[guide.chat] In Reply To: [guide.chat] In Reply To: [guide.chat] clubs

  • From: "James Liddell" <james.liddell2@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "M BOWKER" <bowker288@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Guide Chat" <guide.chat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 2 Jul 2012 09:03:35 +0100

Malcolm;
Yes, I agree.
The chair of our local blind club (OK, we have to have one to make it look 
official!), Diana, is a brilliant person. She's sixty-eight now. She first came 
to the club as a driver/carer for her husband, who had just been registered. 
Five years later, unfortunately, he died. In the same year, twelve years ago, 
Diana had a stroke which left her not only totally blind, but wheelchair bound 
as well. From being an active, energetic person to the state she now found 
herself in was, as you can imagine, devastating.
She was herself a former University lecturer, active as a national Scout 
leader. Her mind, however, is absolutely fantastic, as, thank God, is her 
voice. She said that the members of the club helped her realise that things 
were not quite as black as they could seem at first, and that the support she 
had from fellow VIPs was amazing, really helping her through the first years.
That's one thing a blind club can do which no amount of social work, psychology 
or the rest can; we've been there, said hello to lamp posts...that kind of 
thing.
I'm trying to persuade her to try voice-activated computing: I haven't had much 
experience with it myself, but I think it would suit her. She cannot use a 
keyboard, as her sense of touch, as well as her hand co-ordination, are very 
limited.

-----Original Message-----
From: M BOWKER - Email Address: bowker288@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent On: 01/07/2012 23:52
Sent To: Guide Chat - Email Address: guide.chat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [guide.chat] In Reply To: [guide.chat] clubs

Clare, I agree with Jim here. Loosing your sight in later life is very hard to 
cope with. You say you have never seen and you cope in your world. When, like 
me, you loose your sight at the age of 42 years, its frightening to say the 
least. You have one world you no and cope with. We had one world we lived in 
and coped with. Then suddenly we enter a whole new world of blindness and 
nearly all we have learnt over the years has gone out of the window. You have 
to start learning all over again like a new born baby. You have to change all 
you knew for new ways of doing the simplest things. like eating, dressing. 
moving around the house with other people in it. Its hard for them to because 
they don't understand blindness and they have to learn. The list is endless. 
And if you live alone like me and you want to stay independent you have to 
learn how to use the cooker, washer and many other things in the kitchen.
Like you say Clare, Its hard for all of us. But were all different in so many 
ways, there's no easy answers.

love Malcolm. xxx

Hi Jim, thank you so much for sharing this it's very much appreciated. I always 
love hearing different points of view. I'm very happy I bought this important 
subject up. I look forward to hearing others points of view on this matter. So 
in a way it seems I do have an advantage as I have never known any different 
with being totally blind from birth. This is my world and all I have ever 
known. Love Clare 
 

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