[NJTechDiv] Blind pride, had to share.
Tracy Carcione
carcione at access.net
Fri May 7 12:36:02 UTC 2021
Thanks Andy.
This was great.
Tracy
From: NJTechDiv [mailto:njtechdiv-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Andy via NJTechDiv
Sent: Thursday, May 06, 2021 6:53 PM
To: New Jersey Technology Division List
Cc: Andy
Subject: Re: [NJTechDiv] Blind pride, had to share.
Hey guys,
Jonathan just added a little bit to this post. He does a podcast, called Mosen At Large. He's spliced out the audio of himself reading this speech, so if you want to listen to him reading it, without the rest of the podcast, it's now available on the same page as the speech itself. You can find it here. <https://mosen.org/BlindPride/>
On May 3, 2021, at 6:23 PM, Tony Santiago via NJTechDiv <njtechdiv at nfbnet.org> wrote:
Some of you may have already heard or read this, but I thought it so good I had to share. Enjoy.
Why I am proud to be blind
written by Jonathan Mosen
I often mention on my Mosen At Large podcast that I am proud to be
blind. Recently, I was challenged by a listener and asked how I can
possibly be proud of having a serious, debilitating condition.
I am glad to say that disability pride, and blind pride as a subset of
that, is on the rise. Yet it is an incomprehensible concept to some.
I keep a gratitude journal, where I write at least 10 things every day
for which I am grateful. So it was easy for me to consult that journal,
where I have often written of things relating to blindness for which I
am grateful and write this piece on why I am proud to be blind. You can
hear the audio of this in Mosen At Large episode 119, but here is the
text of what I said.
I am profoundly proud to be blind. I am proud of the fact that as a kid,
when my older siblings would have been found out for reading at night, I
read in the dark as much as I liked, a Braille book tucked under the
covers on winter nights.
I am proud to be blind, because it connects me with a proud history. I
share a characteristic with a man who gave us the priceless gift of
functional, efficient literacy. Louis Braille was an example of “nothing
about us without us” in the 19th century, long before we used that
phrase. His genius invention was derided by sighted people who were
certain they knew what was best for us. He was ridiculed. His code was
driven underground and his books were burned. But he prevailed, because
he was blind. He devised his code for himself, he gave it, at
considerable personal cost, to all of us.
I am proud to be blind, because of all the other blind people who
followed in Louis Braille’s footsteps, blind people innovating and
inventing for our collective advancement, imagining a better future and
making it real. Whether it be Larry Skutchan with his methodical mind
and interminable patience, or Ted Henter with his zeal and
entrepreneurship, or David Costution and Glen Gordon who believed that
Windows could be truly useable and then made it come true, or the blind
people now working on the inside of mainstream companies who are our
champions, we dreamed it, we created it.
I am proud to be blind, because blind people are the reason the 33 RPM
record was developed, initially so talking books could be distributed
more efficiently.
And speaking of talking books, I am proud to be blind, because blind
people are the reason talking books exist. Now, sighted people are using
them too.
I am proud to be blind, because the original reading machine was created
for us. We started the journey of digitising printed text that resulted
in the scanners that are still commonplace in offices today.
I am proud to be blind, because long before the term PDA was in the
lexicon of sighted people, we were taking notes, keeping track of
appointments and reading books on devices like Keynotes and
Braille’n’Speaks.
I am proud to be blind, because we were one of the reasons computers
started to talk. Technology is better because of blind people. There are
so many examples of technology when we, proudly, have been the blind who
led the sighted.
I am proud to be blind, because I am not influenced by someone’s
physical appearance, but instead gain information from the tone of a
voice and the words that are said.
I am proud to be blind, because it has made me a more lateral thinker,
developing and refining alternative techniques to access a wide range of
information so I can thrive in a largely sight-dependent world.
I am proud to be blind, because even though my other senses aren’t
sharper than anyone else’s, in fact I have a dual sensory loss, like
many blind people I use them well. It makes me smile when I can tell
what type of audio processor is being used on a radio station, or when
another blind person can tell the kind of car that’s passing by simply
by the sound it’s making, or when a blind person gives another blind
person an instruction like, “when your cane hits a pole on my street
that emits a fifth octave A-Flat, you’re outside my house”.
I am proud to be blind, because of the legacy of great blind civil
rights leaders around the world. Often ostracised and branded radical
troublemakers, they confronted, and are still confronting today, the
tyranny of low expectations and the disabling decisions society has
chosen to make. They challenged the damaging, fundamentally flawed
notion that we had neither the ability nor the right to achieve
self-determination, that it wasn’t necessary for society to be
accessible, or inclusive, or accepting. Their belief in a fairer
tomorrow unshackled us from institutions and shattered disempowering
paternalism. Their tenacity has seen the increasing availability of
better training, much of it driven by blind people ourselves, and
increased opportunity through civil rights legislation.
I am proud to be blind, because as a subset of the world’s largest
minority, disabled people, blind people led the way in the disability
movement, securing legislative victories long before they were common
for much of the rest of the sector. I am grateful every day of my life
for those blind people who took on those difficult causes, displayed
tenacity and stated their cases again, and again, and again until
progress was slowly but surely made. I am proud of the personal
responsibility I feel as a blind person to always cherish and defend,
never take for granted, and constantly build upon the legacy of civil
rights victories that I have inherited and benefited from. I am mindful
that they must not be squandered, and I am proud to stand up, be
counted, and do my moral duty to advance that legacy so that the next
generation has even more opportunity than I have had.
I am proud to be blind, because it has shaped who I am, it is part of my
identity and it has helped define me. I accept that. I embrace that.
I am proud to be blind, because in being blind I contribute to the rich
tapestry and the diversity of humankind.
I am proud to be blind, because no matter how many negative signals are
sent, I know that being blind makes me no less a person of worth.
I am proud to be blind, because the opposite of pride is shame, and my
blindness is nothing to be ashamed of.
I am proud to be blind, and therefore share a characteristic with
talented people from all walks of life. Blind people are parents,
devoted, loving parents, some of whom have had their babies literally
snatched from their loving arms, an atrocity no capable and loving
parent should endure, and all for no other reason than people getting it
horribly wrong about blindness. I am proud that we as blind people show
those parents love, solidarity, and a steadfast determination to get
those children back where they belong.
Blind people are in factories and farms, law practices and legislatures,
sandwich shops and start-ups. I am proud of the blind teachers, software
developers, businesspeople, mechanics, transcribers, musicians and even
medical doctors. There is very little we can’t do and there are few
professions where you can’t find a blind person, often to many people’s
surprise. The only trouble is, the world doesn’t necessarily know that.
And that’s the biggest reason I am proud to be blind. Because every day,
just by getting on with my life, I defy the odds in a disabling society,
we defy expectations where there is little disability confidence. When
people tell us we can’t, we show them yes, we can. It can be exhausting
sometimes. We may get knocked down, and sometimes we may feel like we’re
out for the count. But eventually, most of us get up again. We apply for
that one more job. We work around that inaccessible website. We keep
calm and carry on when we’re treated like a helpless child in the
street, or when walking into a store, or when yet another ride share
driver declines to take our guide dog. That takes guts, it takes
tenacity. The odds are stacked against us, but we march on, we make
progress. Go us!
Yes, I am proud, proud, a thousand times proud to be blind.
Share and enjoy
<https://mosen.org/BlindPride/> https://mosen.org/BlindPride/
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Tony Santiago
Sent from my iPhone
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