For the Thrill of It
For the Thrill of It
The Braille Monitor
January,
2004
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For the Thrill of It
by
Lohr McKinstry
From the Editor: The
following news story first appeared in the February 8, 2003, edition of the
Press Republican, in Plattsburgh, New York. Some of the details about Braille
classroom equipment are garbled, but the spirit of this active, normal boy shines
through in the reporter's words. In the spirit of winter fun, here is the story:
Blaise Bryant doesn't see
the bobsled run when he hurtles down it on his small sled. Some people might
close their eyes out of fear as they plunge along at forty miles an hour on
a steel sled down a narrow, ice covered track, but Blaise doesn't have that
luxury.
Blind since birth, the
eleven-year-old Moriah Elementary School student steers the bobsled by
instinct.
He counts turns, each of which has a name, and knows just when to turn, when
to lean, and how high to go on the icy sides to find that perfect racing
line.
"I have the track mapped in my head," he said. "I can tell where
the turns are. We start at 'Shady,' which is a wicked big turn. I can just
feel
it in my body."
He must be doing something
right. Blaise and his sister Joy won the gold medal in bobsledding for the
eight
to twelve years age class at the 2000 Empire State Games in Lake Placid. In
the Pee Wee Bobsled Championships last year, they won the bronze medal for
best
time and the award for most consistent sledding. This year they took a silver
medal for best time.
Joy is twelve years old.
She and Blaise switch off on driver and brakeman duties on the pee wee sled,
which is about one quarter
the size of a regular bobsled.
"She's
usually my teammate," Blaise said. "I do fight with her, though."
Piloting
a little sled down a long track runs in the Bryant family. Blaise's father,
Daniel, was a skeleton racer for fifteen years and was part of the World Cup
team. His mother is Marla Rodriguez of Port Henry.
"My
father talked about it; that's how I got interested," Blaise said.
"His dad was a skeleton
team captain right
up to when it became an Olympic sport," said Moriah Elementary Principal
William Larrow. "Blaise takes after him."
Blaise
started bobsledding three years ago. "It was awesome," he said. "My
classmates thought it was awesome too."
It's
not his only interest. His favorite subjects in school are spelling and geography.
In fact he just won the school championship in the National Geographic Magazine
Geography Bee at Moriah.
"The
[final] question was: the currencies of Mexico and Argentina? I said peso. When
they told me I'd won, I couldn't talk for thirty seconds."
For
his win he received a medal, a cash award, and a certificate.
Blaise
is in fifth grade at Moriah, and he's usually well prepared for his schoolwork,
said his teacher, Gail Baker.
"He's
lots of fun," she said. "He listens so carefully that he finds humor
in things other kids miss."
Blaise has an aide, Lynn
Anderson, who works with him. "He has a Brailler in class, and he types
his answers," Baker said. The Perkins Brailler is a typewriter like device
that can translate the raised dot system of Braille into written English. Blaise
also has a set of Braille textbooks, and Anderson translates into Braille for
him.
"He's
a great little guy," Larrow said. "He's very pleasant. We enjoy having
him at Moriah."
One of Blaise's other pursuits
is pee wee football; he has played center for three years.
"The
coaches and the other players tell me where to go. I just kind of feel my way
through."
The
coaches line him up in the right direction, Larrow said. "He knows where
to go. He does it." Blaise has excellent orientation and mobility, Larrow
said. "He can travel the community on his own. He functions very well in
the school. He gets around."
When Blaise gets out of
school, he's not sure what career he wants to follow. It might be teaching,
but it's hard to tell if he's serious when he smiles and says, "I think
about doing a bunch of stuff. But maybe I'll be a teacher. A wacky teacher.
The teachers here are nice and wacky."
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