Thanks, Rosie. I'm definitely praying for her, because I think that God may
be the only one who may be able to help her. She's mad at Him at the
moment, mind you. Yesterday, she said to me: "They say that God won't give
you any more than what you can handle. I wish God would stop piling it on."
But yes, I will most definitely continue to be there for her. She has seen
me through lots of nasty situations, including my recent accident in which I
broke my right upper arm, so being there for her is the least I can do.
Devon.
-----Original Message-----
From: ourplace-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ourplace-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Rosemarie Chavarria
Sent: August-20-16 11:54 PM
To: ourplace@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ourplace] Re: Living Blind
Hi, Devon,
I can't think of what you can say to your friend but continue to be there
for her during these dark times. Just knowing that a person cares is
sometimes the best encouragement you can give to someone. Definitely pray
for her too.
Rosie
On 8/20/2016 8:46 PM, Devon Wilkins wrote:
To take this on a slightly different turn, here's a situation thatright eye, which eventually had to be removed.
I've been wrestling with for a few weeks now. I quite frankly don't
know what to say to this friend of mine. You may remember that I
spoke quite some time ago about a friend named Barb. She and I went
to school together, and we've known each other for almost 53 years
now. She had fairly good sight when we were in school, but when she
had her daughter, they allowed some of the anesthetic to leak into her
She also battles with a neuromuscular disorder which landed her in apain.
wheelchair a couple of years ago. Now, she has developed something
called polymyalgia rheumatica, which causes very severe muscular and joint
She's on steroids now, which are playing Hell with the glaucoma in hersuggestions you might have. Devon.
left eye. Her doctor has pretty much told her that she will one day
lose her remaining sight. She understandably gets quite depressed
when she thinks about being totally blind and using a wheelchair.
I've advised her to brush up on the braille she learned as a kid, and
to contact Southeastern Guide Dog training center in Florida, because
they train blind people to use a guide dog and a power wheelchair.
Can anyone suggest what else I can say to keep her spirits up? Sandy
knows Barb, too, and she'll remember her as being a very active
person. This will be devastating to her. Thanks in advance for any
line; do not include quotation marks:
-----Original Message-----
From: ourplace-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:ourplace-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Linda Gehres
Sent: August-20-16 10:52 PM
To: ourplace@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ourplace] Living Blind
Gaston, what a smart thing to say to someone in the world of the
sighted who's really needing to be educated.
Linda G.
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