THOUGHT PROVOKER 17


Sleep Shades and Blindness


Last Updated May 24, 2004
To Provoke Thought Is The First Step To Beyond




     At the window the office worker pointed out the two pedestrians to her fellow workers. From their birds-eye view they watched the young man and woman arcing their long white canes as they approached a busy lighted intersection.

     “What are they wearing on their faces?” One of the newcomers asked.

      “They are students from the blind center. I asked them the same question a couple of days ago, it’s a sleep shade.” The first worker answered.

     The female student was first to find the downward slant of a wheelchair ramp. She spoke over her shoulder to her companion.

     The male student explored the feature with his cane, his foot, lifted his shades and peered around.

     The two of them stood on the corner, obviously examining, discussing what they were confronting and needing to do. First they faced the north-south flow, then pointed over to the standing east-west lanes. With the changing of the light and the traffic pattern, they talked, listened and had further discussion.

     With the next change of the light the female student stepped out and began her crossing. The guy again lifted up his shades, replaced them and hurried to catch up with his female partner.

      “What is the object? What are they learning?” Asked the second newcomer.




RESPONSES
e-mail responses to newmanrl@cox.net




**1. “The object, I believe, is that they're learning to travel without sight. As for what they're learning, I would venture to say that--barring the notion that they are conspiring concerning the male's lifting his shades and then discussing with her what he visually sees--the female student probably really is learning to travel without sight, while the male is short-changing himself by allowing his insecurity to prompt him to lift the shades and look around. I suppose another outlook might suggest that he is confirming, or trying to, what his other senses have already shown him. But my experience with people learning to travel with the use of shades is that the more confident you feel about travelling without sight the less likely you are to lift the shades. It's equally true that those who want to learn with the use of shades are more likely to acknowledge inadvertent lifting of shades and will really try to work at not doing it.


If the male is observing the confidence of the female, particularly if he knows she's not lifting her shades, he may be learning that the system works for someone else, and may eventually be willing to trust himself with it.”

Barbara Walker (Lincoln, Nebraska, USA, bwalker@inetnebr.com )



**2. “Oh brother, this one is just a little too close to home. It's rather clear that the young woman has begun to recognize that non-visual alternatives really do work, or at least she is willing to give them an honest chance. The fellow either hasn't been at it long enough to begin to realize this, or he may be of the mind set that will never allow him to reach this conclusion. The folks in the window have good reason to be confused, our society does not prepare most folks for this sort of thing, and since the one student is lifting the shades, of course it is hard to figure out what the point is. Clearly the male student hasn't gotten the point either. Unfortunately a lot of blind folks themselves, along with professionals in the field, and groups claiming to represent the "visually impaired" don't get the point either.


I have a nephew who is also blind, and he lives in New Jersey. He went through one of those training programs where they believe that you should maximize the use of your available vision, so he was taught to use the cane, but never under the sleep-shades. I expressed serious concerns about this approach at the time, but he either wasn't able to convince his instructor that he should be using the sleep-shades, or he just wasn't ready at that point in his life to press the issue. Well in any case, he went on to find employment as a computer programmer in Philadelphia, and moved out on his own in Lyndenwald New Jersey. Each day taking the PATCO high speed line in to Center City where he catches the "L" to his job. One morning while rushing to catch his train in Lyndenwald he was walking parallel along a train and spotted an opening he believed to be the open door to the train. He stepped from the platform, without properly checking with the cane to confirm his location. It wasn't the door, it was a space between two trains. He fell to the rails below. He struck the back of his head on one of the rails, and just missed coming in contact with the 14000 volt third rail. He was knocked out from the fall. As he lay there, one of the trains pulled out, and a few minutes the second one was preparing to leave. At this point someone was walking by, and saw his foot sticking out, and stopped the train from moving forward. They got him out of there, with a serious concussion, bruised and bleeding. He just wasn't depending on the cane when he should have been, the guy in your story lifting his shades may not end up as lucky as my nephew. By the way my nephew is now a travel mentor in New Jersey, he is in the local NFB chapter, and he received some training from Doug Boone to do this, he has learned what he should have been taught by the professional giving him the travel instruction long before he had to nearly get killed.”


Jeff Altman (Lincoln, Nebraska, USA)



**3. “The concept of sighted people wearing sleep shades to see what it is like to be blind is very stupid. I don't think it should be tried at a busy intersection. A blind person naturally develops the sense of hearing more and hasn't got the advantage of "taking a sneak look"”


The people in the office would be less likely to help a real blind person who in this or another situation could be in real danger. The male in your story wasn't getting the benefit of the exercise, and the female must have known that he was cheating.”


Jann Rutherford (Sydney Australia, jannr@magnetic.net.au )


FROM ME: “After reading Jann’s response I re-read my Provoker and decided to add more detail as to the characteristics of the students. This update has that addition. A copy of the sentence I altered follows- “They are students from the blind center; one is partially blind from birth and the other is slowly losing vision.” Working in a rehab setting where we/I have students out each day learning travel skills, my mind-set had these two as being partially sighted., but I can see how it could be taken differently. If any of you who have responded to the first version feel you need to write in again, do so; a second response is good or if you wish me to totally change your first, I’ll do it.”



**4. “This topic is very interesting to me. I believe that blind people should learn good cane travel skills. On the surface, the observer might think that cane travel was all these students were learning. But, I believe, more importantly, they were learning to trust the skills they had been taught. They were learning to trust the alternative techniques of blindness and not rely on the vision they had; no matter how much or little it might have been. The woman seemed to have grasped the concept and trusted that she could travel safely and successfully as a blind person. On the other hand, the male student wasn't comfortable without using the vision he still had. He didn't trust that he could be safe without seeing where he was, so he lifted his sleep shade to assess his surroundings, before hurrying across the street. He may have been a competent cane traveler, but he wasn't sure of himself as a blind person.”


Cynthia Handel



**5. “This is very typical of sighted people learning the ways of the non-sighted. I have been in on many sessions of beginning mobility instructors and have seen the cheating glances and the blindfolds or sleepshades adjusted in such a way that they have some vision, it is not until they learn more that they will know they can navigate without sight. But in the beginning they do not trust themselves when they have lost vision, Unlike so many of us they do not have the choice of taken furtive glances. I have thought at first that this should not happen, that someone should make them abide by the rules. But then I also think about what a visually impaired person does, they take advantage of every opportunity to get back out into the world, so why should a student be forced into abiding by strict enforcement, maybe if they learn to take advantage of momentary glances, they can better teach the visually impaired to take advantage of any opportunity they can.”


Mike Wardin (Columbia, Missouri, USA)



**6. “Now this is an interesting story. Are these pedestrians sighted people who are in training to become mobility instructors or partially sighted clients at a rehabilitation center who are completing a mobility instructor's assignment while blindfolded?


I spent some time in a rehabilitation center years ago where I was asked to perform such tasks such as sorting money while wearing a blindfold. I could never understand why I had to do this since I have some vision and my vision has been stable throughout my life and is expected to remain that way.


Fortunately, I was never asked to wear a blindfold during mobility training. It seems to me that partially sighted people, especially if their vision is stable, should be encouraged to use what vision they have.”


Abbie Johnson (Sheridan, Wyoming, USA, abbie@wavecome.net )



FROM ME: “Which partially sighted person do we ask to learn non-visual techniques? Why?”



**7. “ It is obvious to me in this short story that the young man who is wearing the sleep shades is less than serious about his training. By Lifting his shades he is really not " acting " as a blind person. How many of us can " lift our shades"? If this person, the young man, is going to be a mobility trainer I would not want him working with me. We put our lives in the hands of others who are paid well for their services, as in training. So lets take the ladies services instead of the young mans. In closing I do appreciate a forum such as this in which we can voice an opinion and speak freely. Thanks. “


Lee a. stone (Hudson, New York email" stonedge@taconic.net )



**8. “You're a glutton for punishment. This is one of the most heated issues you can pick. I'll be interested to see what you pick. I'm going to sit on my post for a while, though, because my view is that of a person who went through gradual vision loss and not a professional. You are very brave in bringing this one up. J”


Sarah J. Blake (Web site: Email: grayce@iquest.net )



**9. “ This is an issue that I've struggled with for such a long time because I thought I could use what vision I had. Like many other partials, I felt that I could make it on the vision I have. What finally convinced me that I need to try using the sleep shades {with ANY good travel instructor}. My sister went through the training center in Lincoln, Nebraska and after watching her frustrations with the sleep shades, we both decided that it wouldn't be a bad thing for me either. When I get the opportunity, I'll give it a try. I'm no longer opposed to the use of sleep shades.”


Bonnie Ainsworth (NFBtalk list, Laramie, Wyoming, USA, bonniem@cyberhighway.net (



**10. “I must say that I have struggled with this one. I was made to wear sleep shades at the rehab program that I attended. I didn't see the sense then, but I did a few years later when I lost my remaining vision. Perhaps the couple in the story were sighted participants in some kind of sensitivity exercise, or were O. and M. instructor trainees.”


Andy Baracco (NFBtalk list)



**11. “Having been to the Center in Lincoln, the object of what the two are supposed to be doing is learning proper cane techniques and how to get around using their other senses. From the story above, I would have to say that the female has probably been at the Center longer and has had more experience with crossing busy streets. I would also have to say that the male is fairly new and is not yet sure of himself when it comes to relying on hearing and his other senses to get around. Unfortunately the peeking will get him into trouble and he won't learn to use his hearing and other senses as quickly.


I hated the sleep shades, but they did help in the training and in developing a sense of direction. It also gives you a feel for traffic, buildings, alcoves and the like.


Rhonda Sampley (Omaha, Nebraska, USA)



**12. “In reading this thought Provoker, I feel this all too familiar to me. I was a student at the Nebraska Orientation Center for the Blind for 7 months and discovered that the sleep shades were not a punishment, rather they were a tool for me to learn alternative techniques and not rely on what little usable vision I have. I thought that when I first started my training, the sleep shades would be a hindrance, but in more ways than one they were a big help to me! I was able to build my self-confidence and skills in so many things...everything that is offered there. I had a lot of skills when I arrived at the Center, but felt that they could use some brushing up. Braille, computers, and travel were my strengths, but felt a little weak in the home making area and wood shop. Even though I dreaded shop class, I did learn something out of it...and that was problem solving-skills. Another example is, travel gave me the chance to broaden my sense of direction and orientation. In Braille, I brushed up on my reading speed and then ended up helping teach for our instructor. Finally, in computers I learned the basics with Jaws and then after 3 weeks said that I was confident and didn't need that class because I felt I could explore and teach myself. My thought is that, there are similarities in the versions of a program and once you have learned one, you can pretty much learn from that point on...in most cases. With giving that explanation, I can now tell you my feelings on the sleep shades. Many people get frustrated with them, but really if you take each day one at a time and concentrate you will master it. The sleep shades are not to punish you in any way, they are a tool to help you learn. I always told myself, the training will get easier as time goes on...and it is the truth. God Bless”


Carla Kay Laesch (Lincoln, Nebraska, USA, carlakay@inetnebr.com )



**13. “This short story would seem straight-forward enough. Here we have two travelers under sleepshades. One is cheating and one is not. But if we look at the underlying issues here, we might find a debate on sleepshades and their usefulness for training blind and visually impaired persons for traveling. When I was a small boy, I too used the sleepshades because I had some light perception in my left eye. I also had a habit of peering out from underneath the shades when I thought my instructor wasn't looking. Now, here I am at 24 with no sight at all and I discover that I have no way of "peeking" anymore. Many others will find themselves in this situation. When people are first starting out under the shades, it is easy to understand why they are tempted to peek under them at times. Whether you are an adult or a child, the element of fear can cause you to reflexively try and use your sight when you are in unfamiliar surroundings. But doing this will not teach you the alternative skills that are necessary to stay mobile when and if that time comes when your remaining vision fades.”


Ryan Osentowski (Lincoln, Nebraska, USA)



**14. “We make extensive use of the sleep shades at the Colorado Center, and find that those with residual vision do much better, if they use them consistently. Lifting them up, however, defeats part of their purpose. We get some comments from the public, but most never seem to notice. As do, I believe, most NFB centers, and programs with a rooting in our philosophy, they are not just limited to travel.”


Dave Hyde (NFBtalk list, Colorado Denver, USA)



**15. “Thank you very much! I plan on printing and passing that on to my son’s teacher, maybe we can gain some more headway with her. Since we tend to but-heads about a lot of issues.”


Christine (Blindfam list)



**16. "What are they learning? What's the point?" the woman asks.


GOOD QUESTION! Having been through such a course at the Orientation Center for the Blind in Albany California, I have to say I also wonder. Being nearly blind, but still relying on what's left of my senses and a good guide dog, I found that the sleepshade dulled my facial vision, took all my attention and was a dreadful distraction. I cannot remember the exact directions on how to cross the street, but I DO remember how uncomfortable that shade was. It is like trying to learn with a clothespin clipped to your...ear. (smile) I tried to get them to accept me using a pair of sufficiently blacked out dark glasses which would not put pressure on my face, or an eye-patch since I have only one eye that functions. No way. They insisted on that mask. It hampered my learning and slowed it down.


The temptation to cheat and look under the edge of the mask was difficult not to obey. Even the faint shadows that might have been visible would have kept me IN the world instead of floating in space. I was disoriented and dealing with that disorientation while still trying to LEARN new tasks and the effort was well nigh beyond me.”


Sylvia Stevens (USA)



FROM ME: “Is there anyone out there using something other than a sleep shade? The lady makes a good point. If the sleep shade gets in the way or is uncomfortable, what else may be used to block vision?”


17. “There can be a number of answers to this question. They might be student teachers learning to be O&M instructors. Or both might have a little vision and are learning O&M blindfolded (as my husband Bob chose to do). If they are learning to go blindfolded, then he might be cheating. If so, the male won't learn as quickly as the female, who keeps her blindfold on. I have to wonder if the male would ever learn to trust a guide dog, if he doesn't trust a cane and/or his own senses. I may be way out in left field about this, but I don't think he's learning much.”


Carolyn (Rplist, Clearwater, Florida, USA)



**18. “When you speak of "travel instructors", I assume you are talking of what we here call mobility instructors. I know that, during their training, mobility instructors are blindfolded to teach them to use their other senses, so that they could be better equipped to train blind people, as they could then transfer this sensory information without having to fall back on visual landmarks or missing such clues as the smell of a shop or the sound of a post office, etc.”


Christo de Clerk (Alberton, South Africa)



**19. “The object appears to be learning cane travel without using residual sight. The guy hasn't gotten comfortable with that idea yet and appears quite new to the situations. The woman appears to be taking the lead, locating the ramp first, etc. At least, from the guy's hesitancy and the woman's confidence, I presume we're seeing a skilled student and an unskilled student paired together.”

Brett Crow (USA, Brettcrow@aol.com )



**20. “Sylvia here again. One more comment on the sleepshade. I mentioned that I tried to get the school to try me with blacked out lenses (the glasses I showed them were very close fitting and had side pieces which completely obscured light. the lenses were coated with tape inside, and black enamel paint) or an eye patch. I had the instructor wear the blacked out glasses and he, too, agreed that they occluded light sufficiently that they would have worked. STILL he insisted on the shade. I do understand the use of the sleepshade and I totally agree with the motives. They are sound, good and effective. However, the sleepshade may not be the best alternative for all. Other methods must be at least considered.


Obscuration of facial vision was a major objection, but not all of it. The other objection that I had, and STILL have, is the stupidity factor. I'm sorry, but a person tapping their way down a busy street in dark glasses or an eye patch or a bandage, looks blind, but normally blind. A person doing the same in a sleepshade looks like a mental case, a masochist looking for a lamppost to whack himself with, or a college hazing ritual. It is (and I will not mince words here) publicly humiliating. I am NOT ashamed to be visually impaired. I am proud and independent with my dog and my cane. But that shade made a laughing stock of me. I heard whispers on the bus that I had NEVER heard with my dog or my cane. I had one man try to take the shade off me and had a lady on a bus tell me "You're being foolish!". I was dealing with the fright and disorientation of having my face covered and I was emotionally vulnerable. Had I had a patch or glasses, I think I would have been less conspicuous and I could have handled it FAR better.


In ALL my other classes, where I was not in public, I had hassles with spatial orientation and dizziness (whether from the blackness or the pressure from the straps, I don't know) but I did not have the panic. I traveled the halls of the school with ease, the campus... because everyone understood the mask and its necessity. It was in public that I suffered. I am not being melodramatic, it was emotional distress on top of the physical vertigo.


I STRONGLY urge that some alternative, less obvious light-blocking method be used.”


Sylvia Stevens (San Francisco, California, USA)



**21. “I don't know if my response will get through. I usually just read the responses that come in, but as everyone has mentioned, this is a pretty heated topic. I could not leave this one alone.


My uncle who I greatly admire and miss, as he passed away in April, experienced a visual impairment. He had an artificial eye and then was 20/200 in the other. He was trained to be a computer programmer, but never to use a cane.


As my uncle aged, he began to experience more difficulty with his vision. As most of us, he start feeling and noticing this aging process in his late 30's, early 40's. Of course, when we age, the weakest part of our bodies experience it first. For most people with disease or injury (even congenital injury) to their eyes; they experience age related vision loss earlier. With these other complications, these people often are not good candidates for surgery.


My uncle, as well as many of the clients I see as a counselor now, are rendered incapable from this aging process. These people then have to scramble to save their jobs, their social lives, their independence at home...... In my uncle's case; this hardship ended in the divorce of he and his wife.


The purpose for using sleepshades in any case of training - for sighted or partially sighted individuals - should be only to give the individuals confidence in non-visual alternatives. Partially sighted individuals may find that non-visual techniques are more effective in some situations and can combine the use of both non-visual and visual techniques. The very least a partially sighted person would learn is: if I can do this with no sight; I can certainly do this, and I am not going to give up.


Had my uncle had the knowledge of non-visual techniques; he would not have had to scramble and fear the loss of independence, job and home all over again. He would have just begun relying more heavily on the non-visual, and less on the visual, and gone right on with his life.


I guess I have my uncle to thank for my career choice. And with that, I dedicate the work I do to him.”


Linda Chilcott, (Omaha, Nebraska, USA)


FROM ME: “How many stories have we all heard about an individual who has lost it all when it became difficult to function at work, home and play. Have any of you heard this one- the learning of alternatives is the difference between being an inferior sighted person verses being a competent blind person.”



**22. “Here is my response to the sleepshade thought provoker. It might be controversial. Oh well.


When I was young, I heard about people being forced to use sleepshades to learn to travel and assumed this would happen to me. I dreaded it since I do not like mask-type things on my face and was afraid of the dark. I could see light, dark and colors in the right eye and nothing in the left. I had glaucoma and was told at a very young age that due to the pressure in my right eye, the eye would become larger and larger and might rupture. It could happen any time. This was really scary to me as a kid.


My "vision" did gradually deteriorate, which was most noticeable at age thirteen. If any agency people had forced me to suddenly use completely dark sleepshades, I would have been frightened and probably not very cooperative even though the "vision" I had was not all that usable. It would have been a matter of principle for me. If they started out with something very opaque and worked up to the black ones gradually, I might have been okay. I'm just not good at the all or nothing, everybody do it the same way, kind of approach. I also feel that many rehab people assume that the fear of sleepshades comes from being afraid of blindness when for many people it is fear of the dark and of masks that pose some of the problem.


Luckily agency people never did the sleepshade thing on me since I had so little usable vision. I had three pairs of sunglasses from much light coming in to dark gray with very little light coming in. I worked from the light ones to the dark ones and then borrowed sleepshades from the agency. I got around just the same with the sleepshades on, but my working up to them helped me deal with fear of the dark and fear of a mask. I didn't have to wear them very long.

When the time came that I chose to have the right eye enucleated, I knew that I could still function okay. After talking to Hank Vetter, who explained to me that being without light perception was not the same as being in the dark, I calmed down. After the surgery, the hospital staff did not want me to get out of bed to move around by myself and insisted on having someone there to help me eat. I told them I had always been blind and functioned that way and would be fine. The only thing that startled me at this time was that I sat in a chair near the window and couldn't figure out where the heat was coming from, since it was not coming from a heater (the surgery was done in the summer). Finally I realized it was the sunshine warming my chair.


I do not know what to say about the couple in the story except that it seems to me that cheating in any area doesn't help in the long run. I am very thankful that I was not "agencied" in this matter but had and gave myself the opportunity to make the changes in my own way which worked best for me. I hope some day agencies for the blind will realize that they are working with individuals whose needs may not all be the same; therefore the training could be individualized without students being cheated or cheating themselves in learning what they really need to know to get by well in this world.”


Laurie Merryfield (Renton, Washington, USA)



FROM ME: “Notice Laurie mention of Hank, a blind friend. His “peer counseling” is what made it work for her.”



**23. “I did read this particular provoker, and the thought I had was that the person who kept lifting his sleep shades would not benefit from mobility training because he would never trust it.


Can't recall if I told you about Ari. He was blind, and imprisoned for bank robbery. They caught him when he stole a car for the getaway, and presumably couldn't see well enough to drive it properly, so crashed it into an abutment.


Anyway, Ari was imprisoned in New York, so Dr. Jernigan sent us his letter, and I began a correspondence with him. He was imprisoned in a "Sensory challenged unit" along with people who were deaf, or retarded, or had various other handicaps. Ari couldn't believe what my letters said about blindness, so David and Brad (Greenspan) went up to the prison. Brad is blind and a probation officer. Seems appropriate. David brought some material to read, and read the Braille aloud to the inmates. None of them could believe he was so fast. (He reads between three and four hundred words a minute)


When Ari came up for parole, we volunteered to sponsor him, so he came to live with us for awhile. We helped get him a job and I took him out under sleep shades and gave him some mobility training so he could take the train to work. David also took him across our local four lane highway so he would realize a blind person could, indeed do that.


When the Commission for the Blind finally got around to sending a mobility instructor, the man came with a short cane (you know the type). Ari was already using an NFB cane we loaned him, and refused to use the short cane. He told us it was too dangerous, as if you held it out in front of you as you walked, and the cane encountered an obstacle, the cane would be driven forcibly into your privates. That made sense to me. But Ed K., the mobility person, said "If you use the long cane, you can't get mobility from us." Very funny, Ed. His statement didn't hold up under the barrage of letters we sent, with copies right up to the head of the Commission. The Commission changed its policy right after that.


The story has an unhappy ending, but maybe it just goes to show equal opportunities for blind bank robbers. I had helped Ari open an account at a local bank so he could cash his paycheck. I didn't expect him to forge a check and embezzle $12,000 out of the bank!


Before I knew about this, he moved out, moving in with a girlfriend in New York City. She tossed him after awhile. He'd been in jail for seven years, which was too long. He didn't know the value of money, and tended to blow his paycheck the first weekend, though he wouldn't have more for two weeks. Then he fell back into drugs. We found a packet of coke on our bathroom windowsill. Since I had children in the house, that was the end of the relationship. I flushed it away of course.


When the secret service man called me, Ari was already back in jail in the city for holding someone up on the street. I gave him Ari's prison address, and he said, "I didn't think it would be so easy." I told him we refused to help Ari break the law. Apparently he had deliberately done something to get himself arrested because he didn't believe a blind person could survive out here. It was easier in prison, where he had talking books and college courses.


Chances are, he's still in prison.”


Lori Stayer (Merrict, New York, USA)


FROM ME: “Guess alternative aren’t always enough!”



**24. “One of the primary uses of the sleepshades in rehabilitation training is to maximize the value of the remaining vision. It may sound a little paradoxical to say that you can learn to maximize your remaining vision by not using it, but experience has taught otherwise. If one has limited vision, there is a choice to be made: do I live within the limits of what my sight can do or do I learn alternatives that will permit me to combine them with the residual vision and they increase the scope of my choices? While there are a few strategies for learning how to utilize residual vision, those strategies by themselves don't give you any options once you reach the outer limits of usefulness. Unless you have acquired confident and competent use of alternatives, you lock yourself into a lifestyle that allows limited vision to define a limited life. Sleepshades are not a magic bullet that guarantees success, but a thoroughgoing immersion in a learning situation normally increases the efficiency of learning and assures greater retention. That strikes me as a pretty good trade-off for the temporary discomfort of blocking residual vision. The same concept of immersion is sometimes used in teaching a foreign language and, to the best of my knowledge, it works pretty well. Over the years at Nebraska Services for the Visually Impaired we heard a great deal of hostility against the use of sleepshades, but this generally reflected anxiety about loss of visual contact with the environment rather than a rational assessment of the value of sleepshades as a training tool.”


James Nyman (Lincoln, Nebraska, USA)


FROM ME: “What other skills appear to lend themselves to be best learned via the immersion tactic?”



**25. “I started receiving O&M instruction at the age of 7. Back then, the consensus was that I had light perception only. However, this many years later, I and various professionals who have worked with me over the years realize that I had some extremely usable vision and used it fairly well. Still, I mastered the cane with no problem. I learned to use it and my vision in combination. Since my eye condition was considered stable at the time, the issue of vision loss was never addressed.


That vision loss started occurring in brief periods when I was a teenager. Even at the school for the blind, no one picked up on what was happening. The problem was misdiagnosed, and I continued to experience these brief periods of loss for several years. I tended to travel a bit more slowly during these times, but I didn't experience much real difficulty. My main problem was the fear that overwhelmed me when these episodes came on. I didn't fear a loss of functioning so much as I feared not knowing whether the loss was temporary or how long it would last.


When I began training with my guide dog, I discussed this with my instructor. He decided to plan some nighttime instruction for me so that I would be able to develop more trust in the dog and would have the confidence to travel both at night and during the periods of vision loss. I'm afraid I would have found the idea of wearing sleepshades as terrifying as the temporary vision loss, although I'm not sure why. But it was perfectly natural for me to travel at night, and since I had no usable night vision, this filled the need for me very well.

I think it is important for people who are experiencing what will eventually be a permanent and complete loss of vision to learn to travel without that vision. For a person who experiences intermittent losses, I think it is important to provide instruction in a variety of circumstances. That person needs to know how to cope with whatever phase of the cycle he is in. Even using alternative techniques, it is impossible to ignore the input from what is seen. I eventually lived for a year in that gray fog of vision loss before having surgery to repair retinal detachment and corneal damage which had contributed to the loss. Even though I am a good cane traveler, I find myself naturally inclined to notice and rely on landmarks which I can see or startled by the appearance of things I had never known were there before.


I do think it is important for professionals to have experienced travel under the blindfold. I wish it were as possible for them to have such extensive experience traveling with simulators. This would give a much more accurate picture of the needs of potential clients, I think.”


Sarah J. Blake (Anderson, Indiana, USA, Web site: Email: grayce@ihquest.net )


FROM ME: “Working at night where vision is not useful as we see in this case was a common sense alternative approach to using the sleep shade. Any others?”



**26. “Wow! This is a good one. I would have been the one peeking, I'm sure. I have lost almost all of my sight, and could lose the rest of it at any time. In my mobility class, I was taught to use what sight I had. Also when I was in Guide Dog School, they taught me the same. I really feel cheated now though. I wish I could have been trained blind folded. I am confident with my dog and my cane, but I do use what sight I have for whatever I can. But being in the circumstances of losing what sight I have overnight, I fear that the trust I have now, might not be as confident when I can't see at all.


For my own sake, when I take my dog out for walks, I do try to do it just with my eyes closed and can feel my insecurities coming out. I think everyone that has sight loss with a chance to lose more, should be made to train with shades on. I am planning on having a friend or family member work with me, so that I can achieve some sort of stability when my sight is gone.


If the man was cheating by peeking, he is doing himself a big injustice, and doesn't realize it until it's too late. I wish I could have been the brave woman!!!!!!!”


Ann Duncan (Missouri, USA Tear2many@aol.com )



**27. “First, every blind person should learn alternative techniques using the shades if they have any remaining vision at all.


For industrial arts, traveling and home economics teachers doing work with the blind the blindfold is also necessary. They too need to learn alternative techniques of blindness, and learn to trust those techniques. Without this skill, how can they adequately expect to pass on such confidence to their students?


Any less is shortchanging those who expect to be trained.”


Richard Webb (Burlington, Iowa, USA)



**28. “I see others on this list that I know. I was against using the blindfolding method when I learned travel when we all were being trained together. Fighting it like I did I felt I was right, saying things like “Use it or lose it. Or, use what God gave you for as long as you can. And all that.” I was really feeling bad about my vision loss back then. I even felt worse about it when each time I noticed I had lost more vision; losing it like allot of us do, one piece at a time, going blind slow. It was just one big heart ache after another, it was HELL.” I now think it would have been better for me if I had used the blindfold.”


(No name Please)



**29. “I went through the Vets program five times for cane walking. They didn’t push the blindfold much and most of us didn’t use it. Consequently when you lose more vision you need to learn more about the cane and using what vision you have left at the time. I liked the trips, and some of the guys didn’t. Maybe this is another case where the government is foolishly wasting our tax dollars?”



**30. “I have been reading the responses to your latest provoker on sleepshades. Laurie Merryfield brought out a very interesting point in that some people do not have a problem with learning the skills of blindness, but may have a problem with something unrelated to blindness issues, such as fear of the dark. I am in favor of the basic idea of sleepshade training because it seems that sleepshades are the best way we have so far to teach people nonvisual techniques. However, sometimes other fears get in the way of people learning effectively while under shades. I know from my own experience that I did not like looking at black all the time. I think a lot of people would never admit that they were afraid of something or hesitant about something that wasn't related to blindness, especially if they were in blindness skills training. Does anyone out there have any ideas about how a counselor or orientation teacher may approach this type of problem?”


Cheryl Livingston (Lincoln, Nebraska, USA)



**31. “I can relate to the person who had mobility training since she was seven, and to them thinking of only light perception. They tried to tell my mom I couldn't see either. as for sleep shades, I can't ever remember having to use them on a bus, but I can remember using them at my junior high school. I finally told the mobility teacher I didn't want to do that. I don't know if doing the sleepshade thing did me any good, but my mobility teacher told me I should do it in case I lost more vision. My vision is stable. She relented and I didn't have any more training in that fashion. I use visual landmarks a lot, but I am very familiar with the touch technique. I have c.p. Too, and really don't think I did such a good job with traveling with a sleep shade.”


Dawn Petty (USA)



FROM ME: “this young woman's case brings up yet another question in the use of blocking out vision during training. How about using a sleep shade on some one who is additionally mobility disabled? Like with CP or in a wheelchair or deafness…?”


**32. “This is such a complicated topic that I've avoided getting involved with it, but I'll try to express myself briefly.


I am an orientation and mobility specialist working with adults. I find that blindfolding is useful in training, but not at the expense of failing to teach the person to travel while utilizing everything. When you're blindfolded, it's easier to notice sounds and the cane but that doesn't mean you'll notice them when the blindfold is off and you're distracted with vision.


The ultimate skill that I try to teach people is to use the other senses and cane information AT THE SAME TIME that they're using vision, not exclusively one or the other. In my experience:


1) Blindfolding doesn't really achieve that ability to combine everything effectively and 2) it's definitely NOT true that the only way (or even the best way) to notice and learn to use sounds and the cane and other information is to put on a blindfold. I know from years of experience that people can very effectively learn to notice other things while they are not blindfolded. I find that this is a more effective way to teach it because it's real-life, it's what they'll be doing after training.


I'll give you just a few examples. Last week I was working with man in his 50's who has had stable vision all his life but never learned to travel independently. This was his fifth lesson. He approached a door where he had to find the doorbell. He pressed his face against the door, searched and searched and couldn't find the button. I then encouraged him to scan it with his hand. He was very awkward with this because he wasn't accustomed to using touch, and needed to learn to use his hands to get tactile information, but after a short time he found it. The next lesson, he approached the same door. He didn't look at all, he just felt with his hand and found the button and pushed it. If he had worn a blindfold, he would have learned how to find things with his hand, but he would NOT have learned how much more effective touch is than vision because he wouldn't have had an opportunity to realize how ineffective his vision is there.


About a month ago I was working with a woman who had done quite a bit with blindfold (straining to use her vision gives her headaches so she really appreciates being able to do things without looking). On this particular lesson, she did not have a blindfold and approached a short stairway with her cane (it was three steps, going up to a raised platform). It was dark, and the stairs were covered with carpet that matched the rest of the floor. She bent way down trying to see them. She became frustrated and frightened because she was not visually able to make out the details. This is usually upsetting to people who are losing their vision so I was very gentle when I suggested to her that she could get all the information with the cane, as she had done before. Even though she had done other stairs blindfolded, she didn't believe she could get enough information with the cane, so we spent the next 20 minutes exploring the stairs with her cane and negotiating the stairs when she couldn't see them well enough. There was even a wire draped over the stairs which she didn't see and was able to find it with the cane when using it properly. I know that if she had worn a blindfold for this experience she would have (again) learned that she can do it without vision, but she needed to really learn to trust that she can get this information with the cane when she is able to see, and learn that it's okay if she can't see enough details, the cane will fill in the rest. About a year ago a woman with a recent vision loss was walking for the first time with her cane outside on the sidewalk. At one point, where the shadows and the shade of the sidewalk made it difficult to see, she became frightened and disoriented because she couldn't see the sidewalk well enough at that point to know where to go. I had her listen to the traffic, which she had been too distracted to notice. It took a few minutes to calm down enough to notice what I was asking her to notice, but then she heard the car pass her and stop ahead at the stop sign. She then learned to pay attention to sounds like traffic AT THE SAME TIME that she is distracted by visual information (also using the cane information, but this was easy because I don't have people travel outside until the use of the cane is so automatic that they don't have to think about it, they incorporate that information with everything else they are getting)


Of the three clients, only the second one ever used a blindfold and that was because she was initially so frightened and stressed that I asked her to shut her eyes while I guided her. We spent a half-hour just walking around and talking while she relaxed and realized she didn't need to strain and look. Most people can learn this without a blindfold but, as I said, I feel there are times that a blindfold is helpful. I just don't believe that everyone must use it in their training, nor that they should use it throughout their training. It's very important to COMBINE all the information including visual information, and also to realize which ways are most effective for getting which information. This is difficult or impossible to learn with a blindfold, because one choice for getting that information -- vision -- isn't possible, so you can't compare and choose how to get the information.


Well, so much for being "brief"! That's why I didn't even attempt this one, it's too complicated to explain briefly. Another reason to avoid this issue is that there seems to be a lot of emotion invested by some O&M specialists who believe that one way or the other is the only way to do it, and/or they think the training should be done ALL one way or the other (all with, or all without the blindfold).”


Dona Sauerburger, COMS (Gambrills, Maryland, USA >)



**33. “HELLO, I GUESS I'D LIKE TO SAY IT SOUNDS LIKE WE HAVE TWO TRAVELERS, ONE MORE ADAPTED TO HER SURROUNDINGS AND PROBABLY BEEN AT IT LONGER THAN HER FRIEND. AND ONE JUST LEARNING TO COPE WITH BLINDNESS AND GOING THROUGH THE LEARNING MOTIONS. I HAVE BEEN A PARTICIPANT IN BOTH TYPES OF PROGRAMS, I THINK THEY BOTH HAVE PROS AND CONS LIKE ANYTHING IN LIFE YOU ADJUST OR YOU DON'T IT'S ALL UP TO YOU. WITH SLEEP SHADES I DON'T THINK YOU ARE READY FOR TOTAL DARKNESS AT ANY POINT BUT YOU EVENTUALLY ADJUST. IF YOU WANT TO SOCIALIZE, TRAVEL AND BE INDEPENDENT, YOU GET THE TRAINING THAT YOU NEED, ALSO WHAT YOU GET OUT OF IT LEARNING. LEARNING IS A NEVER ENDING PROCESS, USE ALL OF YOUR RESOURCES. IT REALLY HELPED MY CONFIDENCE AND SORT OF KICK STARTED ALL OF MY OTHER SENSES. DID I CHEAT WHEN I HAD MY SHADES ON? Yes, I DID, AND AFTER A WEEK OR SO I BECAME A PROFICIENT TRAVELER WITH SHADES AND WITHOUT. I'M NOT AFRAID TO TRAVEL ANYWHERE IN THE USA, SURE I'M AFRAID OF NEW PLACES BUT I'M WILLING TO TRAVEL ANYWHERE BECAUSE OF MY TRAINING. PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT AND PATIENCE IS A VIRTUE.


DAVID HIDE SAY HI, TO EVERYONE AT CBB. MARK, MARY, JENNIFER AND DAN.


M. L. PATLAN (Omaha, Nebraska, USA, WOLF WOLFAXIM@AOL.COM)



**34. “Well, here's my "for what its worth". I went through sleepshade training over 20 years ago. It sure doesn't seem like it on one hand but, on the other, hand it seems like centuries ago. So, all that we talked about that was happening to others...vision loss...now seems to be happening to me. No, its not darkness or anything like that. It is an annoying gray fog which is the result of a thick cornea which holds more fluid than it should. Yes, it is very frustrating and uncomfortable and even scary at times but, if not for sleepshade training I wouldn't have the sense of reasoning that I gained from that training. You see, it isn't any one physical thing that you learn how to do that makes that training so valuable. It is the method of working out an alternative solution to the problem at hand that is what makes the experience so valuable. When the guy in the story lifts up his shades its not the particular situation that he thinks he is stepping around, it is the experience of problem resolution that he is destroying. Not to mention the development of self-confidence that is so difficult to attain because we are so encouraged by society to let others take care of us.


I am finding now that there are many more frustrations with the foggy vision than there was while learning techniques under sleepshades. Yes, you could remove the shades after 5:00 p.m. so, the thing to do while under shades between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. was to put yourself in a "what if" mode...That is, "what if I can't really remove these shades? What would I do? Even at the beginning when you were totally disoriented and didn't know what you were doing you simply needed to be aware of the fact that there were other people around you who had gotten through it and they were just every-day ordinary people. This for me is the essence of the value of that sort of training. Had I not gone through that training I know that I would be very likely to fall into the same traps that many people with a slow but, progressive loss of vision go through. I know that because, even with that training as part of my background, I still have some of those struggles.


Well, I'd rather not be going through this but, I'd rather not have to pay my bills, do the dishes, clean my house, or allot of other things if I didn't have to either. The whole thing and the whole point is about problem solving now isn't it? That seems to be what life is all about and we can either deal with it or pass it off on someone else. Relying on vision that continues to decrease is like buying on credit beyond your means. Eventually the "chickens will come home to roost" and, you can either deal with it or, as blind people are all too often encouraged to do, pass it off. Its like allot of things, it isn't that bad really but, like many other chores in life, it is all too easy to put more energy into avoiding the task than it is to just deal with it.


People in Lincoln, Nebraska used to know what the purpose of the shades were and there was support from the general public (including the state legislature) as to what was going on. I don't know if that is still the case there but, I feel that society in general has actually slipped back in its understanding of this sort of orientation and adjustment training in the blindness field. We could talk about the damage done by the ADA but, that's a whole other "provocative" issue in and of itself. At any rate, we have to regain the ground that has been lost in this "age of awareness" and I think that sleepshade training is the most visible and effective way that this can be done. The general public must see that regaining one's lost vision is not the only successful outcome when it comes to solving the problems of blindness.”


Bob Simonson (Omaha, Nebraska)



**35. “On this one I feel that I need to add a little more to my earlier comments. There have been several people referring to the shades being used because their vision may become worse, and even an issue that involves being able to compare their ability to function visually as compared with using a non-visual technique. Nobody should consider the possibility of further vision loss as a reason for training under sleep-shades, the real reasons are that people will in almost every case choose to use their remaining vision over attempting to use a non-visual approach, and therefore are unlikely to effectively learn the non-visual techniques and problem solving skills to the degree that they can truly rely upon them should vision be a component of the training experience. also, an individual that is instinctively turning to a visual technique, without also considering a non-visual one, clearly must be functioning under both a habit and a belief system that is based on the idea that visual techniques are superior in every case to the non-visual one, or that a non-visual means of completing the task simply does not exist. Having such beliefs held as truth, an individual is very likely to conclude that a totally blind person is less capable than a person with some limited functional vision. Of course this means that as a person with limited functional vision, you can only reach one logical conclusion, when comparing yourself to a person with normal visual fuction. This is exactly what I have observed happening to individuals trained in an environment where the first concern is utilizing remaining vision. In regard to being able to compare visual to non-visual techniques, I am not aware of any training program which either requires their clients to wear the sleep-shades twenty-four hours a day, or has them permently attached to the person's face for life. I think we need to give blind people more credit, learning does not begin or end with an O&M instructor. I have been a travel instructor for more than seven years and have worked in the field of blindness for more than ten years, not to mention having been blind for more than twenty years, and I have not witnessed any of the problems described by the gentleman who teaches O&M, that is among persons trained in a program which uses sleep-shades extensively, and emphasizes non-visual techniques over using visual techniques. I would say with the greatest of confidence that the cases he relates in his discussion are the direct result of a instructional approach which emphasizes the use of vision rather than the development of effective non-visual alternatives, and his conclusion that the problem was created by the use of the sleep-shades, and the learning techniques to more effectively utilize remaining vision represents the solution is in no small part based upon his own belief system, which inspite of his professional background, clearly holds at least some notion that non-visual techniques are not truly equal to those based on the use of vision. By no means do I believe that anyone should be discouraged from developing low vision techniques, the issue is a matter of timing. A person that is exposed to such techniques before being exposed to non-visual ones, will likely resist or out right refuse to learn the non-visual techniques, believing that vision is the superior approach. If one truly believes that non-visual techniques are equal to their visual counterparts, that totally blind individuals are the equal of their sighted peers, and that blind individuals are as equally capable of learning through experience as are sighted persons, then why should their be any concern about the ability of a person with some functional vision to learn to also incorporate and utilize vision along with the non-visual techniques? In regard to the person's ability to learn non-visual skills without the sleep-shades, I would have to question how the instructor, or of greater importance how the student, truly knows that the successful result is based on only non-visual methods. Should an individual complete training with even the slightest notion that his or her success in completing a task was based on the use of vision rather than solely based upon the use of non-visual techniques, can that individual possibly trust that skill will actually carry him or her through in a situation where visual infromation is not available. Certainly a person with limited visual function is going to experience a situation where visual information is not a viable option, or that individual would not be needing training. If an individual does not trust the non-visual techniques on the same deep level as most people trust their vision, then that person doesn't have a viable option without the use of vision. If an individual cannot relibly function under the majority of environmental conditions, i. e. locate a set of steps or other situations which may represent a danger, using vision, then why is this person attempting to travel based on visual function only? Unless both the student and the instructor believe on some level that using a white cane is somehow a negative experience to be avoided, then why not use both the non-visual and visual techniques together all of the time? If the person is using both together, and still having fears about dealing with environmental surprizes, then isn't this a matter of limited experience, and not some complex problem of inergrating vision and non-visual techniques together? fFor that matter, let us suppose that a person with some functional vision finds himself, or her self, in a situation where his or her level of visual function could be utilized, but rather chooses to use a non-visual technique instead, what is wrong with that? After all the object is to finish the task effectively, and not the means by which it is done. By all means teach low vision techniques when appropriate, but please make certain that all of the person's resources are fully developed, and that you and the student arn't just going through the motions. I am pleased that this gentleman is using the sleep-shades to some degree, but unless you are willing to make a commitment to a full program where the student is using the shades in all skill areas as we do here, then your opinion is just that, your opinion. I have been through both types of programs, and I cannot recommend a program to any blind person that does not make extensive use of the sleep-shades. This is not an emotional response, this is the opinion of a blind person that has lived with the result of both approaches, and a professional that has observed several hundred blind individuals experienceing both types of programs.”


Jeff Altman (Lincoln, Nebraska, USA)


FROM ME: “ I wrote Jeff back and asked, “Why sleep shades and not some other type of tool to block out vision?”


“Well, I can't say that I disagree with this issue, but I am yet to find a set of glasses that truly blocks out light as effectively as sleep-shades. Actually thats not really the case, when I went through training in Pittsburgh many years ago, I was a contact lense wearer, and the regular sleep shades caused me a lot of discomfort. My instructor then had me wear a pair of modified sun glasses. They were painted black, and had some black foam rubber glued around the top and edges. The problem is they were the wrap around style popular in the fifties and sixties, and I havn't seen anything like them in years. The woman that is raising this issue is recalling a situation which both occured a number of years in the past, and also in a very large city where public education is probably limited. Here in Lincoln most people are very accustom to seeing our clients under shades, they know what they are for, and they sometimes let us know when one of our clients are not using the shades in the manner we intended. My sense of this situation for this young woman is that there are other matters that were not resolved during the time she was in training. Perhaps the center that she was attending was not providing the adjustment counseling that she needed at the time, or perhaps she was simply not ready to deal with the issue of her blindness at that time. As far as the other problems she reported, I have not had anyone complain of a problem with hearing the changes in sound most of us rely upon, or serious headaches from the pressure of the straps. She mentioned "facial vision", so perhaps she is under the mistaken notion that this skill is somehow related to the sense of touch in the skin of the face. Many people once believed this to be the case at one time, and many blind persons were led to believe this to be the truth. Once research was conducted, it was found to be a matter of audible information. I think that the feeling she had regarding her blindness and her emotional responce to the reactions of the uneducated public are the real reasons for the beliefs she has about the shades. However, I think a more comfortable, and better looking sleep-shade design would be a good thing.”



**36. “I write in response to the entry by Sylvia, the lady from the west coast. I think she is speaking of faceial vision or the ability of feeling something like an nearby object. Isn’t that more of a function of hearing? I’ve heard of experiments where they used one person in a room with ear phones on and in a second room there is a person with two microphones passing them to and frow before various objects; the result being the person with the earphones gets the sense they are in close aproximation to objects; the same as a blind person feeling something nearby. So if a person is really having the problem feeling things around them with the shades on, is the shades themselves so distracting for some reason to be a problem for them? I’ve used them and know many others from children to adults of all sizes who have used them and no one has mentioned this problem.


I’ also say, I have known some who use goggles and not shades and they made it through programs who require blocking out vision to learn alternatives. So if a student is having problems with one type of blocker, why shouldn’t they have a choice to use another?”


FROM ME:’ Going a little further with the above lodgic; Why not have a range of blind-folds types and let a new student pick which works best for them? I’d say there isn’t anything magical about any one type of device.”



**37. "Now rethinking my original response, I would like to add this.


Relating to the sleep shades, when I was training for my first guide dog, years ago, I had minimal vision, whatever that is. Many times my instructor told me it was easier to train a totally blind person. That way the trainer could add more ideas and suggestions without the student, hesitating and also let the dog know that he/she was really do their job. The sleep shade method is indeed needed in many cases, but I believe there for these students could be more classroom time prior to the street lessons as to the possible dangers in misguided judgements of attempting to partial sight. Sounds odd maybe, and I do believe each of us should be trained as individuals. Again thanks for the time to express our own particular thoughts.”


Lee a.Stone (Hudson , New York email at stonedge@tonic.net )



**38. "I feel that sleepshades are a helpful tool. I am a student at the Louisiana Center for the blind and I realized that even though I have very little vision I still use it. I feel that with using them a person can get all the training that they need and if they lose more vision they do not have to go and get more training to accommodate for their vision loss.


Together we are changing what it means to be BLIND. Visit our web page at .



**39. "I have had beneficial experience with training under sleepshades. I have partial vision, but despite any vision I have the skills I developed while having to use a blindfold during cooking in the kitchen and over a grill, crossing streets, learning computers and Braille, and using drill and power tools in workshop enhanced my ability to discover ways in which blindness does not hinder me from doing anything. Using sleepshades when I was at the Colorado Center for the Blind for a summer gave me both skills in terms of learning to use my ears, sense of touch, and sense of direction more, while also giving me the confidence necessary for trying and accomplishing new things. To this day I notice a difference between the skills I have acquired from being under sleepshades compared to my partially blind friends that have not. For example, just yesterday my friend Jim and I crossed several streets. Every time he practically ran across, because he was so nervous about where cars were coming from. I didn't worry at all because I understood the traffic patterns and could hear where the cars were running. I could also see the cars running parallel to us, meaning we had ample time to cross. But I have learned to rely on my hearing because that is perfect, and not my eyes as much because they are imperfect. I feel that if I am intent on using my ears I will certainly hear a car coming in the distance quicker, than I would be able to see it, as would anyone who is legally blind. Therefore, I strongly suggest having extensive training under sleepshades. It's very beneficial an d it gives you an amazing amount of confidence. Besides, it couldn't hurt-unless you are not taught how to use the cane right. I hope to hear other views too. Take care,


Marina



**40. ” This year I attended Mardi Gras with the Louisiana Center and when a few of the students went in to a record store we were told we couldn't be in there with our masks on. We all were required to wear the sleepshades at that given moment and we were unsure of how to handle the situation. We politely asked the person that had requested us to take them off where the door was and she replied rudely in the same place that you came in at. We had also tried to explain the reason that we were wearing them, but she refused to listen. I had never had any problems with wearing sleepshades up to that point and I haven't had any problems since. Well to finish the story we left the store and we refused to go back there after that.”


Together we are changing what it means to be BLIND.

Visit our web page at .



28. FROM ME: This next response is an anser to ."
**41. FROM ME: "The following response is to a note to this gentleman from respondent 32." "Well, this one is going to be a little difficult to respond to since I do not remember everything I wrote. Certainly I may have miss read some elements of Ms. Sauerburger's remarks and I am very sorry for having mistaken her gender, synthesized speach can sometimes lead to confusion. With regard to paragraphs, I plead no contest, The time I have to devote to these responses is very limited, and I attempt to deliver my feelings on the subject as clearly and quickly as I can. I believe that I have something to contribute to these discussions, but I also have many clients to serve as well. With this in mind, I also recognize that I may not have expressed my beliefs clearly either. I do hope that Ms. Sauerburger will understand that I did not intend to present my views as an attack upon her personally, but rather in an attempt to look at the results she has experienced from a different perspective. I am firmly convinced that the use of the blindfold to the extensive degree to which we utilize it it in our training programs is in fact the most effective way to assure that our clients with some degree of visual function can and will achieve the highest level of independent functioning. I do not simply teach my students to travel independently using non-visual techniques, my goal is clearly to assist each of them to learn to function at an optimum level under all conditions. That is to say, I have never met a legally blind person who has either entered our program or left it, being unwilling to make use of his or her remaining vision. On the other hand, I have met very few that have entered our program that had anything more than a very slight understanding of the true capabilities of persons functioning without vision. Nearly everyone of my clients has entered training fully convinced that the more vision you have, the better off you are. Nearly everyone of them has come into this training focused on using their remaining vision, and very unwilling to consider the possibility that there might be another way to experience a complete and fulfilling life outside of one based upon vision. I can not think of a singal case in which an individual who has completed training under sleep-shades has experienced a negative outcome, and I sadly know of many individuals that have resisted such training, opting for a low vision alternative, and have found themselves in some situation where they have simply run out of options. I have been through both forms of training as a blind person, and for a time I bought into the belief that I should learn the skills I needed by fully utilizing my remaining vision, and where necessary learn non-visual techniques to fill in the gaps. The problem with this approach is that I spent a very large part of this period of my life either avoiding those situations where my vision failed to meet the environmental demands or depending on others, with the same result, much lower self esteem than I ever should have experienced. As my vision declined I had to struggle to find an alternative that would fill the gap. I have seen this same issue arise for the majority of blind individuals who have been trained from this visually based approach. They find themselves in a situation where their vision can not meet their needs neither can their and limited non-visual skills. Moreover, they do not believe that their use of vision is a poor choice, or that a non-visual technique can possibly fulfill the required role. So they more often than not call upon an O&M instructor every time they move to a new neighborhood, have a change in their schedule requiring them to travel at night or in an unfamiliar area, or whenever their vision changes. They accept a lower level of independence as a fact of their lives, not because it has to be, but because someone told and showed them that it should be this way. The majority of my clients, and the majority of those individuals trained through Structured Discovery with the use of the blind fold, do not have this problem. You cannot convince me that anyone that is trained to use non-visual techniques without the use of the sleep-shades, or has only limited exposure to sleep-shade experiences, will learnanything more than to go through the motions. How can a person trained in such a manner truely know whether his or her success was a result of using a non-visual technique or the use of vision? Clearly such an individual cannot determine this, especially when his or her instructor is also premoting the use of vision at the same time. Using the sleep-shades from time-to-time simply does not allow the individual enough opportunity to experience how effective non-visual alternatives can truly be. I am also convinced that this practice will further reinforce the person's notion that the more vision you have, the better off you are. I say this since the person will more likely experience more success when using the familiar visual technique, than when employing the still unfamiliar non-visual alternative. Even if the instructor does not believe that visual techniques are superior to the non-visual ones, by continuing to premote the use of vision, not providing a stable learning environment in which the client can experience non-visual alternatives over a long term period, and doing little to combat the client's mistaken notions about nonvisual function, the instructor has thoroughly reinforced this belief system. If a person with limited visual function believes that he or she is better off than a totally blind person, then what can he or she possibly believe about him or herself when compared with a normally sighted person? Except that they can never be the equal of a normally sighted person. What will happen to a person that relys upon vision when it cannot meet the demands of environmental conditions, and does not truly believe in his or her ability to utilize the appropriate non-visual techniques, or does not have the true confidence to rely upon them? Perhaps nothing, or perhaps, like my nephew, that person steps off a train platform and falls to the rails below. I know the reasons my nephew fell off of that platform, and so does he, and we both take it very seriously. Blind people are taking charge of their own lives, we will no longer settle for what others believe is best for us, and we will no longer accept instructors in the role of masters. My clients are my equal partners in learning, and they are the best resource in the learning process. The paradigm has shifted, and those that do not move with the change will sooner or later be pushed aside by it. Oops, I forgot the paragraphs again.”


Jeff Altman (Lincoln, Nebraska, USA)



**42. This truly is a widely debated topic, and I can just picture the audio blurr of shouting matches that would take place if this discussion were conducted in person rather than over the internet. I respect the views of all those who have responded to the thought provoker concerning the use of sleep shades for training of partially sighted persons; however I do have some reservations when it comes to the use of these masks. I agree whole-heartedly with sylvia in that the sleep shades themselves are more the issue than the acceptance of blindness. I have been born and lived my entire life with very little vision in one eye, and I have accepted that this is how I came into the world. I will be the first to admit that my eyes are bad. One point that Sylvia brought up was the fact that the shades were uncomfortable to wear. I too have found this to be true. I cannot get used to having something firmly held over my face, especially the eye area, and the presence of the shade itself would pose as a distraction for me. Another problem I see with the sleep shades is that they are not only uncomfortable, but a magnet for unwanted attention from the general public. My white cane may draw some stares; however, a white cane is more common in the public streets than a sleepshade. Sleep shades can attract more than just stares, whispers, comments, or snickers from people; they can also increase your chances of being a target for crime. As I have gone through my college career and young adult life, I have been reminded by countless people that a person carrying a white cane or some other evidence of a disability is more likely to become a victim of crime, and the sleep shade seems to me to be an added insentive for someone to choose a person at a disadvantage to rob or attack since the individual obviously wouldn't be able to see the criminal. Although training with the blockage of remaining vision is widely used and supported, I feel that the use of sleep shades should be a highly encouraged option rather than a mandate. Every student or trainee has his or her own style of learning, and they may or may not benefit from the sleep shades. I strongly encourage alternative methods of blocking vision when necessary. When in public, a student or trainee can use adapted glasses that are less conspicuous and more comfortable than the sleep shade. Encouraging the learners to simply ignore any visual stimuli would be more effective, as they won't be wearing sleep shades throughout their daily lives. The training should be as similar to actual daily living as possible. This type of coaching will eliminate the problem of cheating as the man in the above paragraph had done; and if the use of remaining sight should be discouraged, night travel and/or probing from the instructor would be excellent alternatives.


Kristine Beltz (Florida State University)



**43. "I feel that a person who cheats with sleepshades is only cheating themselves. However, I am totally blind and decided to see how it felt to wear them and they are very uncomfortable.”


Lisa (NAVS)


FROM ME: “Their are many different styles, some more in-comfortable than others; some not bad at all. Some are cloth, some are plastic, some are like goggles and some like a mask. You need to find a pair that works for you. Can’t concentrate if the sleepshade is making you un-comfortable, right?”
**44. Well, I have never before worn sleep shades for that purpose. However, as somebody with only light perception I would think wearing sleepshades to enhance the learning curve would not work. I would imagine this is pretty frightening, especially for someone who has had vision and is losing it, whether gradually or all at once. I'm curious to know from those of you who do use sleepshades for this purpose, how exactly is it done?


Jake Joehl, Chicago, Illinois USA