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Judy is a poster child of success absent safe mobility. As a child, she had light and color vision – and that means she was mobility visually impaired. In the 1950s, she learned to use the long cane, but she wasn’t allowed to take it home until she was older. She didn’t really start using a long cane until grad school. She and her husband go on grand adventures around the world. He is a dog guide user and she a long cane user. Her fall into an open manhole is tough to hear – Judy is a delight. Yes, Judy proves that it is possible to grow up without safe mobility and be a highly successful adult– I’m just not clear why we ask this of our blind babies. But that's another story for another time.
This is a laugh out loud great interview –Judy describes her life as a blind traveler before smart phones –with a great story of how she used Atlas speaks an accessible computer maps to help sighted people.
Excerpt:
A. No, I never had a device until I lived in New York, and I was going to graduate school I started using a cane.
Q. Is that right?
A. Yes. It’s really hard to make sense out of because I couldn’t see.
Q. Right, right.
A. And yet, I don’t know how, I mean I know other kids that did this, and I don’t know how. I don’t… now I don’t know how. I mean I think it has more to do with just the incredible versatility of children as much as anything else. I certainly couldn’t do it now.
Q. In thinking back trying to think of some strategies that you used anything come to mind?
A. Ohh. I mean a lot of strategies. You know every crazy thing from you know walking along the line between the grass and the sidewalk and, and, and just hitting things. As a kid I had cuts and bruises from head to toe. People would say well how did you get—I don’t know. You know. I don’t have a clue.
Q. Which one (laugh).
A. Yeah exactly. I don’t. You know. It just you don’t worry about getting hit. You don’t worry about falling down. I absolutely believe that one of the greatest survival—one of the things that, that spells how well a blind person does is how well—how able they are to tolerate pain.
Q. Wow. That shows you’ve earned your…
A. Yeah, because you know if you just keep going and you don’t think about it. You can actually do it.
Q. So is it safe to say the attitudes that your family had were—
A. Oh utterly abhorrent. Yes totally. I mean actually you know as an adult I look back on it I think they were nuts.(laugh) But I’m glad I had them as parents.
Q. How would you characterize their attitudes towards you?
A. Oh I think you know you talk about parents being overprotective of blind kids. My parents were under protective. Oh, utterly I mean to the point of being ridiculous. And, and that’s fine I survived it, but it would have been so easily for, for not to.
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