Of Toothpaste and Shaving Cream
Of Toothpaste and Shaving Cream
OF TOOTHPASTE AND SHAVING CREAM
by Kenneth Jernigan
Almost everybody who thinks about blindness
begins with the
assumption that if you are blind, you are at a
tremendous
disadvantage in dealing with the everyday tasks
of getting along
and managing your life. To some extent, of
course, that is true.
Regardless of other things, the world is
structured for the
sighted. Most books are in print, not Braille; an
increasing
number of electrical appliances have lights that
flash and
flicker instead of knobs that turn and click; and
pictures are
replacing words on everything from the cash
register at
McDonald's to the sign on the bathroom door.
Most of these items and appliances could be
marked and
produced in nonvisual ways, but the fact that
they aren't (and
that they won't be) is not an overwhelming
problem. There are
techniques for dealing with the reading, the
flickering lights
under transparent plates, and the pictures that
tell you where to
go and what to do.
Functioning as a blind person in a world designed
for the
sighted keeps you on your toes, but with a little
thought and
ingenuity you can manage. In fact, you can manage
quite well.
But that isn't the way most people look at it.
They figure
that if you are blind, your days are miserably
bleak and limited.
I've been blind all of my life, and I think I am
about as happy
and successful as most of the sighted people I
know. It is true
that I haven't made a million dollars or been
elected president
of the United States--but I get along, pay my
bills, and look
forward to a good dinner and a Sunday afternoon.
So do the
majority of blind people I know. And I know a lot
of them--some
successful, some just managing to get by, and
most somewhere
between.
And let me hasten to add that I am not just
talking about
people who have been blind from birth but about
all of the other
variations--those who became blind as children,
those who became
blind as young adults, and those who became blind
in middle age
or later.
But if blindness is how I say it is--if you can
have as much
fun, make as much money, and be as successful as
anybody else--
why do people think blindness is so tragic and
limiting? I have
given a lot of thought to that question, and I
believe the answer
is less involved with the major activities of
life than with the
insignificant details.
It is true that over seventy percent of
working-age blind
people are unemployed--not because they can't do
the job but
because people think they can't do it and because
they haven't
had opportunity. But most people don't know that.
More to the
point, they don't think about it, and even if
they did, they
would simply take it for granted that the
majority of blind
people are not unemployed but unemployable, and
then they would
pass on to something else.
No, it is not the big things that cause the
average member
of the public to think of blindness as tragic and
limiting. It is
the routine activities, the details.
More specifically, it is the fact that when there
is more
than one way to do a thing and when one of those
ways involves
using sight, the sighted person will almost
inevitably use the
visual technique. It will be done without a
second thought, with
the automatic assumption that the visual
technique is superior.
Some visual techniques are superior, of course;
some are
approximately equal; and some are inferior.
Let me give you an example. A few mornings ago,
my wife
(who, incidently, is sighted) expressed some
annoyance that her
toothpaste had fallen off of the brush. I was
quite surprised,
for I realized that something I had always taken
for granted
wasn't so.
"Do you squeeze your toothpaste on to your
toothbrush,
looking at it as you do it, and then put the
toothbrush loaded
with toothpaste into your mouth?" I asked.
"Why, yes," she said. "Doesn't
everybody do it that way?"
"I don't," I said. "I put the tube
up to my mouth, bite off
what I want, and then put the brush on my teeth
and go at it."
My wife was as surprised by my technique as I was
by hers.
"It makes sense," she said. "I'll
try it."
She did, and she said how much more efficient my
technique
was than the visual method she had been using.
About a week later
I asked her if she was still using my toothpaste
technique, and
she rather sheepishly said that she wasn't. When
I asked her why,
she thought about it a minute and then said,
"I guess I'm so used
to looking at it that it's just too hard to
change."
Here's a case where the nonvisual technique is
clearly
superior but where the visual method is
automatically used even
though it is not as good. My wife (along with
most of the other
sighted people I have asked) has always, without
even thinking
about it, taken it for granted that the sighted
technique is
superior.
If she had considered it at all before our
conversation, she
would probably have felt that my method of
putting toothpaste on
the brush would be the same as hers except that I
would need to
feel for the brush, which would be a little
harder than just
looking at it.
Certainly the world doesn't turn on whether you
bite your
toothpaste or squeeze it onto a brush, but life
is a matter of
daily routine, not dramatic events. So let me
move from
toothbrushes to razors.
I shave everyday (or almost everyday), and I do
it with an
ordinary razor with a blade. Many of the sighted
men I know tell
me that they shave in front of a mirror. Yet, I
have known a
great many sighted men who have worked at schools
or training
centers for the blind and who, after seeing blind
boys and men
shaving in the shower, have tried the technique
and adopted it. I
have never known one of them to return to the
visual technique.
In fact, even those who shave in front of a
mirror almost
always rub their hand across their face to feel
if it is clean
shaven. Even so, the average person tends to
think that shaving
without sight is difficult. It isn't. The
nonvisual method is
easier and offers more flexibility.
Like most men who shave with a blade, I use
shaving cream,
the kind that comes from a can under pressure and
makes a big
pile of foam. Since I have to wash my face
anyway, I combine the
operation with shaving. I get my face (including
my forehead)
wet, and I then spread shaving cream all over it.
When I am
finished, I rinse and am done.
A few years ago, when I was making television
announcements
for the National Federation of the Blind, I
thought it might be
interesting to demonstrate different techniques
used by the
blind. I had shots made of me walking down the
street, carrying
wood to a fireplace, tying my tie, and shaving.
As the TV editors looked at the pictures,
everything was all
right until they came to the shaving sequence.
One of them said,
"We can't show that. It would look like a
vaudeville act, like
somebody throwing a pie at your face."
I gathered from my questions to them that they
were
accustomed to seeing TV commercials about shaving
and that in
those commercials a small amount of shaving cream
is put on a
part of the face. Those commercials, it would
seem, had formed
their image of what was normal and acceptable. As
with some of
the other things I have been discussing, I had
always assumed
that other men used shaving cream the way I did.
Apparently such
is not the case.
I said to one of the TV editors: "Don't you
wash your face
in the morning?"
"Yes," he said, "but I don't do it
with shaving cream. I
wash my face and forehead with soap. I rinse my
face; and then I
put shaving cream on and shave." It seemed
to me that this was a
time-wasting, inefficient way to do it, but I
thought I would
keep my opinion to myself.
When I was Director of Programs for the Blind in
the state
of Iowa, we bought an old YMCA building for a
headquarters and
training center. It had seven floors, and the
only way to get
from the basement to the top was either by
climbing the stairs or
by using the elevator.
It was, to say the least, not a modern elevator.
In fact, it
was one of the old-fashioned kind using direct
current. It had a
grille-work at the front of the cab and a lever
that you pushed
one way to go up and the other way to go down.
There was no way
to tell when you got to a given floor except by
looking--or, at
least, that's what we thought when we moved in.
But those of us who were blind had the strongest
possible
incentive to devise a nonvisual technique, for we
couldn't afford
to hire an elevator operator--and we didn't want
to walk up and
down the stairs between the seven floors all day.
My first thought was that if we couldn't see the
floors,
perhaps we could string a cable from the top to
the bottom of the
elevator shaft with some kind of tabs on it that
would brush the
elevator car and make a noise at each floor. That
would have been
expensive and complicated and we never got around
to it. In the
meantime we walked--at least, those of us who
were blind did.
Then, one of the blind trainees found that he
could stick a
knife or comb through the grille-work and touch
the bar on the
elevator door at each floor, thus allowing a
blind person to
operate the elevator easily and efficiently. A
little later we
learned that we had been going about the whole
thing wrong. If we
paid attention, we could feel the air currents
coming off of the
floors as we passed them and could level the
elevator without any
mechanical devices at all.
Why did it take us so long to discover this
technique? I
believe it was because it never occurred to us to
think in any
other way except in visual terms. We thought that
if we couldn't
see the floors, we needed to devise a substitute
to do the same
thing, to touch them in one way or another. Only
when we opened
our minds and let our imaginations run free did
we get the
solution.
The elevator technique we developed was not
superior to the
visual technique used by the sighted occupants of
the building,
but it was just as good. The fact that it was
different didn't
make it inferior. It just meant that it was
different.
There is more opportunity for blind people today
than there
has ever been in the history of the world, and we
are only
beginning to realize our possibilities. We are
truly changing
what it means to be blind, and one of the ways we
are doing it is
by coming to understand that visual techniques
are not
necessarily superior to nonvisual techniques. And
it isn't just
blind people who are learning this. It is also an
increasing
number of the sighted public. We who are blind
must lead the way
and do for ourselves, but we must do it in
partnership with the
sighted. And we must do it with imagination and
new ways of
thinking.
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