Living
w Five Sight-Impaired Residents View
Their World - North Coast Journal, CA by HELEN
SANDERSON
While visually impaired
people have their limitations, those in the blind
community on the North Coast are finding many
ways to work, travel and communicate. Here's what
five legally blind residents had to say about
their lives without sight in Humboldt County.
A Corn Flakes cereal
box. A bird flying overhead. Phone poles whizzing
by the window of a moving car. Simple snapshots
of everyday life like these are taken for granted
by most people.
For Doug Rose, 46,
a blind McKinleyville resident and co-owner of
RosePond Aquatics, those three ordinary scenes
are rare treasures. A handful of sights from his
early childhood spent on his family's farm in
Nebraska are the only visual memories he has.
The man's unhurried,
patient demeanor lends to an air of quiet confidence.
He talks deliberately, slowly even, and listens
intently, usually with his head tilted to the
side, his gaze directed somewhere toward the floor,
blinking a bit more rapidly than a sighted person
would.
"I feel like
I can remember some colors: I know red was my
favorite. I know I had a black dog," Rose
recalled, sitting in the small Eureka office where
he works part-time for the LightHouse of the North
Coast, a resource center for visually impaired
people.
By the time Rose
was 5 years old his world had turned black. Cancer
overtook his eyes and he was fitted with prosthetic
ones before he reached kindergarten. His plastic
eyes (they're not glass, as people assume) are
not receptive to light, meaning that he has lived
in darkness for more than 40 years.
Recently, he was
told by a doctor that since light, like sunshine,
boosts the brain's levels of serotonin -- one
of the body's natural "good mood" neurotransmitters
-- the depression and anxiety he has experienced
over the years is likely related to his inability
to distinguish any illumination. Rose explained
that sometimes he would have panic attacks that
made it difficult to do everyday activities like
taking the bus to work.
His counselor in
Arcata suggested a small dose of Lexapro, an anti-depressant
and anti-anxiety drug. The medication, which he
has been using for a few months, has diminished
his stress level, Rose said.
"I guess that
my whole life I just learned to adapt to those
sorts of feelings the best I could," he said.
Adaptation might
be the best way to sum up how sight-impaired people
do everything from cooking to surfing the Internet.
For instance, a
way to keep track of different types of cans in
the cupboard is with rubber bands -- a single
banded can might signify chicken noodle soup,
two bands for corn, and so on.
Teaching visually
impaired people how to do both complicated and
simple tasks is part of the mission of the LightHouse,
a San Francisco-based nonprofit. Rose has worked
as an outreach coordinator and an assistive technology
instructor there since 2002, when the Eureka office
opened.
Assistive technology,
often called "AT," has helped blind
people clear hurdles that just a few years ago
seemed impassable without the help of a sighted
person.
One popular AT device
is a speech output screen reader called JAWS.
A computerized voice reads the text on a document
or Web site, and certain keyboard commands let
the user bypass Web advertisements to jump to
links, search boxes or the body of a story. E-mail
can also be sent and received this way.
For Braille users
who don't fancy the robot reader, or just like
to follow along with their fingertips, there are
"refreshable" Braille keyboards [in
photo below right]. The reader uses a scrolling
wheel to move down the page, and each subsequent
line is "refreshed" with a new series
of bumps that pop up to form Braille letters.
For those with limited
vision, ZoomText -- like the name suggests --
zooms in on the text of a Web site or an electronic
document and enlarges it, up to 16 times its normal
size. Similar to ZoomText is a device called TeleSensory,
which magnifies the appearance of an object up
to 60 times. This way a person with poor vision
can read a piece of mail or a pill bottle, sign
a check or thread a needle.
As the secretary
of the Humboldt Council for the Blind, Rose keeps
apprised of local issues that are important to
the blind community, such as access to public
events, local newspapers and transportation, as
well as pedestrian safety and support groups.
Many people, Rose
said, have trouble admitting to themselves and
to others that their vision is fading.
"I think the
best thing for anyone going through it to remember
is that their life is not over; it's not the end
of the world. You just learn how to do things
a new way -- it might be a slower way than before,
but life isn't a race," he said.
Though she is not
racing, Peggy Martinez [in photo below left] moves
pretty fast. The 44-year-old singer, drummer,
business owner and advocate for people with disabilities
is probably the most visible and busy person in
the local blind community.
Martinez's professional
manner is tempered by the rocker-tinged vernacular
she sometimes slips into, inserting "dude,"
"totally" or "killer" into
conversation if a topic excites her enough. Voting
is one of those topics.
"Lindsay [McWilliams
from the Humboldt County Elections Office] is
totally working on making things accessible, not
just for blind folks but for people with all kinds
of disabilities," she said.
When Martinez voted
in last week's special election for the Arcata
City Council, she had to have a poll worker fill
out her ballot.
Like Rose, she belongs
to a number of advocacy groups for disabled people,
including the Humboldt Council for the Blind (she's
the president), the Northwest Committee on Employment
for People with Disabilities and Pedestrians for
Education, Development and Safety (PEDS).
Her brand of "mellow
advocacy," versus a more strident, comply-with-the-Americans-with-Disabilities-Act-or-else
attitude, seems to work best in this area, she
said. Instead of demanding change she politely
asks for it. For instance, to get audible traffic
signals in Eureka and Arcata, she talked casually
with public officials about the safety issues
visually impaired pedestrians face in Eureka and
Arcata.
It didn't take long
before the four new cuckoo-sounding signals were
installed. The next project on her list is to
have a particularly dangerous intersection at
Myrtle and West fitted with audio signals and
new crosswalk lines.
Aside from her diligent
volunteerism, Martinez runs her own business,
Eureka AT, teaching people assistive technology,
and has been in a number of bands, from heavy
metal to calypso.
And while she is
not shy about highlighting her ambitions, she
prefers to think of herself as a "regular
person."
"When I was
growing up we only heard about people like Ray
Charles. And Brother Ray is great, but we never
heard about a normal blind guy who worked at the
hardware store, or some regular dude with a wife
and kids," she said. "It's important
to know that a lot of us are successful, but we're
also just regular folks."
That she seems more
focused on her abilities, rather than her disability,
is indicative of the way many blind people view
themselves.
"One of the
biggest issues that a lot of us have is that [sighted]
people get this idea that our lives must suck,"
she said. "Personally, I feel pretty dang
lucky. I've got great things going on. I'm having
more fun that most people out there.
"My sight impairment
doesn't keep me from doing very much. I work,
I walk all over the place [using a cane], I travel,
I take the bus, I go hiking with friends. I have
different methods for doing some of these things,
but so do sighted people."
Still, certain things
are tougher for blind people to do without some
help. For Martinez, whose vision is 20/400 (20/200
constitutes legal blindness), there are household
chores and grocery shopping that she has a paid
assistant help her with, since she lives alone.
Of her clients at
Eureka AT, the youngest person is in his 30s,
the oldest is an 84-year-old woman from McKinleyville
who's learning Braille.
What's strange is
that most of Martinez' clients are women, even
though statistics reveal that almost twice as
many men are legally blind or deaf in this area.
"There are
a few reasons for that. One is that boys are taught
from a young age not to ask for help, and that's
a drag because we know there are a lot of [legally
blind men] out there who need it," she said.
"Another reason is that men usually have
their wives to rely on" since women generally
live longer than men.
A 2003 survey by
the State Independent Living Council of California
based on 2000 U.S. Census data showed that in
Humboldt County, 2,677 people between the ages
of 16 and 64 reported having a sensory impairment
(deafness or blindness): 1,718 men and 959 women.
According to statistics
that the LightHouse compiled from 2000 U.S. Census
data, there are 585 legally blind people in the
county.
After losing his
sight, James Forbes didn't spend much time feeling
sorry for himself.
It's been three
years since the energetic 38-year-old father of
two boys, 6 and 10, has gone completely blind.
Since then, he has become fluent in assistive
technology programs, enrolled at College of the
Redwoods and joined a band, The Buffy Swayze,
which he describes as Devo-like karaoke pop.
Forbes explained
how an autoimmune condition caused his sight to
deteriorate over the course of a few years, first
in one eye, then the other, starting toward the
bottom of his line of sight, then the periphery.
He was put on steroids for two years to slow down
the weakening of his eyesight until he finally
he couldn't see anymore. That was July 2002.
When the realization
set in that he could no longer play catch with
his sons and that he would have to quit his job
as a buyer and operations manager for a crystal-making
company, he felt a stab of grief, but said he
shook off any sadness pretty quickly.
"I just don't
waste any time moping around. At first I was kind
of depressed but I've gotten through all that.
I don't dwell on the past," Forbes said.
To say that Forbes
is self-assured or resilient is an understatement.
Fearless might be more accurate.
Forbes has jumped
headlong into general education courses at CR.
Learning Braille and JAWS along the way, he has
bypassed the baby steps of taking special computer
courses for the disabled, in a sense speeding
his way toward transferring to HSU as a business
major.
"At first I
thought I just wanted to get an associate's degree,
but now I'm really digging school," he said,
pointing out that he has a 3.5 grade point average.
"But I'm not here to have fun. I'm taking
real classes so I can move on."
School wasn't on
Forbes' mind when he and his wife decided to leave
Santa Rosa for Eureka in August 2002. Since he
couldn't work anymore, they knew they'd need cheaper
housing. "I also figured that a smaller town
is safer than a city for someone like me, with
crime and everything," Forbes said.
Less than one month
after arriving in Eureka, Forbes was playing bass
for The Buffy Swayze.
"I always fancied
myself a pretty confident musician, but it became
a lot tougher when I couldn't see what I was doing,"
Forbes said. "Most musicians don't have to
look at their instrument too much, but even having
the luxury of glancing at it once in a while is
helpful.
"So I took
it slow for a while, and sort of relearned the
guitar."
In addition to playing
the music, Forbes books the shows for The Buffy
Swayze, and is about to finish a Web site for
the band.
As for long-term
goals, Forbes wants to get back into the same
type of business he was in before, as an operations
manager.
"Right now,
I think that with all the AT I have I could do
that same job again. I couldn't operate a forklift,
but any correspondence, ordering, maintaining
operations, all that. I'm totally ready, but I
want to finish my education first. I just want
to be the best at whatever I can do so I can feel
comfortable with my performance."
While losing his
sight motivated Forbes to plow ahead toward his
goals, 71-year-old Jean Wellington [photo at left],
of McKinleyville, said that being blind has taught
him that patience is a virtue.
These days when
the retired fifth-grade teacher checks his mail,
he runs his hand over each envelope, feeling for
the raised surface of a stamp. Letters from friends
have stamps, junk mail usually doesn't.
On a lucky day that
he receives a personal letter, he might have to
wait days before his assistant can come by to
read it to him.
Aside from reading
printed letters, it's the unspoken parts of conversation
that Wellington longs for the most.
"I really miss
seeing the expressions of people's faces,"
Wellington said.
In his mind's eye,
there are certain faces that he can still remember,
including prominent figures like Ronald Reagan
and Richard Nixon. It was the mid-1960s when Wellington
noticed that his eyesight was fading. By the early
`80s, still years away from retirement, he was
completely blind. He does not know what the current
president looks like.
"I know it's
probably better off that way," he quipped.
Wellington's wife
died in 1987, one year before he retired after
25 years of teaching in McKinleyville schools.
Since then, he has volunteered at KHSU, hosting
two radio shows -- "World of Music,"
a classical music program that airs Wednesdays
at 11 a.m., and "Good Stuff," a program
of jazz and big band tunes from 1930s musicians
like Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman. He keeps
his song lists for each show on a BrailleNote,
a laptop computer with an internal modem and refreshable
Braille keyboard.
Wellington accepts
his limitations gracefully, and he still manages
to get out of the house regularly, for his radio
show, to attend support groups for people with
vision impairments and to visit the Adult Day
Care Center in Arcata.
"I don't do
much there, but I think people might like my company.
They know I won't judge the way they look. Some
people have terrible handicaps, but I don't see
that. I see them for who they are inside,"
Wellington said.
He knows what it's
like to be treated differently for having a disability.
"If I go out
to dinner the waiter will usually ask my companion,
`What will he be having for dinner?' So I just
say, `He'll have the fish entrée for his dinner,"
Wellington recalled. "Then they usually start
talking directly to me."
Lauren Favor, a
blind Arcata resident and single mother of a 12-year-old
son, has also experienced bizarre treatment from
sighted people, but the spirited 41-year-old Arcata
resident describes the experience more bluntly.
"People will
seriously treat me like I'm retarded," she
said. "A cashier will talk to me really slow
and loud, and I have to be like, `Hey, do I look
like I'm 3 years old?"
While incidents
like that get a good-natured rise out of Favor,
a recent encounter at a fast food restaurant made
her seriously upset.
Last month when
Favor, her guide dog Riva, and two sighted friends
went into Carl's Jr. in Eureka, Favor was asked
to take her dog out of the restaurant.
"I really didn't
want to be Rosa Parks and refuse to leave, but
I was not about to be unlawfully kicked out of
there," she said.
An exchange ensued
between the cashier and Favor, with Favor explaining
that guide dogs are allowed in restaurants per
the ADA, to which the cashier replied, "Whatever."
Favor, it seems,
was born a fighter.
Delivered four
months premature after her mother fell down the
stairs while carrying laundry in their Massachusetts
home, Favor was officially labeled a miscarriage
at birth. Her parents were told to not get too
attached, and she was placed in an incubator.
Years later she
found out that the long period of time she was
kept incubated is probably the reason that she
is legally blind. (High levels of oxygen in incubators
can interfere with eye development; today, oxygen
levels are monitored carefully.)
When she started
elementary school, she could see, but not very
well. "I was that poor ugly kid with the
huge thick glasses," she said.
Over time, her eyesight
worsened. A number of surgeries have been performed
on her eyes for a rare condition called lattice
degeneration, where small holes wear through the
eye's retina. The surgeries slowed her vision
loss for a time, but at this point there is nothing
more that can be done, she said.
Although the remaining
eyesight she has is very blurry, something she
describes as looking around under water, Favor
said she feels lucky to still perceive color;
matching her clothes isn't a problem.
A few years back,
Favor decided it was time to learn how to walk
with a cane, a labor-intensive process that takes
months of training with an orientation and mobility
specialist. In order to be eligible to have a
guide dog, like Riva, a person must first pass
a cane-training course.
"I knew from
the start that I wanted a dog. For one, because
I love animals, but also because I felt like I
couldn't get around very fast with a cane. I'm
short and husky, but I actually like to walk pretty
fast, so the cane was frustrating for me,"
she said.
Having Riva, a 5-year-old
yellow Lab, has been a definite perk for Favor.
But one drawback to living in Arcata, she said,
is that other dog owners are lax about the town's
leash law, and Riva has been attacked by loose
dogs.
"Riva won't
fight back. I have to protect her," Favor
said.
Once when a dog
bit Riva in the face, Favor "beat the hell
out of it" with the cane she was carrying
under her arm.
When she's not protecting
her dog, Favor takes classes at CR's Arcata campus,
and works for the school a few hours a day doing
office work.
Like Forbes, Favor
is also on the Dean's list with a 3.7 GPA and
plans to transfer to HSU to pursue a degree in
social work.
"If I can do
this, anyone can. If you're a single mother and
you're disabled, you can't stay in your house
all the time, you can't stop parenting, you can't
give up," she said. "I know it sounds
crazy, but my vision impairment has actually opened
up a lot of doors in my life."
How to interact
with the blind
1. When addressing
a visually impaired person you know, tell them
your first and last name: just saying "Hi,"
won't suffice, since they cannot see you.
2. Grabbing a sight-impaired
person's arm to get their attention is invasive.
(See step one.)
3. If a person appears
to need assistance, ask them if they would like
some help. Don't assume that a disabled person
would take offense to your offer. But don't play
the hero either. Just ask.
4. When leading
a sight-impaired friend somewhere, offer your
arm, and stay a half-step in front of her as you
guide her along. Some people tend to push a blind
person in front of them as a way to steer them
in the right direction, which can be scary and
disorienting.
5. When a sight-impaired
person is preparing to cross a street she is listening
closely to traffic and/or an auditory traffic
signal. If you happen to be on the curb with her,
striking up a conversation can be distracting.
6. Do not pet a
guide dog when it is trying to do its job.
7. Do not assume
that blind people are hearing-impaired or learning
impaired. Talk at a reasonable volume and speed.
If a person has trouble hearing you, he will probably
ask you to speak louder.
SOURCES: PEGGY MARTINEZ
AND LAUREN FAVOR