[blindkid] Identify yourself please

Brandy with Discovery Toys branlw at sbcglobal.net
Fri Nov 21 20:34:30 UTC 2008


Hi,
This one is very hard. I deal with it all the time. I live on the fence. I 
go to college with thousands of other people. Sometimes I say excuse me, but 
I recognize your voice, but can't recall your name, or do you mind reminding 
me of who you are? It is tough for sure. I often just let it slide and act 
as Jordan is doing. Sorry I'm not more help. Bran


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Some take us forward, they're called dreams."
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Brandy Wojcik
Discovery Toys Group Manager and Educational Consultant

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----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Carrie Gilmer" <carrie.gilmer at gmail.com>
To: "'NFBnet Blind Kid Mailing List,(for parents of blind children)'" 
<blindkid at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 8:45 AM
Subject: [blindkid] Identify yourself please


> Hi All, Especially to our blind colleagues and friends.
>
>
>
> I have one thing with Jordan that has improved but still is an "issue". I
> think it bugs me way more than him, and likely that is why it is still an
> "issue".
>
>
>
> Jordan often does not ask people to identify themselves. It is one thing,
> and understandable to me, when he is in the very crowded school hallways 
> and
> some voice calls out, "hey Jordan!" in a passing greeting and he simply
> calls back hey-but has no idea who that hey came from and to not yell out 
> in
> a crowd "hey who are you?",
>
>
>
> But there are many times.
>
> At the state fair, in a store, even at a lunch room table!, where he 
> THINKS
> he is talking to one person and discovers mid-conversation that is not who
> he is talking with (and never says anything or finds in the end who it 
> was),
> or we walk away from the teen working the register or who has come up in
> Best Buy and said "hello" and I ask "Who was that?" and he says I have no
> idea.  I know that sometimes because he is one of 3,000 at school-and
> because he has the one and only thing, a lot more people know who he is 
> than
> vice versa and sometimes he really doesn't know who they are, but not
> uncommonly it is evident the kid who is greeting him, he should know, but 
> he
> doesn't ask. I know that sometimes he thinks it is rude, if the other kid
> thinks Jordan should know who they are.the same way if I forget someone's
> name and I should definitely know it, and I am thinking how can I ask
> without offending?...But many times he is just too "shy" about it. I have
> seen on the student list before threads where lots of kids are somewhat
> uncomfortable with this one. Any strategies that you blind folks have come
> up with to gain the confidence or decide when to do it? Is it just a
> personality thing, because I know many blind folks who are not shy about 
> it
> and simply say, "Who are you?"
>
>
>
> Should I just let this one go now as a mom-especially since he is now a
> senior in high school?
>
>
>
> Carrie Gilmer, President
>
> National Organization of Parents of Blind Children
>
> A Division of the National Federation of the Blind
>
> NFB National Center: 410-659-9314
>
> Home Phone: 763-784-8590
>
> carrie.gilmer at gmail.com
>
> www.nfb.org/nopbc
>
>
>
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