[stylist] Visual scenes

Eve Sanchez 3rdeyeonly at gmail.com
Mon Apr 15 04:51:32 UTC 2013


Yes Donna. I think we do have simular backgrounds. We were the blind kids
who grew up sighted. I just find labels interesting and have thought of
this with recent conversations of levels of blindness. I find those
discriminating in a new way; descrimination of certain blind people from
within the blind world. So when Bridget made this perfectly innocent
comment, it made me think. I like to be prompted to think at times. It
brings out the creativity. There have been some interesting conversations
lately about color as well. I know for myself, I do not see the colors the
way I used to. Does this mean I can not see them? Could I ever? I knew what
I was looking at, even if my images did not match someone elses. Who would
know actualy? All it is, is dust in our eyes. ;) Eve+++

On Sun, Apr 14, 2013 at 9:49 AM, Donna Hill <penatwork at epix.net> wrote:

> Hi Eve,
> Just wanted to jump in here, because it sounds to me like you had an
> experience very similar to mine. I was born legally blind and didn't find
> out about it till I was 16. I was told that I had "bad eyes." Of course, my
> classmates knew I was blind and had no end of fun tormenting me.
>
> I remember some of the strange things that happened when I was a child. We
> had an apple orchard in our neighborhood, and you could see the trees from
> our back yard. I had seen other kinds of trees up close and had touched
> their leaves. The apple tree intrigued me, because it looked like it had a
> small number of huge leaves rather than thousands of small leaves. One day,
> I went over there and was expecting to be able to touch one of the mamouth
> leaves. They weren't there, of course. I was dumbfounded that they could
> have looked so different from a distance and that the other people around
> me
> hadn't seen it that way.
>
> I have RP, and I could never see much at night. I could see light sources
> and even read lighted signs, when I got close enough. What puzzled me was
> that others claimed to be able to see the same things they saw in the
> daytime. I had a hard time getting my head around how that was possible.
>
> You bring up an interesting point about "fully sighted." I'd hazard a guess
> that when most people use the term they mean 20 20 vision with an
> unrestricted field of vision (not sure what's normal. I've been hearing
> since childhood, though, that sighted people see color differently than
> each
> other. They also use their "normal" vision in different ways. Some really
> seem to be looking around at the full spectrum of their environment, while
> others seem to be imposing some sort of self-restriction and seem to be
> focused narrowly on what's right in front of them.
> Donna
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: stylist [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Eve Sanchez
> Sent: Saturday, April 13, 2013 11:12 PM
> To: Writer's Division Mailing List
> Subject: Re: [stylist] Visual scenes
>
>  Bridget, What is fully sighted? I find that term to be even more vague
> and
> meaningless than partially sighted. Im not meaning to be a smart ass. Just
> thinking about it. I had always thought I was a sighted person, but came to
> learn that I had always been what is legally blind. I saw though. I saw in
> my own way that is and since that is how I saw, I thought it was full
> normal
> vision. I wonder if anyone really does see things the same way as another.
> Oh we could describe things that are recognizable to each other, but it
> perhaps is more that we know what is being described and we know what it
> looks like to us. I hope this is clear though my sight is not. I am just
> thinking there is more to sight and the lack of, than we all consider.
> Perhaps none of it really matters either. Blessings, Eve
>
> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 1:41 PM, Bridgit Pollpeter
> <bpollpeter at hotmail.com>wrote:
>
> > Tessa,
> >
> > I was fully sighted for 22 years, so I've never been able to
> > adequately answer this question. I have a visual understanding of the
> > world, and though totally blind, I'm still an extremely visual person,
> > which is evident in my writing. In fact, I find it incredibly
> > difficult to write from a blind POV.
> >
> > Having said all that, one word of advice I've given to others with
> > this dilemma is that is writing the visual element necessary? This of
> > course depends on what POV you want in a story, but we shouldn't look
> > at our lack of visual understanding as an obstacle to hurdle in our
> writing.
> > Perhaps you can provide a unique perspective writing as a blind person.
> > Consider how this would affect your characters and plot; how can you
> > approach this from your unique perspective? It's worth considering.
> > You want your writing to be organic, believable, and by writing from
> > your perspective as a blind person, you are allowing the process to
> > happen naturally.
> >
> > Having said all that, you may want those visual descriptions; you may
> > want your sighted characters to come from a sighted POV, and this is
> > perfectly fine. I think your best bet would be to ask people since the
> > internet may not always have exactly what you're looking for, no pun
> > intended, grin. A real person can give details, and you can ask
> > questions specific to what you want. Though the internet is certainly
> > a great resource for any writer, but many of us still do some old
> > fashioned research.
> >
> > As to the application of this, well, my best advice is to study and
> > analyze how other writers describe things. Keep in mind that any
> > description must be necessary to the plot and/or character development.
> > Perhaps some descriptions you are fretting over are not as crucial as
> > you think. Always consider this when describing things in a story. But
> > yes, I would pay attention to how others describe the world around
> > them, and from this, take what is important to your process and see if
> > you can emulate it in some way. I'm not suggesting you plagiarize, but
> > simply study other works and incorporate that knowledge into your own
> > writing process.
> >
> > Hope this helps
> >
> > Bridgit
> > Message: 1
> > Date: Sat, 13 Apr 2013 12:52:57 -0400
> > From: <tfurban22 at gmail.com>
> > To: "'Writer's Division Mailing List'" <stylist at nfbnet.org>
> > Subject: [stylist] Visual scenes
> > Message-ID: <002201ce3867$5aa2d1d0$0fe87570$@com>
> > Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="us-ascii"
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I hope all of you are doing well.  I have a problem, or question,
> > however you wish to look at it when it comes to writing visual scenes.
> > Scenes that have (or, I want to have.) descriptive feel to them.
> >
> > I'll give an example of something I'm struggling with now.  There's a
> > fanfiction story I'm looking to write based on a character from the
> > musical Wicked.
> >
> > I haven't read the book this musical is based on, but a friend of mine
> > has so I know the musical is loosely based on the book and I know the
> > differences between it and the musical.  However, I'm getting off topic.
> >
> > The scene that I'm looking to write is visual.  You see, my character,
> > whose name is Thackery, is attracted to a character named Nessarose or
> > Nessa for short.  I can kind of see the scene in my head, but not
> > clearly.
> >
> > She's giving a lecture, he's in the back as it is in a room of advisors.
> > He's an artist, so instead of paying attention to her speech, he's
> > paying attention to, "her."  He likes to draw; sketch what not.  I'm
> > sorry I'm being vague. I'm just not sure how to write him looking at
> > her, avoiding eye contact when hers meets his.. He trying (and
> > failing.) to be secretive that he's gazing at her and drawing her
> > outline.  It's great in my head but I'm finding the words to be very
> difficult.
> >
> > Not just that, but how can you, or do you write landscape scenes that
> > are not boring?  How to write the colors in a sunset over a lake?  Or,
> > the sun over a meadow in the afternoon?  A raging thunderstorm?
> >
> > These are just some of the many examples that I can think of at the
> > moment. There are a million of visual things that I just don't know
> > how to describe. I try to google things but it just gives me images.
> >
> > Another example is looks.
> >
> > Case in point: I'm looking to write another fanfiction based on the
> > Disney movie Pocahontas.  There's a character in it that is a woman
> > from Turkey. However, I haven't a clue what she should look like.  I
> > mean, I know dark hair and eyes, but that's really it.  What did they
> > wear and more importantly what did it look like?
> >
> > Any help would be greatly appreciated.  I realize I must sound like a
> > new writer lol but I did join this list to learn and improve.  It is
> > scary for me at least stepping out of my comfort zone.
> >
> > Thanks so much!
> >
> > Tessa
> >
> >
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