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Friday, February 19, 2010

Simple Rules to Follow for Using a White Cane in a Town are City


Stop… Listen… Look
Rules for using a White Cane at a Intersection
In this lesson, the objective is simple:

  • To walk up, down, and around the block

  • Stopping for all open areas (that includes driveways)

  • Listening, for cars and the direction of traffic, as of yet still waiting for "All Quiet"

  • Finally look to make sure all is clear before you cross a driveway or street… and as always, using perfect cane technique.
Make your way to any street, survey the location, note the street name, the flow of traffic, and how the intersection is controlled… listened for sounds and made it all the way across… as you go down a few more blocks, do the crossings the same way, always stopping, listening for any sound, and then looking before crossing.
This lesson is for you to be observed, to see how you approached the curb, and to make sure you listened, and looked before crossing. It is best to do this repeatedly. In addition, have you observer (helper) a good 20 to 30-feet behind you, as to not disturb you.
As you walk down the street, listen to people, as they are out. As you come to an intersection, check the curb edge with your cane. Every once in a while stop and rest and see what you hear. As you make your way down the street, you might overhear people saying things as; "Leave the man alone, he knows what he's doing"… and a fleeting comment of "Them blind people sure amaze me, I don't know how they do it…" – People will noticed what you are doing with a White Cane. However, most of them will just walk on by and never offer to assist you crossing the street or help you, listening to the light signal. However all ways remember others walk and go faster than you, so go when you feel safe to go.

 

As a note to fellow sighted readers, Please do not shout or startle a blind or low vision person; chances are they are concentrating on the task at hand… You should not yell, "It's OK to cross," they will cross when they feel safe. Chances are they are at the curb, with the cane in front of them waiting to step off. If they are not going to cross, they should pull their cane tight to their body, and back away from the curb, – Please do not be offended, if they tell you, they do not need your help.

Stop… Listen… Look        
Rules to Follow at the Stop Light

This Lesson is all about intersections controlled with stoplights.
The first thing to know is the different types of stoplights, the Variable Timed, and the Fixed Time. You should be able to guess the difference by their names, it's really simple.
A variable timed intersection is controlled by a stoplight with an embedded pressure plate or wiring that a car rolls over to control the amount of time the light will stay green on the next cycle. – You can usually see the wires or plate in the roadway. A fixed time intersection has a set interval of red to green cycles that will not change… Simple.
Did you know that most traffic lights and cross walk lights; timing is based on the fact that most people walk about 5-feet-per-second? The wider the street, technically the longer the light will stay green, or the light will stay on. Did you know that on a variable timed intersection, most lights would add about 3-seconds to the light cycle for each car in the line, most times with a maximum up to three cars deep? (That is about 9 or 10 seconds.)
So, why does a person that uses a White Cane need to know these facts?
As a blind or visual impaired person approached the intersection, they have a better idea about when it is safe to cross. If you know the cycle is 30 seconds as the intersection you cross all the time, then if you are still hearing car noise and 15 seconds has gone by, well it would not be sate to set into the intersection.
If the city has installed the walk signals correctly, the stoplight or walk pedestrian button facing into you is used to control the light crossing the street that you are facing, the button should never behind you or facing the other walkway. However, remember some may not be working, could be installed, wrong, or just broken. Next you:

  • Hit the walk button and wait for the light to change

  • Have the cane in front of you

  • Be away from the curb, remember to be listening

  • Listen for the chirp, the sound which means go and the other chirp that means you should be half way and lastly the chirp that means 10 seconds and you better be across

  • The Light turns green

  • You are still listening for noises of danger, the chirp…sounds for you to cross

  • Hold your White Cane into the air as if you were holding a flag…hold it out for vehicles to see. It the official warning for vehicles to slow down and you are crossing, this is good to use coming out of stores to a parking lot or going in to a store from your vehicles in the parking lot

  • Find the drop in the crib, set off and begin you crossing, listening for the chirps and other danger noises

  • Keep walking at a regular pace, feeling for cracks, holes and the curb.

  • AS you get to the curb, find the sidewalk and go up or what ever is needed
Now that was not bad we all made it… and now… keep doing it over and over, until you feel comfortable and safe.
Danger:
Always be aware, of the people, which will not see you or could care less, if you are in the intersection. These (?) feel like they have the right of way, all the time. In addition, never forget about the dangerous's
turn-on-red that so many drivers like to do, even though some (a lot) like to ignore the no-turn-on-red signs. Yes, pedestrians have the right-of-way at crossings, but, just because a car stopped, it does not mean that they see you and that they will not turn on red. They are watching for other vehicles and police, so you have to watch or listen for yourself. You are at the disadvantage, if you get hit my a vehicle, the vehicle will win,
Therefore, drivers, please put down your cell phone, stop putting on your makeup, do not pass stopped cars, and pay more attention at intersections. Pedestrians have the right-of-way at cross walks, and persons with a white cane or service dog have even more! If you would just pay attention, the road would be much safer for all of us!
I understand, now, what Road Rage is, especially blind man style!


Stop… Listen… Look What is happening at the Intersection
How the things and action that is happening at the intersection is something most sighted people give little thought about. Nevertheless, for a person who cannot see well there are many things that has to be taken into consideration:

 


  • Is the street one-way or two

  • What type of intersection is ahead

  • What shape is it

  • How is it controlled - stop sign or stoplight

  • Does traffic even stop at all?
Not to mention, what street are you on, for it is very important for person that is visual impaired to be able to survey the intersections, in the area, that they will be crossing. They need a blueprint or a picture inside their head of the anatomy of the intersection.
They need to know if the intersection has crosswalks, lights, walk buttons, stop signs, if it is right on red, the timing of the lights, walk chirp, and most important the noises and what they should and not hear. It is important to know if the intersection is busier at certain times. Then, there is the name of the street for most people, do not know that visually impaired people cannot see the signs and if they do, they have to be right up to it. One needs to know where one is, in case of an accident or emergency.
Usually, a visually impaired person needs someone to walk around with him or her, to inform them of landmarks and explain to them the noises. As one walks with their cane, the person helping them can tell them as they get close to a story or landmark. For there are times, were a person can pick up sounds and feel things in their cane and this tells them where they are. They can then know, where they are, by a thud in the sidewalk or sound of how a door opens or closes. They identify areas and driveways by the feel of their cane.

 

The sound most visually impaired people hate to hear is…
STOP!

 

When this dreaded word is said, the visually impaired person…FREEZES!
Example, you are caning down the street, just moving smoothly alone and your observer or someone walking with you hollers out… STOP! Have ever wondered why new curbs have them bumpy Lego looking things, that is why…
Then as you wait for your heart to stop banging you think, well, I am still on the sidewalk, I did not feel a curb or a step off… WRONG, you are two steps out in tin the street. It is one of the new sidewalks, at the end of the corner is very flat and blended into the street. That is why there was no bump. and you… FREEZE!



 So blind and visually impaired folks can tell there is a ramp for wheelchairs, and they are about to step into the street.
The same rules apply here as at all intersections, however stop on the Lego bumps, while holding your cane in hand. Reach out to see if you can feel the pavement. The danger here is that it is hard to know how close you are to the intersection and more importantly, since there is no curb, the vehicles turn very sharply and can very easily hit the person standing there.
Hold your can across your body and out from you to protect you into you are ready to walk. At this point, point your cane out and up, for all to see, make it very visible for all to see, you. Listen to the traffic, following the rules and go when you feel safe. Some people say wait until it is all quiet, but I have found if you do this, you could stand there for hours. However, when you feel save, go and walk and find the far curb. Now, remember there might not be a curb; it could be you go until you feel the Lego's.
If you are visual impaired and can see some, then follow the 5-step rule look left, forward, right, behind, and then left again, before you step off. For a sighted person crossing is easy, but if a person cannot see very well, they might not be able to see the drivers in their cars, waving them across. Just remember crossing a street is dangerous, be prepared, and know the anatomy of the intersection. This little bit of knowledge and being prepared can save your life.

 

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Ours words produce “Life” or “Death” and more importantly our words show what is truly in our hearts.


President Barack Obama's, chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, use the word "retarded" to describe liberal activists whose tactics on health care, he questioned.

 Then on February the fourth, the New York Daily News reported:
White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel offered a personal mea culpa on Wednesday to advocates for the disabled who were offended that he used the phrase "f---ing retarded."
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2010/02/04/201004_rahm_says_sorry_again_over_use_of_rword.html#ixzz0ebpVIjsb

 
What is it going to take before we wake up and realize that these words that require "formal apologies" that are coming out of the White House is exactly how these men and women in power feel. There words are how these people think!

Plus, why did Mr. Rahm Emanuel have a private closed door meeting with Andrew Imparato, president of the American Association of People with Disabilities; Ricardo Thornton, a Special Olympics athlete; and, Peter Berns of The Arc, the a community-based organization for people with developmental disabilities. These men are not the ones that were offended by the word used

The only way for this to be corrected and to prove to others that remarks like this cannot be used 'is to fire' this White House Chief of Staff.

 Next, this is not the first time apologies have had to come out of the White House because of speaking before thinking. It seems to be a national policy that one can say anything about anyone, anyway they want, if you are a member of the President's staff. However, if you say anything about President Obama's White House staff or policies, you are carried out and personal destroyed. So, I guess, I better get ready!

Just last year, our President made headlines with a joke on the Tonight Show with Leno, in which President Obama compared his poor performance in bowling to the Special Olympics. President Obama said, "It's like -- it was like Special Olympics, or something."

No apologies were giving then!

But a White House spokesman was forced to release a hurried statement which said: "The president made an off-hand remark making fun of his own bowling that was in no way intended to disparage the Special Olympics. He thinks the Special Olympics is a wonderful program that gives an opportunity for people with disabilities from around the world."http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/emanuel_meets_with_special_olympics_FNa1hbIFJiGJpbo0CAdNgJ#ixzz0ebtsntIW
Words that are coming out of the White House are a disgrace. Sure White House Staff member Rahm Emanuel, made the remark over a year ago, but who knows if it is the first time and what other words are being used in those hollow halls.

Then our own President made remarks that offend millions of Americans on national television. But what takes the cake, is all of this was hidden, and when it finally got out, this white house chief of staff person, said it again and added another dirty word to it. So tell me, what is being siad in those closed doors, what are they calling us. Plus, didn't the President promise use before he was elected that their would ne NO CLOSED DOOR MEETINGS!

Yes, they want to get around this, by saying it is a word use casually, especially used by kids in schools and in classrooms. Then, if this is so, MR President Obama, stand up and let out children know that words like this hurt and destroy people. The way to do this is to ban, talk like this in all government and the best way is to prove it. Now, fire the man, who used the word.

Let our children see that if a person talks like this, there are consequences for it.

Language and what it does:
The language we use, and the images created and promoted through language, reflect the attitudes we have towards individuals and groups of people. It is important to remember that people with a disability are just that - they are people who have a disability. Adults and children with a disability, have exactly the same needs and expectations as any other person. They are consumers, workers, and individuals.
  • When we are referring to an adult or child with a disability, there is no need to comment or mention the disability unless it is directly relevant to the conversation;
  • Use 'people - first' language. Don't refer to a person as 'the disabled person ', or the paraplegic'. Appropriate terminology would include:
  • Person with a disability;
  • Person with a hearing impairment;
  • person who is deaf;
  • Person with Cerebral Palsy;
Remember - The best way to refer to a person is by their name.
There is a saying "Your attitudes affect other people's lives". This is particularly true when it comes to people with a disability or medical condition. People's attitudes affect the ways buildings are designed, the way laws are enacted, the way people are treated, the way people feel in relation to belonging to a group and whether people feel they have a right to be in a particular place or undertake a particular task. If you have a negative attitude towards people with disabilities, then this will affect the way you treat them and the way they feel about being a person.
The words we use (even nicknames) have a powerful impact on others. These words that are coming out of our mouths and or from our fingertips in typing, writing, or texting will evolve and grow in a positive way (when positive words are used) or they can rebel and react in a negative way (when negative words are used). Therefore the question is what outcome do you want?


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