anyway.  

Mark Tardif 
Nuclear arms will not hold you. 

From: Sherri Brun via NFBF-L 
Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2020 4:57 PM
To: 'NFB of Florida Internet Mailing List' 
Cc: Sherri Brun 
Subject: Re: [NFBF-L] Why I Identify as Blind When I Can (Kinda) See | by Lisa Ferris | Medium

Hi Judy.

 

We are all at different levels—different skill levels, different ways we have come to terms with our blindness.  We just have to keep moving forward.  I admire you so much!

 

Sherri

 

From: NFBF-L <nfbf-l-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Judith Hamilton via NFBF-L
Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2020 4:31 PM
To: NFB of Florida Internet Mailing List <nfbf-l at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Judith Hamilton <hamilton.j.r.2309 at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [NFBF-L] Why I Identify as Blind When I Can (Kinda) See | by Lisa Ferris | Medium

 

I can relate to this. I have spent most of my life "sitting on the fence" Never feeling like I fit in the  fully "sighted group" due to the vision I don't have; nor the totally blind group because I do have some vision with magnification. I have been confronted by strangers who would say "You're not blind". Our society puts a lot of emphasis, possibly too much, on appearance. Now that I am in Act 3 of my life, I have come to terms with these issues by connecting with my NFB family and learning tools to put in my box so that the struggle is not so tough. It does not go away, but it is less. I am still progressing.

Respectfully,

Judy Hamilton

 

On Sun, Oct 18, 2020 at 3:29 PM Ryan Mann via NFBF-L <nfbf-l at nfbnet.org> wrote:

  i agree. Even though I have a little bit of vision, I tell people that I am blind. 

   

  Get Outlook for iOS


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: NFBF-L <nfbf-l-bounces at nfbnet.org> on behalf of PLipovsky via NFBF-L <nfbf-l at nfbnet.org>
  Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2020 3:15:49 PM
  To: 'NFB of Florida Internet Mailing List' <nfbf-l at nfbnet.org>
  Cc: PLipovsky <plipovsky at cfl.rr.com>
  Subject: Re: [NFBF-L] Why I Identify as Blind When I Can (Kinda) See | by Lisa Ferris | Medium 

   

  Agreed.

   

   

   

  From: NFBF-L <nfbf-l-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of DENISE VALKEMA via NFBF-L
  Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2020 2:59 PM
  To: NFBF <nfbf-l at nfbnet.org>; NFBF <nfbf-leaders at nfbnet.org>
  Cc: DENISE VALKEMA <valkemadenise at aol.com>
  Subject: [NFBF-L] Why I Identify as Blind When I Can (Kinda) See | by Lisa Ferris | Medium

   

  Kimberly shared this with FPOBC on Facebook. I relate. What are your thoughts? 

   

  “If you can only read with 20X magnification, you are going to read with incredible effort and incredibly slowly, as compared to the blind people reading braille at 200–300+ wpm. If you are afraid to go out at night because you are night blind, you are going to be more impaired than someone who can use their cane and go anywhere, anytime. If you struggle to find your way around your computer with only 1/9th of the monitor visable (through magnification) you are going to be more strained and tired, and less efficient than blind people who learned to use voice synthesized computer programs. The skills of blindness (basically, non visual methods of doing things) are almost always much more efficient than those that maximize vision, which cause strain, fatigue and can be unreliable. I think most people with some vision use maximizing strategies sometimes, but they gain the most function if they have a full bag of tricks. By not considering those with limited vision as blind, they weren’t considered for blindness skills training. It robbed them of the strategies that would make them almost fully funtional in a sighted world.”

   

  https://medium.com/@lisaferris/why-i-identify-as-blind-when-i-can-kinda-see-2df3f6af5a0c


  Together, 

  Denise Valkema, President  National Federation of the Blind of Florida 

  (305)972-8529

  president at nfbflorida.org

  www.nfbflorida.org

  Follow us @nfbflorida

  You can live the life you want.

  The National Federation of the Blind is a community of members and friends who believe in the hopes and dreams of the nation’s blind. Every day we work together to help blind people live the lives they want.

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