[vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
- From: "Ed Harper" <goat@xxxxxx>
- To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 3 Aug 2012 02:15:17 +0100
Hi both, repetitive strain frequently does cause the condition Gerrard is
describing, but sadly for me that was ruled out at the beginning.
Fortunately so was things like MS. I actually find it more of a present
disability than blindness, but that is probably because I have grown up with
the former. All sorts of fine discrimination tasks are problems as well as
reading braille and nmanipulation of small objects can be a problem too,
because of the lack of feedback rather than any motor problem. Fortunately
I am a touch typist on a keyboard, or I would really be stuck, which is a
misnomer since limited loss of touch doesnt make a lot of difference!
----- Original Message -----
From: "Susan Curry" <SusanCurry@xxxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2012 7:23 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
hi ed and gerad,
i better watch as i've been having simmular problems with constantly
holding my white stick, i took tennis elbow and it wouldn't go away
because the way my arm was bent using the white cane, my hand used to be
nearly numb and pins and needles by the time i got home.
susan
----- Original Message -----
From: "GERARD SHANAHAN" <gershan@xxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2012 6:42 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
Hi Ed and Susan,
From your description Ed and the sympthoms that Susan describes, I am
suffering from a similar numbing sensation in the thumb, forefinger and
middle finger of the right hand. A now deceased GP of mine once
described it as Milker's hand
but never really dealt with it for me. Recently when I discovered the
problem becoming more problematic, holding items for long periods of
time, i.e. treking walking sticks whereupon I have to let my hand hang
downw freely allowing blood flow, I decided to make it known to my
present GP. She told me that it was due to a narrowing of the nerve canal
in the hand/wrist and it could be eased with micro surgery so I've been
booked in for Cruem Hospital since February and am awaiting the call.
The cause in my case may have been due to a fall or from my days of being
a petrol pump attendant.- constant gripping and holding of petrol gun
could have been a factor. So Susan and Ed, I'd get back to your local
doctor and se if micro surgery on the area could elliviate numbing
sensation by micrpo surgery increasing blood flow. Gerry---- Original
Message -----
From: "Ed Harper" <goat@xxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2012 5:58 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
Hi susan, Dont know. I didnt know they published much in that. I
seem to remember seeing it when I ws at school. But in practice I
doubt it. In my case it is a fault in the nerve sheath which religiously
refuses to repair, despite the fact that they can see no reason why it
shouldnt. I don't honestly think it will ever come back, its been about
six or seven years now. My own personal theory is that it maybe due to
a goat and sheep disease virus, orph, which I got some years ago, but
its one of those like chicken pox which retreats into the nervous system
and can relapse if you are particularly run down. It is pretty rare in
people these days as you need to be in prolonged physical contact with
the active virus to get it, and you have to be a susceptible person.
It produces a condition called milkers' nodule, which is an extremely
itchy hard nodule that turns from white to a very dramatic black thing.
You pretty well have to be a hand milker of a goat or sheep who has it
in its active form, which is why its rare these days, in Europe and the
US anyway and I don't know if anyone has bothered to find out what goes
on in those parts of the world where goat and sheep milking by hand is
more common.
On the whole though I've adjusted to not reading braille. Hope the
diabetes stays controlled.
All the best
Ed
----- Original Message -----
From: "Susan Curry" <SusanCurry@xxxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2012 8:15 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
hi ed,
that's awful, i would hate that, i know that happens to some diabetics
of which i've just became one, i can control it through diet, but what
about the jumbo braille would that be any better for you?
susan
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ed Harper" <goat@xxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2012 4:46 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
Hi susan, Sadly so can I these days, due to a failure in the nerve
sheath of the nerve that gives touch to my first first two fingers and
the thumb on my right hand. I wouldnt these days feel it worth
reading a book or magazine in braille.
Ed
----- Original Message -----
From: "Susan Curry" <SusanCurry@xxxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, July 29, 2012 2:03 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
hi ed,
unfortunitly i can only read braille with one hand, that's my right
hand, and mind you that is just the one finger on that hand,
susan
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ed Harper" <goat@xxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, July 28, 2012 8:28 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
Take Sean's apology for mine too, but another point about braille is
that it may in fact foster an ability, which probably we all share
as human beings, but which if research on brain plasticity is
correct we, braille readers, may have especially developed by the
practice of reading braille with both hands.
I sadly these days can only read with one hand, because of a nerve
sheath failure, and so books are a waste of time, but that
re-enforces the point of how we read braille so fast.
I can't remember his name at the moment other than Gerry, which
shows my memory is going too, but he used to be a prof in Keel
university in the UK. He was a braille reader and I remember him
telling me that he was trying to devise an experiment to test the
capacity for paralell processing and whether it even really existed,
which was in question at the time, the ability to process two things
at once and synthesise them. He had notes in braille which he was
looking through, and realised he had the answer at his finger tips!
That is exactly what he was unconsciously doing. Starting a line
with one hand and finishing it with another whilst starting the next
with the first hand and subjectively reading a continuous logical
text without ever having to consciously sort what otherwise would
have been jumbled information into order.
All the best
Ed
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sean CLAFFEY" <sean.claffey@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, July 27, 2012 5:41 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
Hello all,
Sorry for coming in so late on this one, but I had no access to my
e-mails for nearly a week.
In addition to its many uses already mentioned, Braille enables us
to read aloud to others - to our friends, children, in a public
setting.
But I think there's a more general point to be made. Braille is,
quite simply, our way of reading. Of course screen readers give us
access to vastly more material than braille ever can; and a
well-read audiobook is a real delight; and the medium of speech is
clearly an obvious and practical option for people without sight.
On top of that, braille (on paper) is cumbersome and expensive and
slow to produce. But with all its drawbacks, it's our particular
way of reading. And reading is subtly different from listening:
that relationship between the writer's message on the page and the
person reading it - with no machine or other human coming between
them - is a very special one; and braille is our door into that
magical experience. Reading is a skill and a pleasure which
millions of people throughout the world take completely for
granted, and which many more millions yearn for and work hard to
acquire. Since the invention of braille, this gift is available to
us too: I hope we never let it slip from our grasp.
Sean.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ed Harper" <goat@xxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2012 2:08 AM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
Hi Ronan, I have often thought about the problem of braille
notices like the one that you describe below. because we cant
scan a large area casually there needs to be a convention of say a
particular change in surface which is cheap to affix to an object
like a door around the height to increase the chance target area,
which would alert a vip to an information notice in the area, or
inward pointing raised arrows or some such. Often thought smells
as background alerters might have some merit as often they
inadvertently a and unintentionally perform that role.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ronan McGuirk" <ronan.p.mcguirk@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, July 22, 2012 5:38 PM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: Is Braille Dead?
Hi all,
I certainly hope Braille is not dead!
I read one or two books in Braille a year to try to keep my hand
in.
As I normally read so much with synthetic speech or mp3 audio, it
is a
welcome relief to read by Braille instead. I guess it must use a
different part of your brain!!!
I find Braille lables on pharmaceuticals and on items such as
shampoo
bottles are quite useful.
Braille is also useful for labelling items such as dvds etc.
I found Braille most useful when learning a language since you
can see
how the words are spelt.
Incidentally, I noticed on the Dart that the button that you
press to
open the door has the word 'Open' written in Braille above it. I
assume this has been there for years but I only noticed it a few
months back! I wonder how much more Braille there is in the
environment that has passed me by!
Ronan
On 20/07/2012, maria <maria.pileidi@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Susan.
I know exactly what you mean. could you tell me how you label
your
medication boxes? do you use Braille on paper, dymo ladlers? or
do you
manage to somehow put the actual box into the Perkins brailler?
I'd imagine
that would be impossible. Please please don't get me wrong. I'm
not being
sarcastic. I'm GENUINELY CURIOUS BECAUSE I'd REALLY LIKE TO
LEARN TO LABEL
MY OWN TABLETS.
Would my stylist and needle help? yes folks. I still have those
prehistoric
implements. Believe it or not, they are still widely used in our
Russian
school. In fact, in the academic year 2000/2001, a board and
stylist was
used a lot more in our school, than when I was at school before
from 1986
till 1992. That was because our Perkins braillers were made in
Latvia and
after the collapse of the soviet union the Latvians stopped
supplying them
to us, not that I blame them. Anyway, When I did my Russian
leaving cert you
could count on fingers of one hand the number of secondary
school students
who had a Braille machine. Back during the 80s/beginning of 90s,
most of
secondary had a Perkins brailler.
Primary wasn't allowed to use one at any time I was there.
Back to why I still use the needle and stylist though, which
brings me to
an other very important use of Braille I forgot to mention
earlier. I use my
stylist and needle in order to write down my card data into my
Russian note
book. The pages of those note books are way too small to put
into the
Braille machine. Some of you who went to school with me have
seen the note
books and know exactly what I mean.
Then, every time I do an online transaction or order concert
tickets by
phone, I'm able to get my Braille note book and either input
the relevant
data into the web site or call it out to a person on the other
end of the
phone. That way it's more secure because I don't have to ask
anybody else to
look at my credit or laser card number. I can just get the
relevant info
myself and pass it on to the relevant people. Without Braille I
would not
have been able to do that.
I also use Braille to label my DVDs. I have accumulated over 100
Russian
DVDs over the 10 years since I returned to Ireland in 2001, and
without
labeling them in Braille I'd be totally lost.
when MY MUM LIVED HERE, I'd FIND IT A LOT LESS CUMBERSOME TO
BRING ALONG MY
STYLIST AND NEEDLE OVER WHEN I CAME TO VISIT, IF I NEEDED HELP
LABELING
SOMETHING. I JUST FOUND IT EASIER STICKING A BOARD AND NEEDLE
INTO MY BAG
THAN TRAVELING ON 2 BUSES ALL THE WAY FROM STONNEYBATTER TO
RATHMINES, BUT
THAT IS JUST MY OWN SUBJECTIVE PERSONAL PREFERENCE.
in GENERAL, I find a stylist and a needle quite useful if you
need to write
something down quickly, but not for a big long assignment. Trust
me. your
hand would be killing you. I know from experience. Although I
know that some
blind and visually impaired people in Russia who can't afford a
laptop,
find the needle and stylist rather useful for taking notes in
college.
And before I sign off, I would like to apologize for raising
some points
which perhaps should have been raised on Ireland VIP news, BUT
I'm AFRAID
I'm NOT SUBSCRIBED TO Ireland vip NEWS AND DON'T KNOW THE
ADDRESS FOR
SUBSCRIBING, SO I WROTE EVERYTHING DOWN IN THIS EMAIL. My
apologies once
again.
all THE BEST AND HAVE A GREAT WEEKEND.
Maria.
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