[stylist] Sharing Memoir and question
Herrin, Amber R.
herrinar at muohio.edu
Thu Jul 19 15:10:39 UTC 2012
Jackie,
I think it depends on a lot of factors:
1-are you generally good with technology? (read as, pick up quickly and with
minimum instruction?)
2-Do you learn quickly or less so?
3-How determined are you to know (insert task here.)?
My point is that there is no right or wrong answer to any of these
questions, and they certainly don't mark you as a "good" person or "bad"
person for a particular area, but what they do do, is help you pinpoint what
area it is that makes it difficult or take longer or have to study harder
etc.
If, for example, you want to know something with a large amount of
determination, you will sit there, regardless of how tedious it seems or how
confused you feel, because you want this thing badly, and are determined to
figure it out.
If, on the other hand, it's something you'd like to know but you feel that
the knowledge (or lack thereof) doesn't affect you much, you might attempt
it for a bit and then give up because it feels too hard for one reason or
another.
I know that this probably doesn't answer your question, and it might even
seem as though I'm trying to be vague, but please know that I'm not. It's
just that the answers to your questions are particular to you, and it would
take a lot more information to really help you answer them.
HTH (though I'm not as confident in this reply as my last),
Amber R. Herrin
ATI Student in Training 2012
World Services for the Blind
Mobile: (513) 593-5855
E-mail: herrinar at muohio.edu
2811 Fair Park Boulevard
Little Rock, AR 72204
"It doesn't matter what you've heard
Impossible is not a word
It's just a reason
For someone not to try
Everybody's scared to death
When they decide to take that step
Out on the water
It'll be alright
Life is so much more
Than what your eyes are seeing
You will find your way
If you keep believing"
-----Original Message-----
From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Jacqueline Williams
Sent: Wednesday, July 18, 2012 11:55 AM
To: 'Writer's Division Mailing List'
Subject: Re: [stylist] Sharing Memoir and question
Amber,
You have been kind to give a short cut to getting the word count. For me, it
is overwhelming and underlies why I am hesitant to get on my new computer.
When I receive lengthy discussions and steps to accomplish what have
heretofore been simple tasks, and hear statements like, "you will see
icons," I find it hard to believe that you are blind, or have severe visual
loss.
I am grateful, and will save this in my folder of lessons, but I am
wondering if to learn JAWS 12, and Word 7, I will have to go through
numerous tutorials that are just as complicated to follow auditorily.
I guess I am just interested in knowing how you all have done it, that is
making the transition, without having lessons with someone.
I know it would be possible, if I would just stop writing to deadlines.
Since you are a student, Amber, perhaps you meet these kind of concerns
regularly, and might share your insights.
Jackie
-----Original Message-----
From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Herrin, Amber R.
Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2012 7:09 PM
To: 'Writer's Division Mailing List'
Subject: Re: [stylist] Sharing Memoir and question
Linda,
Though the question has already been answered about how to find the word
count, I would like to take a moment to show you how to add the function to
a quick access toolbar, which will allow you to forget all day long as long
as you know how to get to the toolbar.
1-Open MS Word
2-press Alt plus R for review, and navigate using the tab key to word count
3-press applications key (if desktop, located just to the left of the
right-hand control key), or, if using a laptop or netbook of some kind,
press shift plus f10 4-You should hear your screen reader say "Add to quick
access toolbar"
5-press enter on this
Now to utilize it whenever you are anywhere in word, you will:
1-press the alt key by itself
2-You will hear the screen reader announce whatever ribbon you were last on
3-Arrow left or right, according to your preference, or whichever will
return you to the home ribbon the quickest.
4-arrow up from the home tab
5-you should see any items placed in the quick access toolbar. You may
arrow left and right to navigate through these.
6-Whenever you reach the desired icon, press enter to execute its function.
A few notes:
1-You can add almost anything from the ribbons to this particular toolbar;
the list will just grow. There is a limit, though it is late here, and I am
exhausted, so forgive that I do not at this moment, recall what that limit
is. Be assured that it is a very large number.
2-When you arrow up to access the toolbar, I indicated that you can arrow
left and right to access the icons located here. This is accurate, but you
must use caution when first accessing it, as arrowing left may take you onto
what your screen reader will call "office button" and then indicate that it
is a "dropdown" in a grid. You may arrow right again, which will place you
back on the home ribbon, at which point you may arrow up to reach the access
toolbar again.
3-There are other ways to access the toolbar, but for the sake of less
confusion, I have only indicated one here. Please know that I am by no
means, claiming that this is the best or quickest or most used way etc. I
am only describing a method that might be used. Feel free to use other
methods if others are taught or described for you.
4-Finally! Anyone with questions can feel free to ask me off list about
them. I am happy to help in any way I am able.
Hoping this helps,
Amber R. Herrin
ATI Student in Training 2012
World Services for the Blind
Mobile: (513) 593-5855
E-mail: herrinar at muohio.edu
2811 Fair Park Boulevard
Little Rock, AR 72204
"It doesn't matter what you've heard
Impossible is not a word
It's just a reason
For someone not to try
Everybody's scared to death
When they decide to take that step
Out on the water
It'll be alright
Life is so much more
Than what your eyes are seeing
You will find your way
If you keep believing"
-----Original Message-----
From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Lynda Lambert
Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2012 11:18 AM
To: Writer's Division Mailing List
Subject: Re: [stylist] Sharing Memoir and question
OK, I will ask this question - I know I should KNOW this, but, how do I find
the "word count" for my writing?
I will copy and paste a short memoir I have worked on today. I am writing a
series of memoirs about a Great Grandmother's Memories - her reflections on
Art and Memory. This is the first of the "Silent Discourses." In this one,
the storyteller speaks of a memory shared by the Great Grandmother. The
recollections of the Great Grandmother on her childhood and her love of
nature and secrets of the Earth.
It should move from the storyteller, to the memories of the grandmother,
back and forth, as in the way memories come to us - in layers, shifting, and
moving.
In my work there is almost never a chronological time line - so don't expect
it. Life shifts and moves and comes and goes like the ebbing of the
Caribbean waters as one stands on the beach. That is how I approach writing.
I very greatly would appreciate any feedback you can give me on this, any
suggestions for improvement, or anything else you can offer to me on it. I
consider every comment carefully.
I really appreciate feedback. In fact, because of the great feedback I
received from a group of writers on another site, my poem "Flotsom, Jetsom,
and the River" was selected in the NFB writing contest. The group had told
me it was too vague - so I set to work to figure out what I needed to do to
make it stronger and then I submitted it to the contest. Without their good
critique this poem would have been too vague, I am sure, to be considered.
Thanks, Lynda
Here is the Memoir:
____________________
Silent Discourse: Reflections on Art and Memory
By Lynda Lambert
Silent Discourse #1
Memories of her summer days in Western Pennsylvania seemed to silently move
in the thoughts of the Great Grandmother today as she thought of the little
girl who stood alone, surrounded by a yellow-green world.
Great Grandmother's memory was taking her back to a distant summer day in
western Pennsylvania. She thought it must have been in the late 1940s
because she was so very young at that time. The little girl was sensitive
to the natural world of trees, flowers, birds, grasses, and the brilliant
blue sky. She loved to be outdoors in all kinds of weather but summer time
was particularly pleasant because she did not have to wear shoes. She could
splash through the falling rain as it saturated her clothing and made her
long auburn hair stick to her wet shoulders. She liked to stomp down with
her bare feet, into the puddles of cool squishy water in the yard. Her
toes moved about on the wet ground, and it felt so good to her!
On sunny days, she climbed into the back yard walnut tree quickly and
liked to hide amid the foliage to survey the entire world of her deep green
grassy yard. From there, she could watch her father working in his gardens.
There were two of them, separated by a path down the middle. When she thinks
about her father, in her mind's memory book, he is always laboring in his
garden and bringing fresh vegetables to the house for their dinners. Father
brought other delights, too. There were rabbits and squirrels, wild game
birds , and deer. All were brought by the Father for his family. There were
fresh fruits, too, from his trees. And, chickens from the chicken coop
behind the gardens.Great Granmother's favorite gift that was gathered by her
Father was the assortment of fresh mushrooms he gathered in the woods. He
knew exactly what each mushroom was, and exactly when each would be ready
for picking. He was a woodsman who knew the ways of the woods and brought
the bounty of the w oods home to feed his family of four children. There
was always plenty to eat because of her Father's skills in hunting and
gathering.
If she was not high up in a tree, then she might be found in the gardens,
making trails and roads through the dark rich soil. She liked to play there
in the dirt with her dump trucks and brightly painted metal cars. She was a
little girl who did not play with baby dolls or have tea parties with her
friends. She read about little girls who liked those things in the books she
read from the library. She enjoyed reading about the tea parties and the
adventures of little girls in the books. But, that was not really her world.
It was the Earth that she connected with. The Earth in all it's many
manifestations was her muse from the earliest days of her life.
Great Grandmother was in her late 60s and she still loved the Earth. She
liked to feel it in her hands. She liked to sit on it, and lay on it under
the trees in the shade. Her children would often lay there on the Earth with
her and they would laugh and tell stories, and dream together. It felt so
good to lay there, fixed onto the surface of the earth like a magnet. She
taught the children that the Earth was a Positive charge, and that people
were a negative charge. It was necessary to join their bodies with the
Earth's surface for them to be complete. Just like a set of magnets, the
positive and the negative charge have to be together for the magnet to work
properly.
Great Grandmother believed it was probably mid-July when she reflected on
it because the days were smoldering and languid because the sun was high in
the sky very early in the mornings that particular summer. The days were so
intense and hot that her skin felt sticky all the time. Her hair felt wet
from sweating as she played in the trees that summer afternoon. She was
aware of the stifling heat of the early afternoon. The child's stature was
quite small as she stood beneath the large leather-textured tree. She was
small, but very strong. Neighbors often said she was athletic and wild.
She had glanced up into its gnarled branches, with their downward movement
towards the earth. They reached out in every direction over her head. This
hulking giant was her favorite Apple tree - a protective, sheltering
hide-away. This ancient Apple tree stood just behind Mr. Corbin's gray
concrete block garage. As Great Grandmother recalled, it was the only tree
that stood in her neighbor's yard. She could not say that there were no
other trees, but it is this giant one that was remembered. It must have
been very old and looking back on the scene through the lens of memory. It
seemed to her to stand as a sentinel to separate the garage from the rows
of garden plants. But,Great Grandmother
knew for sure that even as this tree separated and divided Mr. Corbin's back
yard it was also the connection between Heaven and Earth. It was the space
between Here and There; between the Present moment and the Future. The
tree stands in her childhood memory as a vertical division in a horizontal
verdant landscape - an axis mundi.
The Great Grandmother knew then just as sure as she knows now about
secret things.
She has always known about hidden things and what they mean. She knew
about the life inside of rocks, and the tears that were there. She knows
about the silent and quiet things that most people never see. Some people
call Great Grandmother a "seer." But she really cannot see because she is
now blind. Great Grandmother talked about seeing wit her inner eyes. She
calls this her "intuition." She says she sees the very special places that
people with good eyesight have never seen.
The secret places are all tucked away in her memories. One by one, over the
years, she will share them with her children and her grand children and even
now, today, she shares this memory with her Great Grand-daughter. It is the
Great Grandmother who is the Storyteller. Just like the Griot in an African
village, Great Grandmother is the One who preserves the memories for the
family and tells the stories that will give them the information they will
need on their journey in life. She holds the secrets in her memory until the
time is right.
Lynda Lambert
104 River Road
Ellwood City, PA 16117
724 758 4979
My Blog: http://www.walkingbyinnervision.blogspot.com
My Website: http://lyndalambert.com
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