[Nfbmo] Fw: Baseball at it's finest.

James Moynihan jamesmmoynihan at gmail.com
Thu May 24 19:40:20 UTC 2012


Fellow Federationists

We are trying to convey the message that blind people are like everybody 
else even though we are blind.  We are not amazing because we enjoy baseball 
and attend baseball games.

Actions speak louder than words.  We show that it is respectable to be blind 
by participating in everyday activities such as attending baseball games.

Cordially,

Jim Moynihan
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bryan Schulz" <b.schulz at sbcglobal.net>
To: "NFB of Missouri Mailing List" <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, May 20, 2012 4:47 PM
Subject: Re: [Nfbmo] Baseball at it's finest.


hi,

i don't see it as a positive story when the news channels did the story when 
he was in town.
stories like his add to the difficulty of blind people being employed when 
the news made it seem like it was a f'n miracle that a blind person could 
find the stadium and attend a game.

Bryan Schulz

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: fred olver
  To: NFB of Michigan Internet Mailing List ; NFB of Missouri Mailing List ; 
msb-alumni at googlegroups.com
  Sent: Sunday, May 20, 2012 11:58 AM
  Subject: [Nfbmo] Baseball at it's finest.


  You may not think this is about you, but I think it's something we can all 
learn from.

  In two weeks, Reggie Deal will plop down in a seat at Target Field at 
Minneapolis and be generally unimpressed by the skyline, the giant Target ad 
on Target Center, or the big light pole beyond the rightfield bleachers. 
Deal won't see any of those things, but despite being blind, he'll drink the 
scene in with other senses.
  "There are a lot of things you're able to experience," he tells MLB.com, 
"when your faculties take over and supplement what's not there."
  Deal has started a mission to visit 30 baseball parks in 30 days. He's 
sandwiching Minneapolis in between Boston and Phoenix.
  "I want people to have a different visual of what blindness entails," the 
Wyoming man said. "People get caught up in the negative, but there are ways 
to work around it."
  He's documenting his trip on his Facebook page (he's also on Twitter), 
where it's obvious one of his biggest challenges will be how to fit in all 
the fans who want to meet him into what must surely be a hectic schedule to 
make the ballgames and the airline connections.
  "People ask me, 'How can you enjoy the game without seeing it?'" he said. 
"I say, 'You don't realize how much of the game you can pick up on until you 
close your eyes.'"


  this is the first one I read


  Reggie Deal can tell a lot about baseball by simply listening.
  As he stood near the batting cage at Target Field earlier this month 
before a game between the Twins and Blue Jays, Deal could hear how the 
baseball came off the bat of Minnesota's Trevor Plouffe.
  "The way the ball sounds off the bat, if you're close enough to the plate, 
sometimes it'll give you an indication if it's a slice — like that," Deal 
said as Plouffe curved one foul down the right-field line. "Or if it's real 
hard hit."
  Most baseball fans might not pick up on such subtleties, but Reggie Deal 
is not like most baseball fans. The 39-year-old has been blind since he was 
a baby. Born prematurely, he was placed in an incubator. But an overexposure 
to oxygen in the incubator caused his retinas to detach from his eyes.
  Deal hasn't been able to see since then, but that hasn't stopped him from 
enjoying the fine details of a baseball game. As a matter of fact, Deal is 
on the home stretch of a quest to see all 30 major league ballparks in a 
30-day span. Saturday, he was at Comerica Park in Detroit, his 21st park of 
the trip. Sunday, he'll visit Coors Field in Denver for ballpark No. 22.
  It's something Deal has wanted to do for years — the idea for this journey 
came about nearly 15 years ago, he said. But he started getting serious 
about it in recent years by planning itineraries for his trip.
  His plans became reality April 29 as the Texas native and current Wyoming 
resident began his journey at the Rangers Ballpark in Arlington. He'll end 
his whirlwind tour on May 28 at iconic Wrigley Field in Chicago.
  Deal won't see all these parks like other fans would see them, but he 
remains intensely curious about many physical aspects of each stadium. He 
talks fondly of the warehouse building beyond right field at Camden Yards in 
Baltimore. And about how the odd shape of the outfield at Boston's Fenway 
Park intrigues him. He's also hoping to perhaps get a chance to tour the 
ivy-draped outfield walls of Wrigley Field.
  "For a blind man, he's one of the most visual people I've ever met," said 
Reggie's wife, Lorna.
  Being blind allows Deal to see ballparks in an entirely different fashion. 
He soaks in the smells of the roasting hog dogs and notes the differences in 
sounds from one park to another. During batting practice in Minneapolis, 
Deal commented on the echoes that resonated from Target Field as each ball 
hit the bat.
  "It's not that I really see anything that other people don't see. It's 
more the perspective," Deal said. "What I say is close your eyes for a 
minute and you'll notice there's a lot of things that go on in the ballpark 
that the stadium itself will tell you. . . . Those sounds and experiences 
will tell you things that are happening that you don't necessarily have to 
look at to fully appreciate. …
  "It's the totality of each ballpark that makes it unique in its own way."
  Reggie Deal is unique, too. Not only has he been blind since he was young, 
but Deal is also a thyroid cancer survivor. During his trek to see all 30 
parks in 30 days, he's also helping promote thyroid cancer awareness by 
teaming with ThyCa, the Thyroid Cancer Survivors' Association.
  "It was a very changing experience," Lorna said of her husband's 
diagnosis, which came while he was in graduate school several years ago. "He 
decided then that you don't put things off that you want to do because you 
never really know how you have. Life should be lived to the fullest."
  And that's exactly what Reggie Deal is doing. He's currently between jobs 
after moving from Texas — where he was a program development specialist for 
a community college — to Afton, Wyo., to be with Lorna. The two met online 
and married in June 2011. Deal's trip will wrap up in time for him to return 
home and celebrate one year of marriage with Lorna, who stayed behind in 
Wyoming while her husband left for his cross-country voyage.
  "I'm ready to be home, and she really wants me back home,” Deal said. "At 
this point, I feel like I'm on the baseball version of a Mount Everest climb 
and I'm not going to stop now.”
  Being blind and traveling across America on his own has presented several 
challenges for Deal, who is paying for his trip out of his own pocket. Since 
he decided to travel without carrying much cash, he has had trouble finding 
taxis that take credit cards. In some cases, total strangers have driven him 
to find nearby ATMs.
  While in New York, he chipped a tooth when a cab door hit him in the 
mouth. The following day, he had to scramble after discovering his airport 
shuttle to take him to the hotel wasn't there.
  "It was one thing after another," Deal said. "Just seeing how shocked 
people are by the fact that I'm doing this and they seem to think, ‘My God. 
You've got a disability. You must have a travel companion, right?' I'm like, 
‘No, I don't.' I never have, unless I'm traveling with my wife to go 
somewhere.”
  Recently, Deal had an issue with customs while flying from Los Angeles to 
Toronto. The flight attendant told him he must have a customs agent read the 
directions aloud, so Deal had to wait until he landed to fill out the forms.
  But he's pressed on and has had a pleasant experience at each ballpark. 
It's the task of getting there that's been a bit of an obstacle.
  "I was worried about the fiascoes of public transportation and how it 
would frustrate and upset him," Lorna said. "But him being out on his own 
and doing this on his own, I wasn't worried about him, per se. It was more 
about how others around him would respond."
  Deal's experiences have been memorable. He witnessed the boos that rained 
down on Red Sox pitcher Josh Beckett on Thursday at Fenway Park — "They were 
on him mercilessly," Deal said — but missed Rangers slugger Josh Hamilton 
hit four home runs in one game by just one day.
  While in Toronto on Friday, Deal was keeping tabs on what Tigers pitcher 
Justin Verlander was doing in Detroit against the Pittsburgh Pirates. 
Verlander took a no-hitter into the ninth inning just one day before Deal 
was scheduled to visit Comerica Park. But Verlander fell just short, 
allowing his only hit in the ninth.
  "I'm sitting in Toronto (Friday) night and I'm thinking, ‘Verlander, you 
better not throw a no-hitter because I'm in Detroit the day after you make 
history,' ” Deal said. "I don't normally root for a guy to not get one, but 
I'm kind of glad he didn't. Otherwise I could honestly say that I missed two 
major baseball accomplishments by one day.”
  Deal has yet to witness a grand slam, an inside the park home run, a 
shutout or a walk-off. He's hoping to witness a bit of baseball history in 
his final week and a half of his journey.
  Even if he can't see it.
  "That's the beauty of baseball. You never know when someone's going to hit 
four home runs," Deal said. "You never know when someone's going to throw a 
no-hitter, pull off a triple play or an unassisted triple play or hit for 
the cycle. There's always the chance things happen."

  Deal's itinerary:
  April 29: Arlington, Texas
  April 30: Houston
  May 1: Atlanta
  May 2: St. Louis
  May 3: Kansas City
  May 4: St. Petersburg, Fla.
  May 5: New York (Citi Field)
  May 6: Washington
  May 7: Baltimore
  May 8: Philadelphia
  May 9: New York (Yankee Stadium)
  May 10: Boston
  May 11: Minneapolis
  May 12: Phoenix
  May 13: Oakland, Calif.
  May 14: San Francisco
  May 15: Los Angeles
  May 16: San Diego
  May 17: Anaheim, Calif.
  May 18: Toronto
  May 19: Detroit
  May 20: Denver
  May 21: Seattle
  May 22: Milwaukee
  May 23: Cleveland
  May 24: Cincinnati
  May 25: Pittsburgh
  May 26: Miami
  May 27: Chicago (US Cellular Field)
  May 28: Chicago (Wrigley Field)




  http://www.dealingwithvisionloss.com  For some of us it's a way of life 
and for some of us it just makes life easier. Fred Olver
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