[Njagdu] [Fwd: [nagdu] Fan's every visit to Yankee Stadium a result of teamwork]

Suzanne Woolbert mom2brylaur at verizon.net
Wed Aug 25 03:23:25 UTC 2010


Hi, Sue,
Actually, my friend lives a lot closer to you than she does to me--in our
old hometown of Woodbridge, specifically Avenel. But, I see her a few times
during the year.

Suzanne
  -----Original Message-----
  From: njagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:njagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org]On
Behalf Of MS S TILLETT
  Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2010 10:17 PM
  To: New Jersey Association of Guide Dog Users
  Subject: Re: [Njagdu] [Fwd: [nagdu] Fan's every visit to Yankee Stadium a
result of teamwork]


  You are so lucky that your friend lives near enough to truck around with.
My friend is in Middlebury Vermont and only comes down once a year.  I used
to go up there a lot.  They live on a sheep farm and I used to go up for
lambing and take care of the bottle babies.  I used to think I would live in
Vermont but now I don't want those long winters or mud season in the spring.
There is nothing like old friends!

  Sue, Wonder, and Gillah
    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Suzanne Woolbert
    To: New Jersey Association of Guide Dog Users
    Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2010 7:00 PM
    Subject: Re: [Njagdu] [Fwd: [nagdu] Fan's every visit to Yankee Stadium
a result of teamwork]


    Wow, Sue,
    It was almost like you were talking about me, with your best friend and
God daughter. My friend Debbie and I have known each other since toddlerhood
too, and her daughter, six months older than mine, is my God daughter. We
trek all over the place together with Taj, sometimes just for girls'
outings, unless we include my son, Bryan. Either way, it's always a lot of
fun. You made me miss New York when you talked about Broadway and the
surrounding neighborhoods. It's been several years since I've been back.

    Suzanne
      -----Original Message-----
      From: njagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:njagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org]On
Behalf Of MS S TILLETT
      Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 8:57 AM
      To: New Jersey Association of Guide Dog Users
      Subject: Re: [Njagdu] [Fwd: [nagdu] Fan's every visit to Yankee
Stadium a result of teamwork]


      My oldest best friend, we have been friends since we were two years
old, and I meet once a year in the city for a long weekend.  Her daughter,
my god daughter, is a singer/song writer and will be performing.  We usually
try to catch a Broadway show and explore new neighborhoods.  Don't know what
else we will do but we will have a good time!   My niece lives in the city
and is giving us her apartment for the weekend.  It is a fifth floor
walk-up, which Wonder thinks is excessive.  After three days Wonder and I
are ready to come home but she loves working the city.

      Sue, Wonder, and Gillah
        ----- Original Message -----
        From: Suzanne Woolbert
        To: New Jersey Association of Guide Dog Users
        Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 5:12 PM
        Subject: Re: [Njagdu] [Fwd: [nagdu] Fan's every visit to Yankee
Stadium a result of teamwork]


        Sue,
        That sounds great! It's always good to get away for a weekend, and
I've always loved the city in September, the beginning of street fairs and
festivals and the like.

        Suzanne
          -----Original Message-----
          From: njagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org
[mailto:njagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org]On Behalf Of MS S TILLETT
          Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2010 8:47 PM
          To: New Jersey Association of Guide Dog Users
          Subject: Re: [Njagdu] [Fwd: [nagdu] Fan's every visit to Yankee
Stadium a result of teamwork]


          That's two good stories!  Keep it up.  Wonder and I are proud of
you, and it's good for your kids too.

          I don't seem to travel far and wide like I used to.  I tell Wonder
"if she knew how hard I worked my first three dogs her tongue would be
hanging out.  We are looking forward to making two trips to NYC in September
though, and one will  be for a long weekend.

          Sue, Wonder, and Megillah
            ----- Original Message -----
            From: Suzanne Woolbert
            To: New Jersey Association of Guide Dog Users
            Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2010 9:48 AM
            Subject: Re: [Njagdu] [Fwd: [nagdu] Fan's every visit to Yankee
Stadium a result of teamwork]


            Hi, Tracy and all,
            That's an awesome and very touching story. It's all about
freedom and
            independence to be able to do what you want, and having the
confidence to do
            it. I now do things with my dog, Taj that a few years ago I
wouldn't have
            thought I would.

            In the past two years, I have become a single mom. At times, I
travel with
            my dog, kids and adult friends, but we've been making more solo
trips
            lately. This past week I was on vacation and my kids and I were
determined
            to strike out on our own. Bryan, also visually impaired and
eleven, and
            Lauren, sighted and nine, traveled to the beach at the Hilton in
Atlantic
            City where Taj enjoyed the sand and the surf. Another day, we
went to Bounce
            U, one of those very noisy and crowded places for children to
jump and play
            for two hours. The next night, we found ourselves on the Ocean
City
            Boardwalk, in and out of shops, restaurants, and on the Cast
Away Cove Pier
            for amusement rides. UP and down steps, in and out of noisy
lit-up rides,
            and through crowds of people Taj and I followed behind my two
kids.
            Yesterday, we went to Clementon Water Park. I spent a lot of
time cooling
            Taj off with bottles of water over his neck and back, and bowls
full to
            drink. We traversed the park to find the different water rides,
lunch tables
            and games. I do believe he sighed a heavy sigh of relief when at
last the
            Access Link bus pulled up to our home some nine hours later, and
we walked
            quietly down the steps and made a detour to his favorite spot in
a field
            next door for a break.

            The moral of the story--it can be done! It's all about
confidence and faith
            in yourself and your dog.

            Thanks for reading
            Suzanne

            -----Original Message-----
            From: njagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org
[mailto:njagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org]On
            Behalf Of Tracy Carcione
            Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 7:46 AM
            To: njagdu at nfbnet.org
            Subject: [Njagdu] [Fwd: [nagdu] Fan's every visit to Yankee
Stadium a
            result of teamwork]


            This story is from last year, but I enjoyed re-reading it.
            The other day, I put on the Yankees game for a minute, during
the
            commercial in the Mets game, and Jane and Pete Lang were in the
broadcast
            booth.  It was fun listening.  Jane's new dog is Clipper, so he
has a Joe
            DiMaggio jersey. The broadcasters were remarking how quietly
Clipper was
            lying there.  People remark the same about my Ben.  I expect my
dog to lie
            quietly, but JQ Public seems to expect him to be leaping about
like a
            fool.  Guess they're used to untrained dogs.
            Anyway, here's last year's story.


            NEW YORK - The doors to the D Train open at 161st and River Ave
and they
            step onto the platform, one unlikely Yankees fan guiding another
through the
            dense game-day crowd.

            Laramie leads the way. Jane Lang follows at his side. They walk
up a
            stairwell to the street and past the vendors lined up alongside
the famous
            ballpark. They circle around to Gate 4, where Laramie stops in
front of his
            favorite tree. He has earned a quick bathroom break.

            "Isn't this place something?" Lang asks when they finally make
their way to
            her seats behind home plate. This is a spot that gives her an
ideal view of
            the old ballpark, from the famous facade that looms in the
outfield to the
            infield grass that is always a perfect shade of green.

            Except she has never seen Yankee Stadium - at least not in the
way most fans
            have. Jane Lang is blind. Laramie, a golden retriever, is her
guide dog. For
            the past eight years, they have made the trip from their home
Morris Plains
            to the Bronx too many times to count.

            And one week from today, along with 55,000 other fortunate fans,
they will
            make it for the final time.


            "I am very sad about it. I love it here," Lang said. She is
wearing a
            light-blue Derek Jeter T-shirt and dangly Yankees earrings, and
Laramie has
            curled up on a Yankees beach towel spread at her feet. "The
minute I step
            into Yankee Stadium, I feel safe.

            "I feel home."

            Yankee Stadium means something different to every fan that has
walked
            through its gates since 1923. The first time Lang made this
trip, she
            gripped the metal bar in front of her seat, heard those familiar
sounds of
            batting practice and beer vendors, and couldn't stop her tears.

            "What are you crying for?" the usher asked her. "We haven't even
lost the
            game yet!"

            "I'm crying," Jane Lang said, "because I got here on my own."

            That first journey was not without an unintentional detour. She
had filled
            her pockets with eight pieces of candy, one for each stop the D
Train would
            make, and popped one into her mouth every time the doors opened.

            But she must have dropped one piece along the way, because she
got off one
            stop too soon. It didn't take long to figure out that something
was wrong,
            though. Laramie wouldn't budge until she got back on the train.

            He leads her around puddles in the street and past careless
teenagers
            talking on their cell phones as the walk. He makes sure she
stops on every
            corner and waits for the light to turn green.

            He walks like a typical New Yorker, never hesitant to bump his
way through a
            slow-moving crowd. Lang follows at his right side, whispering
"good boy"
            when he stops at the subway stairs or near the edge of a ramp.

            It is a two-hour trip that could test the nerves of a person
with 20/20
            vision. Lang, 65, makes it about 25 times a year, sometimes with
her husband
            Pete to help, but often just with Laramie.

            "You can't be afraid," Lang said, "because if you're afraid, you
can't do
            anything."

            She has experienced Yankee Stadium in a way unlike any of the
millions of
            people who have come here. She has listens to the radio
broadcast of the
            game in one ear and the reaction from the crowd in the other. If
the other
            fans get angry about a call, she joins them.

            "Hey ump!" she'll yell from her seat. "Are you watching the same
game I'm
            watching?"

            Pete planned a special surprise for their 41st wedding
anniversary, leading
            her onto the field before a game and into the Yankees dugout
where Jorge
            Posada was waiting for her.
            She reached up and felt his face.

            "He has such a great smile, he really does," she said. "And he
hit a home
            run that day!"
            She was sitting next to Harlan Chamberlain the night his famous
son, Joba,
            made his much-anticipated first start for the Yankees. Harlan,
who uses a
            wheelchair, held her hand so tight she thought it would break,
and when she
            touched his cheek, she felt the tears.

            The Yankees have become her family. Maybe the fans around her
are furious
            with the team for its struggles on the field this season, but
Lang is
            grateful that they put a fresh patch of sod outside for Laramie
if he needs
            to make a bathroom break. She kisses the concessionaire and
sends Christmas
            cards to the ushers.

            She wishes she could meet owner George Steinbrenner some day,
because she
            knows exactly what she would tell. "You know what I would do?"
she said. "I
            would touch his face and give him a big hug and say, 'Thanks for
giving me
            so much joy over the years.'"

            Lang hopes she can still visit the new Yankee Stadium next year,
but
            Laramie, now 10, won't come back after the final trip to the old
ballpark on
            Sunday. The team even put his picture on the scoreboard screen
last month,
            congratulating him on his upcoming retirement.

            That day after the game, as the two walked down the steps to the
D Train,
            fans spotted the golden retriever.

            "Make way for Laramie!" they yelled, and the crowded parted to
let them
            through.

            He will lead her down those steps one last time next week, and
Lang knows
            she'll be crying when he does. But they'll leave this place with
a lifetime
            of memories from a ballpark she has seen in way nobody else has.




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