[NFBF-L] Fwd: [NFBF-Leaders] Braille Monitor article

Andrew Rood radiorexandy at gmail.com
Mon Mar 16 02:02:40 UTC 2020


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Jorge Hernandez via NFBF-Leaders <nfbf-leaders at nfbnet.org>
Date: Sun, Mar 15, 2020, 15:24
Subject: Re: [NFBF-Leaders] [NFBF-L] Braille Monitor article
To: NFB of Florida Internet Mailing List <nfbf-l at nfbnet.org>, NFBF <
nfbf-leaders at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Jorge Hernandez <jeh1065 at comcast.net>


The blind movement has withstood years of criticism, years of stereotyping,
and years of longevity.

We the blind only want to be seen as equal not as second class citizens.
Although we can be those elite blind individuals or mediocre blind
individuals or individuals who have no blindness skills what so ever.  But
who are we to say they are less different from all of us.  We build on the
fortitude of those members who have had the opportunity to mentor those
less skilled so they can also become those elite blind people we are.

We as leaders of the National Federation of the Blind have the duty to
educate society and breakdown the barriers that create obstacles  that
permit us to ”live the life’s we want”.

Let’s go build the National Federation of the Blind.

Jorge Hernandez, President
Miami-Dade Chapter
National Federation of the Blind of Florida
Board of Directors

-----Original Message-----
From: NFBF-L [mailto:nfbf-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Denise Valkema
via NFBF-L
Sent: Sunday, March 15, 2020 10:31 AM
To: NFBF; NFBF
Cc: Denise Valkema
Subject: [NFBF-L] Braille Monitor article

Any discussion on article below? The article is pasted below the link.

https://www.nfb.org/images/nfb/publications/bm/bm20/bm2003/bm200306.htm


Live the Life You Want: A Choice or a Prescription for Being an Elite Blind
Person

by Gary Wunder

When I was asked to be a part of coming up with branding messages and we
selected “Live the Life You Want,” I was keenly aware that anything we
chose would perpetuate the questions folks on the outside have always had
about us: Is the Federation’s goal to help blind people travel their own
path, or is it the Federation telling blind folks how to live? I knew that
the way people perceived a message was everything and feared that if it
took much explaining, it wouldn't be the right tagline. My concern didn’t
spring from some innate ability to predict the future but from living
through some of our past.

I clearly remember other messages that tried to briefly speak to our
mission and work—nowadays called an elevator speech. If you only get the
time it takes to go from floor three to four, can you briefly explain what
this organization that means so much to you does and why others might want
to help further its goals?

"We are Changing What It Means to be Blind" was a phrase I liked very much.
It was on the lips of many of my generation in the movement. But the
problem with it was that too many people thought we were pledging to change
visual acuity, and it took too much time to explain that it was social
change that filled our agenda. Then there was "It is Respectable to be
Blind," the reaction to the fact that some didn't believe that people
perceived as broken could ever garner true acceptance and respect. But some
folks objected to this one because they thought we were saying that the
mere presence of blindness in one’s life conveyed respectability. They
agreed that being blind didn't preclude being respectable but neither did
it convey respectability
The criticism of our tagline isn't the five words "Live the Life You Want."
It is the suspicion that what we really mean is that blind people are to
live their lives in such a way that they become the elite blind, the people
who go further than anyone expects, the people who are admired by all
because of their undeniable intellect, motivation, and accomplishment. To
some extent I understand the concern and the way that some have elevated it
to a criticism. Every civil rights organization pushes its people to go
beyond where they are. All of us believe that many of the things that keep
us from being all we can be are socially constructed barriers. But beyond
this, most people involved in civil rights also believe that part of the
problem we face comes from buying the societal expectations that do so much
to limit us. So yes, there is upward pressure to do more and be more, but
no organization encouraging the advancement of a class is free from this
expectation.

For me our tagline asks each of us to exercise some faith: faith that we
will help when one of us encounters problems in living the life they want,
and faith that each of us can dare to dream and dare to act on those
dreams. Not every dream will come true, and not every dream is meant to. As
a youngster I dreamed of being an astronaut, and that hasn't happened. But
many of my generation shared that dream, and only a small number achieved
it. Blindness certainly precluded me from flying in space, but so too did a
number of things: the few positions there were to be had, the training that
was required, and even the height and weight requirements that were and
probably still are a part of the program.

Nobody in the Federation has ever questioned what I have wanted or done in
my life except a dear friend who once told me that before writing a book
about myself, I’d first need to do something worth writing about. My
Federation colleagues, friends, and family have asked me to be honest in
distinguishing between real accomplishments and the faint praise I can
easily get by being blind. They have asked that I look at the things I have
in my life and try to see that others have it at least as good, and they
have allowed me to participate in something I believe makes that possible.

At least from my perspective as the editor of this publication, I welcome
articles from people whose aspirations and achievements vary widely. If you
volunteer for an organization that values your work and gives you
satisfaction, write us. If you work a job that pays at or slightly above
minimum wage and you have a story to tell about how you do it as a blind
person, write us. If there is something you do in lieu of paid employment
and there are good reasons why you don't pursue something that pays, tell
us about it. If you have tried and failed and there may be a way we can
help or benefit from your experience, together let’s put that out for
public discussion and concerted action.

Please don't assume that because you don't see articles about people like
you, it is because we actively discourage them or outright turn them down.
I believe we mean what we say in our tagline and that we find value in
anyone brave enough to dream, brave enough to try, and brave enough to
share their story with blind people who share in common this pledge of
helping each blind person live the life they want


Together,
Denise Valkema, President
National Federation of the Blind of Florida
President at nfbflorida.org
(305)972-8529
WWW.NFBFLORIDA.ORG
Follow us @nfbflorida
Live the life you want.
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