[nabs-l] Finding seats VI that does not use cane or dog

Suzanne Germano sgermano at asu.edu
Fri Sep 20 04:30:14 UTC 2013


I need the notes for Calc 3. Like I said I am visual. I draw, I rewrite
notes etc That is how I learn. You tell me something and I forget it in 2
seconds.

I love how I am doing stuff now. And really just taking the 5lb cctv out
wouldn't change what I bring with me by that much.

Even reading on my iPad is inefficient compared to large print or my 27
inch monitor. It is so slow having to move the text side to side. I find it
extremely frustrating not seeing the entire page and I have had the same
vision my entire life so I have found the combo of what works best for me.

I even have 4 different pairs of contacts. With Achromatopsia I need
filtering from the light and red contacts are best for that. But with many
teachers using power points the rooms are too dark for red so I have more
of a medium brown. The medium brown also work better for reading. Some
people might find it a pain in the butt but I change my contacts 2-4 times
a day if I am going to be in very different lighting situations. I have
never had my vision as good as it is now and under nearly all conditions.

I am extremely happy with how I do my contacts, glasses and technology.


On Thu, Sep 19, 2013 at 7:45 PM, Arielle Silverman <
Arielle.Silverman at asu.edu> wrote:

> I understand what you mean about not wanting to take time off to learn
> speech technology, but I'm thinking that maybe there is a
> lighter-weight way to combine the speech and the large print, like on
> your laptop or an Ipad with a wireless keyboard. Also I am wondering
> if you can ask your instructors to send you the notes from the board
> by email so you can review them on your laptop rather than needing the
> CCTV. Personally as a blind college student, I found the boardwork to
> almost always be totally redundant with what was being said verbally,
> and so usually wasn't necessary for me to follow closely. What are the
> binoculars and monocular used for? It seems there might be a more
> compact replacement for those too.
>
> Arielle
>
> On 9/19/13, Anna Givens <annajee82 at gmail.com> wrote:
> > It seems to me like you are carrying way too much.  You say you can't go
> > without any of it.  I understand, I used to be like that.  I got tired of
> > it.  Relying on my vision just got too exhausting after a while, having
> to
> > have kinds of extra equipment and different things for each part of the
> day.
> >
> > But that is my experience.
> > I do understand not wanting to and feeling like you don't have the time
> to
> > learn other ways of doing things.  It really is up to you, although I am
> > quite certain that in the end, you would feel much better about it and
> > yourself.
> > But I will say, It doesn't seem to me like walking up and down every row
> of
> > tables is a big deal.   Do what you gotta do, and use the techniques
> > described by others.
> >
> > Anna E Givens
> >
> > On Sep 19, 2013, at 1:12 PM, Suzanne Germano <sgermano at asu.edu> wrote:
> >
> >> I don't use a cane or dog but when I walk into a room like the
> >> engineering
> >> tutoring center, I find it very hard to know where an empty seat is.
> >> these
> >> are tables that hold 6-8 people.
> >>
> >> Being someone use does not use a cane I find people difficult if you say
> >> for example "I am visually impaired would you mind showing me where an
> >> empty seat is" It seems they have to go through the song and dance of
> >> "you
> >> don't look blind" "why don't you get glasses" but rarely answer the
> >> question.
> >>
> >> Because I am not obviously visually impaired I feel very uncomfortable
> >> just
> >> walking up and down between all the tables looking for a spot when just
> >> off
> >> to the side I may have missed one. I feel like everyone is wondering
> what
> >> the hell I am doing and thinking I look stupid.
> >>
> >> I know this comes from years and years and years of being teased and no
> >> one
> >> understanding legally blind and I should just get over feeling like they
> >> think I look stupid. But in the meantime does anyone have any good
> >> techniques?
> >>
> >> I did use a cane in high school. Partially for identification and partly
> >> for mobility but I still had issues with people because I would ALWAYS
> >> get
> >> the comment "Your not blind" They could never just answer my question
> >> like
> >> what bus is this
> >>
> >> Suzanne
> >> _______________________________________________
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