Climbing the Acropolis
Climbing the Acropolis
The Braille Monitor
__May 1997
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Climbing the Acropolis
by Susan Povinelli
From the Editor: The following story
first appeared in the Summer, 1996, issue of the Vigilant, the publication of
the NFB of Virginia. Susan Povinelli is an engineer by training. She works for
the United States Navy. She, her lawyer husband, and their children live in
the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., and are active in the Virginia affiliate.
This is what Susan says:
As I climbed the multitude of steps
to the top of the Acropolis in Athens, Greece, I thought of all the ancient
Greek philosophers who climbed this path to the summit to sit and contemplate
the meaning of life. I reflected on the wisdom of those ancient philosophers.
Now I reflect on how I took that opportunity to travel to Greece.
In April, 1993, I was offered a job with my agency's training group as a training
system manager to support one of our foreign military sales programs. I remember
spending one sleepless night contemplating two great philosophical ideas. The
first was the general public's philosophy of blindness: that because of helplessness
a blind person cannot travel independently and conduct business in a foreign
country. The other was the National Federation of the Blind's philosophy that
a blind person with the proper skills and training can travel independently
and accomplish a multitude of jobs. I recalled a blind colleague's struggle
to enter the foreign service, and I decided that, if he
could travel abroad independently, so could I. So I accepted the position. That
sleepless night was not the last time these two competing philosophies would
come into conflict around me.
About a month after I started the new job, a discreet effort was made to transfer
me out of it. The old philosophy of blindness had reared its head again. Questions
were raised. How would the customer perceive and react to a blind manager? How
would a blind person be able to interpret nonverbal communication? I assured
them, as I had done many times before, a blind person using good management
and blindness skills could do the job efficiently. As for nonverbal communication,
there would be others available to advise me on any matter I had missed--nonverbal
communication or technical issues.
Let me briefly describe what I do as a training system manager. When a customer
(foreign government) procures an aircraft, its personnel need to learn how to
maintain and fly that aircraft. The training team and I develop a training program
and then implement it. I incorporate the following techniques in my job:
I use Braille throughout my work. Pricing
data are developed with a computer spreadsheet program, which I then translate
into Braille using the Duxbury translation program on my MacIntosh computer.
This allows me to reference the data while on the phone or in a meeting. I use
Braille briefing sheets that correspond to the printed view graphs. These are
notes for my brief.
My job requires that I travel to the customer's country and assess the facilities
where the training will be conducted. This survey is usually conducted by a
team of technical experts. The experts and I look at the facility. The expert
points out what is wrong and what is right. We then discuss items needing correction
and develop a plan to remedy the problem.
One of the management tools used is a milestone chart. This graphically displays
each event by its duration. For years I was baffled about how to make raised-line
drawings quickly and inexpensively. I learned to use a child's screen board
(a piece of cardboard with wire window screen placed over it). A member of my
support staff places the milestone chart on top of the screen board, traces
the milestone chart with a crayon, and labels the events in Braille. This same
technique could be used for floor plans, engineering drawings, or any diagram
which has few details.
Now that you know what I do and how I conduct my job, it is time to catch an
airplane and fly to Greece. I remember the first time I went. The rest of my
team was already there, and I had to make the trip alone. Once again the two
philosophies clashed. Airline personnel, especially in foreign lands, believe
that a blind person cannot travel independently and find the boarding gate.
Most airlines have policies to escort the blind person to an assist lounge or
to chairs outside the boarding gates. The questions that plagued me were, would
accepting assistance impede my independence? Would I miss my connection and
spend the night in John F. Kennedy Airport? Could I catch a taxi in Athens if
no one met me at the airport?
I realized that the real problem was not my blindness but my lack of Greek.
I was more frightened of not being able to communicate than of getting lost
in an airport. I frequently use the airport assistance services when I travel
alone because I know it is the most efficient way to travel through large airports,
especially in Frankfurt, where I know there are no chairs outside the boarding
gates and the airport is so large that dragging around carry-on luggage is difficult.
I can proudly claim that I have made that trip across the Atlantic several times
alone. As I was standing next to the rock from which Saint Paul was supposed
to have preached Christianity to the ancient Greeks, I wondered what important
message I had to share. At the time nothing came to mind. But a few weeks later,
as I was giving a presentation on blindness to my children's school, I recognized
it: being blind is not a tragedy. With the proper skills and alternative techniques,
a blind person can live a
successful and productive life.
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