Re: remembering my first experiences with the Optacon

  • From: "Shari Weir" <shariweir@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <optacon-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 17 May 2006 13:49:30 -0500

When I left training with a loaner optacon I was thrilled beyond belief. I
had lots of opportunities to use the optacon during the day at work, but
when I went home at night, I didn't want to do anything but sit on the couch
with my optacon and stacks of magazines and books. I went from a pretty
physically active person to a total couch potato and gained 20 pounds the
first 6 months. It took a while, but I finally got things back in balance.

Shari
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "don bishop" <w6smb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "optacon list" <optacon-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2006 11:21 AM
Subject: remembering my first experiences with the Optacon


> Just changed the subject from "some comments about the optacon" or at
least pretty much that subject line.
>
> Anyway, I remember the first time I actually used my first optacon.
>
> I was in a training class given by TSI in Palo Alto.  It was held at a
motel where we students stayed for a week or two weeks depending on people's
> schedules.
>
> TSI also had a suite there where the training was conducted.
>
> They brought us into a training room with a long table.  In front of each
of us was this big
> wooden box and a brand new Optacon sitting inside.  I think it still had
the plastic around the case.  In those days the OPtacon came in a large
wooden
> carrying case with thick foam padding.  (soft packs were not even heard of
yet.)
>
> It was like being at the door of a new world and even just seeing the unit
without using it was liberating.  I can still remember the new smell of the
unit with
> the leather protective case.
>
> And then the fun began.  So did the work.  <smile>
>
> The excitment of actually reading print material, even if it was just a
training document, was something I'll never forget.
>
> Since that day in 1972 I've read virtually every kind of printed material
at one time or another.
>
> I still am a bit in awe when I look at an old book published in the early
1900s or before and realize that many many blind people lived in "homes for
the blind",
> or other institutional or protective settings, and that reading such a
book independently wasn't even considered possible.
>
> It does put the progress in the world in some sort of perspective.  I
think this is largely why I've always felt that the discontinuance of
Optacon production
> was truly a step backward from independence for blind people.
>
> Don
>
>
>
>
>
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