Gray Pancakes and Gold Horses

Gray Pancakes and Gold Horses

Gray Pancakes and Gold Horses

Kenneth Jernigan

Editor

Large Type Edition

A Kernel Book

Published by

NATIONAL FEDERATION OF THE BLIND

Copyright (C)1998 by the National Federation of the Blind

ISBN 1-885218-12-5

All Rights Reserved

Printed in the United States of America

Cover Photo: E. Cohen/Super Stock

Table Of Contents

The Barrier Of The Visible Difference

by Kenneth Jernigan

Gray Pancakes And The Gentleman's Hat

by Marc Maurer

Where Are The Eyes?

by Bruce A. Gardner

Educated Fingers

by Barbara Pierce

Let The Medals Jingle

by Tonia L. Valletta=20

Sewing

by Ramona Walhof

Editor's Introduction

Editor's Introduction

This is the fourteenth volume in the Kernel Book series. Its

title, Gray Pancakes and Gold Horses, is taken from the first two

stories and symbolizes the theme of the book.

How do blind children learn the details of the hundreds of

small daily acts that sighted children pick up without ever even

knowing they have done it? A blind boy sits in a farm house on a

summer night and wonders which way to shake his head to mean yes

and no. He guesses and loses, and his mother's feelings are hurt.

I know, for I was that boy.

A blind father cooks for his two sighted children, and the

pancakes are gray, causing the children to reject them. Small

incidents, things of no great moment. Yet, the stuff of daily

living, the patterns and realities of life.

This Kernel Book is much like those that have gone before it.

It contains first-person real-life stories, told by those who have

lived them. It talks about going to school, communicating with

others, and living from day to day. I know the people who appear in

its pages. They are friends of mine. Some have been my students.

The one thing all of us who appear in this book have in common

is our shared participation in the work of the National Federation

of the Blind, the organization which has been the strongest single

factor in making life better for the blind of this country during

the twentieth century. With more than 50,000 members, the National

Federation of the Blind is primarily composed of blind people, who

are trying to make life better for themselves and other blind

people, while at the same time making the world a better place in

which to live for everybody.

We who are blind have a major job on our hands in trying to

get members of the general public to see us for what we are--not

especially blessed or especially cursed but just ordinary people,

exactly like you. The only difference is that we don't have

eyesight, which is not as big a factor in our daily lives as most

people think it is.

So how do we get the job done? How do we get people to see us

for what we are and not just what they have always thought we are?

One of the most important ways is through the Kernel Books. This is

why we write and publish them. They must be entertaining enough

that people will read them, but they must do more than that. They

must carry the message of what blindness truly is, and what it

isn't.

We hope you will enjoy this book and that it will give you new

insights about blindness. Since more than 50,000 people become

blind in this country each year, the information you get from these

pages may be useful to you in a personal way at some future time--

and if not for you, then for a family member or friend.

As you read, remember that we who are blind have more hope

today than ever before in history. We believe that when we can, we

should do for ourselves before calling on others for assistance,

but we also recognize the value of the help which a growing number

of sighted friends and associates give us. We want to live the full

lives of free, participating citizens, and we know that we can.

All of this you will see reflected in the pages of this book.

We hope you will find it of interest and that it will cause you to

rethink some of your notions about blindness.

Kenneth Jernigan

Baltimore, Maryland

1998

Why Large Type?

The type size used in this book is 14 point for two important

reasons: One, because typesetting of 14 point or larger complies

with federal standards for the printing of materials for visually

impaired readers, and we want to show you what type size is helpful

for people with limited sight.

The second reason is that many of our friends and supporters

have asked us to print our paperback books in 14 point type so they

too can easily read them. Many people with limited sight do not

use Braille. We hope that by printing this book in a larger type

than customary, many more people will be able to benefit from it.

The Barrier Of The Visible Difference

by Kenneth Jernigan

Catchy titles and clever phrases are the stuff of big

business. As every advertising agency knows, fortunes are made or

lost by the way the public reacts to a jingle or a slogan.

Once I heard a liquor distributor say that his company had a

thoroughly mediocre wine that was going nowhere, and then somebody

got the bright idea of giving it a sparkly name (I think it was

Wild Irish Rose). After that, he said they couldn't make enough to

meet the demand, operating three shifts a day.

Whether that story is true or false, the underlying message is

right on target. It is not just what a thing is but how it sounds

and feels that sets the tone and gives the value.

When most of us come across the term "visible difference," we

think of the trademark of the beauty expert and cosmetics

manufacturer Elizabeth Arden. "Visible Difference" is the brand

name of moisturizers, lotions, and other products. But for the

blind the term means something else. It represents a barrier and a

hurdle to be surmounted. Let me illustrate.

When I was a boy of about four, my mother and I were sitting

in the front bedroom of our home. Even though more than sixty-five

years have passed, I still remember every detail. It was a summer

evening just after dark. My father and brother were sitting on the

porch, and the night sounds (the frogs and crickets) were coming

into full chorus. It was oppressively hot with a lot of dust in the

air.

In those days we didn't have electricity, so my mother had

just lit the oil lamp. The smell of the burning kerosene began to

blend with the regular odors of food and plant life that permeated

the four-room house. Of course, all of the doors and windows were

open.

When my mother finished lighting the lamp and adjusting the

wick, she sat down and put her arm around me. Then she kissed me on

the left side of my face. Since she was sitting on my left, this

was a natural (almost an automatic) gesture. Then she said:

"Do you like for mother to kiss you?" Now, this put me into a

real dilemma--for I very much liked for mother to kiss me, but I

felt shy and embarrassed to say it.

Hunting a way out, I thought perhaps I could say yes by

shaking my head. From conversations I had heard, I knew that other

people shook their heads to mean yes or no, but I didn't know which

way the head should move to indicate which meaning. It had never

before occurred to me to wonder about the matter since I had never

needed to know. My mother or anybody else around the house would

undoubtedly have been perfectly willing to tell me if I had asked,

but that didn't help in the situation I was then facing.

Using the best logic I could muster, I thought that since my

mother was sitting on my left, maybe if I moved my head that way,

it would indicate yes. Unfortunately it didn't, and my mother (not

understanding my embarrassment and lack of knowledge) thought I was

saying no. She was hurt and cried, and I didn't know how to

explain.

So what is the moral of that little story, that minor tragedy

of childhood? It is not that blind people are less competent than

others of their age and circumstance. It is not that blind persons

are slow learners or inept. It is that sometimes something that can

be seen at a glance must be learned a different way by a blind

person. The learning can be just as quick and just as effective,

but it won't happen unless somebody thinks to explain, to help the

blind child cross the barrier of the visible difference. There is

no great problem in knowing how to shake one's head or in doing a

hundred other things that sighted children learn without ever

knowing that they have done it. It is only that the blind child

must either be unusually persistent and inquisitive or have

somebody constantly at hand who thinks to give information.

Otherwise, insignificant details will multiply to major deficits.

And this is not just a matter of childhood. After seventy

years I keep learning new things about the barrier of the visible

difference. Recently when I told a blind friend of mine who is a

lawyer about my head-shaking episode, he asked if I knew how you

are supposed to hold your hand in a court when you are told to

raise your right hand. I said that I had never thought about it but

had always assumed that you simply raise your hand above your head,

which is what would seem logical in the circumstances.

"No," he told me, "that isn't the way it is done. You raise

your hand to shoulder level with the palm out." He went on to tell

me that when he was being sworn in to be admitted to the Bar, he

had raised his hand above his head and that later, one of his

classmates had told him how the customary ritual is performed.=20

It is important to understand the significance of this

incident. There is nothing better about raising the hand to the

shoulder than over the head. It doesn't make one a better lawyer or

a better witness in court. My friend is an excellent attorney, and

I have testified in court on more than one occasion. We are simply

dealing with a custom of society, a visible difference.

More than anything else (at least, unless one is aware of it

and thinks about it) meaningless visible differences can lead to

confusion and misunderstanding, and sometimes even to misplaced

feelings of superiority or inadequacy. A thing that looks beautiful

to the eye, for instance, can feel ugly and dirty to the touch.

Again, let me illustrate. Once when I was four or five, my mother

and father took me to the county fair. This was a big event.

We lived about fourteen miles from the county seat, and we

didn't have a car. Very few people did in those days, so friends

and neighbors pooled their transportation and helped each other

with rides.

On this particular occasion my mother and I were standing at

one of the booths at the fair. In retrospect it must have been one

of those places that give prizes for throwing darts, tossing rings,

or something of the sort. Regardless of that, the woman in charge

gave me a small statue of a horse. As I think back on it, she may

have done it because I was blind, or simply because she thought I

was a cute kid. For purposes of my story, it doesn't matter.

The horse must have been quite pretty, for both the woman and

my mother kept exclaiming about it. It was apparently covered with

some sort of sparkly gold paint. To the eye I assume that it was

extremely attractive, but to me it just felt dirty and grungy.

Now, I had never before had a small gold horse or, for that

matter, any other kind of horse, or very many nice toys of any

kind--so I was pleased and ecstatic with my treasure. But I thought

I ought to clean it up and try to make it look nice.

Therefore, while my mother and the woman were talking, I

busily scratched all of the rough-feeling gold paint off of it. It

was quite a job. By the time I had finished, my horse felt clean

and attractive. I was proud of it. Imagine, then, my disappointment

and chagrin when my mother and the woman noticed what I had done

and were absolutely dismayed. I couldn't understand why they were

unhappy, and they couldn't understand why I felt that the horse was

better for my effort. Again, I had bumped head-on into the barrier

of the visible difference.

Unlike the head-shaking incident, this was not exactly a

matter of learning correct information. If a thing looks better to

the eye and feels worse to the touch, that doesn't make it better

or worse. It simply means a different point of view, a visible

difference.

I thoroughly understand that we live in a world that is

structured for the sighted, so if a blind person intends to get

along and compete in society, he or she must learn how the sighted

feel and what they think is beautiful and attractive. But this has

nothing to do with innate loveliness or quality. It is simply a

visible difference.

As a matter of fact, although I wouldn't scratch the paint off

of it if I met it today, that horse of my childhood would feel just

as dirty to me now as it did then. A few years ago when I went to

Athens, I was invited (no, urged) to handle a variety of

sculptures. They may have looked beautiful, and I have no doubt

that they did; but they didn't feel beautiful--at least, not to me.

They felt dirty, and I wanted a good hand-washing after feeling

them. Hopefully this does not mean that I am either a barbarian or

a boor, only that my way of appreciating beauty may have something

to do with the fact that I touch instead of look.

Do not make the mistake of thinking that it is only the blind

who get stuck on the barrier of the visible difference. The sighted

do it, too--repeatedly, every day. Recently when I was in the

hospital, I was being taken to the x-ray department for tests. On

the way I had to stop to go to the bathroom. As I came out, a

hospital official (I think she was a nurse) saw me and exclaimed,

in what I can only describe as panic:

"Catch him! He's going to fall. His eyes are closed."

My wife explained to her that I am blind and that my eyes are

usually closed. It made no difference.

"It doesn't matter," she said. "Hold him. His eyes are closed.

He will fall." This woman is not abnormal or unusually jumpy, nor

(at least, as far as I can tell) is she stupid. She is simply so

accustomed to the fact that sighted people look about them to keep

their bearings that she cannot imagine that sight and balance have

nothing to do with each other. If I had thought it wouldn't have

upset her, I would have asked her if she believed she would be

unable to stand up in a totally dark room.

During that same hospital stay, when I stepped into another

bathroom, the nurse turned the light on for me even though I told

her in a light and pleasant tone that I didn't need it. She said

she would turn it on anyway. It was clear that she felt

uncomfortable to have me in the bathroom in the dark. Obviously

this is not a major matter. It simply shows that we feel uneasy

when something violates (even benignly) our routine patterns.

And these are not isolated instances. Every day letters and

articles come to my attention to prove it.

A journalist from Ohio writes to say that the blind need

special fishing facilities--and he will lobby the government to

help make it happen. He doesn't say why we can't fish in the

regular way like everybody else, which many of us do all of the

time.

A locksmith from Wisconsin believes the blind would benefit

from specially shaped door knobs (oval and textured, he thinks),

and he is willing to design them. A pilot from Pennsylvania thinks

we should solve any problems we have with the airlines by setting

up an airline of our own, and he will help fly the planes.

A man from Minnesota believes that blind alcoholics cannot

benefit from regular programs used by the sighted and suggests

separate services. Some years ago the Manchester Union Leader, one

of New Hampshire's most prominent newspapers, said that the

governor of the state was so bad that only the deaf, the dumb, and

the blind could believe he was competent.

These few illustrations are not a complete list, of course,

but only a sampling. Moreover, I am not talking about all of the

sighted. An increasing number are coming to understand and work

with us. They give us some of our strongest support.

Nor am I saying that the sighted are hostile toward us. Quite

the contrary. Over-whelmingly the members of the sighted public

wish us well and have good will toward us. It is simply that they

are used to doing things with visual techniques, and when they look

at a blind person, they see something to which they are not

accustomed--what I call the barrier of the visible difference.

Most sighted people take it for granted that doing something

with eyesight is better than doing it some other way. Visual

techniques are sometimes superior to non-visual techniques, and

sometimes not. Sometimes the non-visual way of doing a thing is

better. Usually, however, it isn't a matter of better or worse but

just difference.

This brings me to my experience with the National Federation

of the Blind. I first became acquainted with the Federation almost

fifty years ago, and it has done more than anything else in my life

to help me gain balance and perspective--to understand that the

barrier of the visible difference need not be a major obstacle,

either for me or my sighted associates.

With more than fifty thousand active members throughout the

nation, the National Federation of the Blind is leading the way in

making it possible for blind people to have normal, everyday lives.

We of the Federation seek out parents and help them understand that

their blind children can grow up to be productive citizens. We work

with blind college students, giving scholarships and providing

successful role models. Blind seniors make up an important part of

the organization, helping and encouraging each other and exchanging

ideas and information. We develop new technology for the blind and

assist blind persons in finding jobs.

All of this is what we of the National Federation of the Blind

do to help ourselves and each other, but the chief value of the

organization is the way it helps us look at our blindness and the

way it helps sighted people understand and accept. We who are blind

know that with reasonable opportunity and training we can earn our

own way in the world, compete on terms of equality with others, and

lead ordinary, worthwhile lives. We do not feel that we are

victims, or that society owes us a living or is responsible for our

problems. We believe that we ought to do for ourselves and that we

also should help others. These attitudes are the heart and soul of

the National Federation of the Blind. They constitute its core

beliefs and reason for being.

We go to meet the future with joy and hope, but we recognize

that we need help from our sighted friends. If we do our part, we

are confident that the needed help will be forthcoming. We also

know that both we and the sighted can surmount the barrier of the

visible difference and reduce it to the level of a mere

inconvenience.

Gray Pancakes And The Gentleman's Hat

by Marc Maurer

How important is appearance? More than most people think. As

readers of the Kernel Book series know, Marc Maurer is not only the

President of the National Federation of the Blind but also the

father of two sighted children, David and Dianna. The Maurers, like

others who are blind, keep bumping into the matter of appearances.

Here is what President Maurer has to say about it:

I have been given (along with almost everybody else I've ever

met) the advice that I should not judge a book by its cover--that

the intrinsic value of a thing is more important than its

appearance--or that beauty is only skin deep. The problem with most

of the people who have given me this advice is that they ignored it

themselves much of the time. Those who try to live so that they may

disregard the covers of books or the packaging on the outside of a

commodity or the stylish cut of somebody else's clothes, are

regarded as crazy and ostracized.

While I was a boy, attending the School for the Blind, I was

forcibly made to realize the difference between the way a thing

looks and the way it feels. The School for the Blind collected

blind children from all over the state of Iowa, and we attended

classes together. The boys living in dormitories were divided by

age. The Cottage was a building for the little boys--the

kindergartners and first graders. The second and third graders got

to move into one wing of the boys' dorm. This was a major step in

our growing up. When we lived in the Cottage, we attended classes

and ate our meals in the Cottage. The classrooms and dining room

for the small boys were all in the same building.

However, when we got to the second grade, we had begun to be

counted among the bigger boys. We slept in the boys' dormitory, but

we attended classes and ate our meals in the administration

building.

One of the Saturday morning rituals for the boys in the fifth

and sixth grades at the School for the Blind was shoeshining. We

did this in the janitor's room. Each boy was required to have a can

of shoe polish--cost, ten cents. A dauber, a shoebrush, and a

polishing cloth were provided. I wasn't all warmed up about the

shoeshining assignment because anything that interferes with the

enjoyment of free time on a Saturday for a fifth grader is

bothersome. However, I thought if I got the polishing out of the

way, I could go somewhere else; so I started in with a will.

I soon discovered that polishing shoes has its disadvantages.

I daubed the polish onto the leather, rubbed the shoes with the

shoebrush for a time, and followed up with the polishing cloth.

The shoes felt perfectly clean and smooth to me. I figured that I

had finished the job and could go my way. But this was not the

case. The house parent, the master of the shoeshining and general

arbiter of boys' lives, came to inspect. The shoes were not shiny,

he said. I was told to begin again. So, I started once more--this

time with extreme care. I put on more polish, making certain it

covered every part of the leather. I rubbed vigorously with the

brush, and then I took up the polishing cloth. I polished

diligently for a time, and I thought that they must certainly be

done by now! But the inspector, the house parent, informed me that

I had failed a second time. I started polishing my shoes for the

third time and wondering whether I would be through polishing

before lunch.

After the third try (another failure), the house parent asked

an older boy to show me what to do. He took the polishing cloth and

made a few swift passes over the shoes. Then he said, "See how easy

that is?" I couldn't figure out why his polishing worked but mine

didn't. From the perspective of many years, I have concluded that

the speed of his polishing put the final shine on the shoes. They

felt the same after I had polished them as they had after his

effort. But they didn't look the same, and I understood the

importance of getting them to look right.

The next step was to clean my hands. During the first attempt

at polishing, I had kept my fingers out of the can of polish and

away from the moist surfaces of the shoes. But when my polishing

job was rejected, I decided that my fingers must tell me how much

polish was being applied. My hands carried the unmistakable

evidence; my fingers, my nails, and my knuckles were black. Shoe

polish is intended to be reasonably waterproof. I washed my hands

thoroughly; they felt perfectly clean to me. However, they were

still black, and I was sent back to the basin to wash a second

time. After several sudsings, my hands became clean; and I

understood for the second time that the way a thing feels isn't the

same as the way it looks.

Today, I know that appearance is important. The substance of

a thing is more important, but often we don't explore the substance

unless the initial appearance is attractive.

As readers of the Kernel Books know, my children, David and

Dianna, are sighted. My wife and I are both blind. Much of the time

we do not discuss the subject of blindness or its implications, but

sometimes the difference in approach taken by a blind person from

that of the sighted is significant.

I do much of the cooking for our household. One evening I

decided to make potato pancakes for supper. This requires taking

fresh potatoes and grinding them up before mixing them with flour,

salt, and other ingredients to make pancake batter. When the

pancakes are fried crisp and hot (and served with apple sauce, sour

cream, or fruit compote), they are delicious. Most people peel the

potatoes before grinding them up for the batter. However, I thought

that I would grind the potatoes with their skins. Potato skins, I

have been told, are very good for you--they contain all the

vitamins and minerals.

Soon I had a nice pile of potato pancakes, crisp and hot. I

called the family to eat them, but my children would not take the

first bite. My wife and I thought the pancakes tasted just right,

but we couldn't tempt the children. When I asked why, David gave me

the answer. My pancakes were gray. Apparently, not peeling the

potatoes before putting them in the pancake batter makes the

pancakes come out gray, and gray pancakes are not very appetizing

in appearance. They tasted great, but they looked awful. So, the

children ate chicken noodle soup, and my wife and I finished the

pancakes. Since that time, I have considered (even if fleetingly)

both the appearance and the flavor of the things I cook.

As I have said earlier, I believe that appearance counts. My

experience tells me that those who are most conservatively dressed

are often taken most seriously. I dress conservatively, wearing

white shirts, black wing tip shoes, and dark suits. A number of

years ago, a friend took me to get a wool top coat. She told me

that the winter coat I had been wearing was not suitable and that

I needed a gentleman's coat. Along with the coat I obtained a pair

of black gloves. However, I was never sure how to complete the

ensemble. What should I wear for a hat?

I grew up in the state of Iowa, which frequently has a cold

winter. As a boy, I was given a jacket with a hood. I disliked the

hood because when I wore it, I had trouble hearing. I used my

hearing to learn about my surroundings and to help me in traveling

with my cane. A stocking cap is much better than a hood. It can be

worn so that it completely covers my ears without interfering with

my ability to hear.

My stocking cap became my good wintertime friend. I did cause

myself trouble with it one time. On a particularly cold day, I

pulled it down over my face. A stranger apparently felt outrage at

my appearance. He said that I looked like a fool, and perhaps I

did. After that, I wore the stocking cap in the customary manner,

and I had no more trouble. However, a stocking cap would not do

with my gentleman's coat.

I went to a hat shop to look at all the hats, and I asked for

lots of advice. I finally selected a black felt Saxon style with a

black band. I was told that it was exactly the right kind of hat to

go with the gentleman's coat. I bought it mostly for style, but I

hope that it also has some practical use as well. I am now learning

about the language of the hat. For example, what does it mean to

"tip" a hat, and when should the "tipping" occur? What other odd

customs are associated with the hat, and how will I come to learn

them?

If the purpose was to keep my head warm, I would go back to

the trusty old stocking cap. But the purpose is to combine a

practical function with the proper appearance.

In the National Federation of the Blind, we are doing what we

can to help blind people become a meaningful, contributing part of

our society. In order to make a contribution, we must learn enough

so that the talent that we possess is useful. However, talent is

not enough. We must also present the appearance of talent, and we

are helping each other gain the proper appearance. Some people

think our method of traveling from place to place with a cane or

dog is odd or that some of the other alternative techniques used by

blind people of performing ordinary tasks are unusual. Because some

of the methods that we use to do ordinary things seem unfamiliar,

some sighted people seem to feel uneasy in the presence of a blind

person. Of course, there is no need to feel this way. Some of what

we do is unconventional, but we have the same hopes and dreams, the

same fears and frustrations, the same willingness to work and

longing to make contributions that others have.

Through the National Federation of the Blind we are focusing

this willingness to work and longing to contribute, and we are

helping the dreams of blind people come true. We will do our best

to remember that the pancakes should not be gray, and we will tip

our hats at the proper time.

Where Are The Eyes?

by Bruce A. Gardner

Bruce Gardner, active in the Mormon Church and President of

the National Federation of the Blind of Arizona, is a successfully

practicing lawyer in Phoenix, Arizona. Like many of us who are

blind, he has had to learn through painful experience the

importance of appearance and the symbols of successful behavior. Of

course, nothing substitutes for performance and substance--but

symbols count, more than is generally understood. Here is how Bruce

tells about one of his experiences in moot court:

Should we who are blind be concerned with our posture,

gestures, and facial expressions? If we do pay attention to these

things, aren't we just trying to hide our blindness by pretending

that we can see? I remember pondering these questions as a blind

student in college.

My major was interpersonal communications, which included a

wide variety of topics from debate and public speaking to family

counseling and organizational communications. I found it

interesting and a great preparation for life and the practice of

law. As part of the major, I took several nonverbal communication

classes in which we discussed how things other than spoken words

(such as the voice and body language) affect the message that is

conveyed. We studied the effects of inflection, pitch, tone,

cadence, volume, and intensity of the voice, as well as gestures,

posture, and facial expressions. We noted that variations in the

voice can alter or even reverse the meaning of words. For example,

"thanks a lot" can express genuine appreciation; however, if said

with icy sarcasm, the message might actually be one of contempt.

Likewise in our predominantly sighted society, body language

along with the voice affects the meaning of the spoken word. A

friend may say she is happy and even do it with a cheerful tone in

her voice, but the frown on her face and the droop in her shoulders

may suggest otherwise. I learned that although as a blind person I

may be unaware of the messages conveyed by body language, most

sighted people (usually subconsciously) pay attention and give

credence to the messages conveyed through gestures, posture, and

facial expressions. For example, if I am facing away or looking

down at my shoes when talking to someone, he may get the impression

that I am not interested in him or what he has to say. I learned

that it is therefore important to understand basic body language

and use it properly when we are communicating in order to convey

the intended message rather than mixed or incorrect messages.

Even so, communication is an art, not an exact science, and

the best intentions can sometimes fall short. I vividly recall a

situation in law school when that happened to me. I was selected to

be on the moot court team representing the Brigham Young University

Law School in intercollegiate moot court competition.

Similar to an undergraduate debate team, moot court

competition consists of drafting a court of appeals brief and then

arguing the case before a panel of judges. In intercollegiate

competition a hypothetical legal issue and fact scenario is

selected for the year. The moot court teams, consisting of three

members each, are assigned to write a brief for the United States

Supreme Court representing either the appellant or appellee in the

hypothetical case. A great deal of legal research and analysis is

done by the team members in selecting just the right cases to cite

and legal arguments to make in each brief. The briefs are then

carefully analyzed, critiqued, and scored.

Two members of each team then give oral arguments before a

panel of judges just as if they were arguing the case before the

Supreme Court. Although each team prepared its brief for either the

appellant or appellee depending on the assignment, at oral argument

the team must be prepared at the flip of a coin to argue the case

for either side. The issues are divided in half, with one of the

team members prepared to present oral argument for the appellant on

one half of the issues and another team member prepared to present

oral arguments on the other side of the case for the appellee on

those same issues. The third member of the team is the swing member

who must be ready to present the other half of the issues for

either the appellant or the appellee. This meant that the swing

member gave oral arguments each time the team competed, sometimes

on one side of the case and sometimes on the other. Just before

time to present oral arguments, with a flip of the coin, we would

find out which side of the case we would be presenting. Because I

had won the Dean's Cup that year for best oralist at the Brigham

Young University Law School, I served as swing member of my team.

In regional moot court competition each law school in the

region sends its two teams to the day-long multi-round competition.

Each panel of judges is comprised of three practicing attorneys who

live and work in the city where the host law school is located. In

the semi-final round of regional competition, my team (which had

gone undefeated to that point) faced the host law school's

remaining team. Each presenter was interrupted numerous times by

the judges asking pointed and difficult questions, and each oralist

deftly fielded the questions and made compelling presentations.

After the semi-final round was finished, the two teams sat

quietly in the courtroom awaiting the judges' verdict as to which

team had won. We all knew each of the oralists on both teams had

done extremely well and the scoring would be close. We also knew

that if the scoring of the oral arguments was tied, my team would

be declared the winner because our written brief had taken first

place in the region.

When the panel of judges returned, they each gave a critique

of our arguments. Each judge identified strengths and weaknesses of

the presentations. After the first two critiques, it was apparent

that the scoring was tied. We all wondered what the third judge

would say, particularly because he had not opened his mouth or

asked a single question during the entire semi-final round. The

third judge made rather routine comments about each presentation,

but then to my surprise and great dismay he had an additional

unusual and negative criticism for me. He said that although my

presentation was excellent and my arguments compelling, I did not

look him in the eyes and convince him that I was right.

He further said that the fact that he had not asked a single

question should not matter, and I should have looked him in the

eyes and talked directly to him just as much as I did the other two

judges. He then "docked" my team, which meant that the team from

the host law school won by one point.

My teammates and I came away from that experience convinced of

two things. First, the judge had no clue that I was blind, and he

was therefore not trying to discriminate against me. After all, he

had no opportunity to see my cane because we simply stood when the

judges entered the courtroom and stood when they left, and I did

not need or utilize my cane when I stepped from the table where I

was sitting to the podium to give my presentation. And second, he

(probably subconsciously) had decided that the home town team

should win, and he caused that to happen in the only way he could

think of. We knew this second notion was probably just sour grapes,

but it made the losing more palatable.

The ironic thing was that harkening back to my non-verbal

communication classes, I had made a conscious effort to look all

three judges in the eyes, but because the third judge never said a

word, I was not sure exactly where he was sitting or where to look.

I was pretty sure he was to the right of the other two judges who

frequently interrupted my presentation to ask me questions, so I

would look in that general area occasionally during my oral

argument, but to no avail. Oh well, as I said, communication is an

art, not an exact science. You win some, and you lose some.

This incident reminded me of a conversation I had in one of my

nonverbal communication classes taken several years earlier in

undergraduate school. One day we were discussing various studies

that addressed eye contact: how far apart people are when their

eyes meet as they approach each other; how long it is customary to

look a friend, stranger, subordinate, or superior in the eyes

before glancing away; how often during a conversation direct eye

contact is repeated; and the various messages that are conveyed by

these actions.

One of the students said that he had noticed that the blind

guy in the class (me) looked people in the eyes when he talked to

them and he wondered why since he knew I could not see them. I

responded by turning my face to the wall and saying, "Because it

would look strange if I talked to you like this." He then said,

"Yeah, but you look people right in the eyes. How do you know where

to look?" I teasingly responded, "I don't know about you, but most

people's eyes are just above their mouths; therefore, I use your

voice to determine where to look. The whole class laughed.

Later, however, I did some serious reflecting on his question.

Why did I face people when talking to them, and why did I pay

attention to my gestures and facial expressions? Was it because I

was still trying to hide my blindness by pretending that I could

see and was "normal" as I had done for so many years before I

learned the truth about blindness from the National Federation of

the Blind?

It was only a couple of years earlier that I had learned of

the NFB and begun accepting and dealing with my blindness. Before

that time I had been ashamed of my blindness because I thought

blind people were fumbling, bumbling Mr. Magoos or worse, virtually

helpless dependents who sold pencils on the street corner. I did

not want to be thought of like that, so I tried to hide my

blindness. And of course, I did not use a cane. I did crazy things

to appear "normal." I came to think of these actions as playing

"blindman's bluff." I would do ridiculous things, such as pretend

to be reading a magazine in the barber shop or a doctor's office

and turn the pages after the appropriate passage of time; loiter in

lobbies outside what I hoped were the restrooms (sometimes in

increasing discomfort) in order to identify a man and then observe

which door he went through so I could follow him into the correct

restroom; and pretend to be distracted or unfriendly rather than

let people know I did not see or recognize them.

But now that I had learned the truth about blindness, that it

is respectable to be blind, and was carrying a rigid long white

cane like a neon sign that said "look at me, I am blind," hiding my

blindness by pretending to see was not only impossible but out of

the question.

Before I heard of the NFB my actions were motivated by my

intent to con or deceive others into thinking I could see. But upon

introspection I realized that thanks to the NFB, my motives had

changed, and I was now simply trying to be a better communicator.

I realized that there is a profound difference between trying to

hide the fact that you are blind by pretending to see, and

understanding and using body language as an important part of

communication.

Educated Fingers

by Barbara Pierce

Barbara Pierce is the wife of a college professor, the mother

of three children, the editor of the leading magazine in the

blindness field, and the President of the National Federation of

the Blind of Ohio. As indicated in the following article, she leads

a full and active life. Here is what she has to say about some of

her experiences.

From the time my daughter Anne was a tiny child she has had a

sharp eye for detail. Before she could speak, she could point

correctly to where I stored each piece of kitchen equipment. If

there was a coin on the sidewalk or a four-leaf clover in the lawn,

she would find it.

Since her marriage she has been working in the local jewelry

store. Her gift of visual observation is now being trained in very

specific ways. Her eyes are being educated to notice and appreciate

subtle detail and to draw conclusions from what she sees.

Everyone who is neither blind nor colorblind can distinguish

colors, but artists, interior decorators, and house painters notice

shades and blend and contrast them with a sureness unmatched by the

rest of the population. Similarly, auto mechanics, musicians, and

linguists in very different ways have educated their ears to notice

subtle differences in pitch and tone that escape the rest of us.

In the same way, while learning to function efficiently, a

person who has become blind or a blind child must actually educate

his or her fingers to discern nuance and appreciate small

variations. As a young child I remember often being confused when

I was handed unfamiliar objects. It took time and patience to learn

to sort the shapes and make sense of what I was holding.

Take cookie cutters for example. The star, valentine, and

Christmas tree were easy to identify. The gingerbread man, Santa

Claus, and angel were almost as obvious. Animals were a little

trickier. The Easter Bunny and chicken were simple, but I had

trouble distinguishing between the dog and the sheep.

Then one day some friends handed me a cookie and asked if I

could identify the shape. It was unlike anything I had ever

handled. All the lines seemed to sweep in one direction, and one

portion reminded me vaguely of a robe or skirt. I had not the

remotest idea what the thing could be, but I felt great pressure to

make a guess, and I was afraid of making what they would consider

an absurd mistake.

In desperation I said, "a girl airplane." I knew perfectly

well that aircraft did not have gender, but I hoped by making up an

answer that was patently absurd to protect myself from being

laughed at for making an actual mistake. To my surprise, they burst

into delighted laughter and announced that my guess was more or

less right. The cookie was a witch flying on a broomstick. I

considered myself extremely lucky.

At the same time I recognized that a whole new range of

outlines had just opened to me. I was used to identifying the

shapes of objects standing still, looking like Christmas stockings

or birds or cows. Suddenly I realized that lots of things moved and

therefore could be depicted in motion and that I would have to

build that concept into my efforts to recognize the shapes of

things.

Having a visual knowledge of shape does not, however,

translate directly into tactile understanding. Last Christmas my

daughter Margy gave me a wooden puzzle of the United States in

which each piece is a state. I had never had access to such a map

as a child and had always wanted to know more particularly how the

various states fit together.

As an elementary school teacher Margy knew where to find the

puzzle, and I thoroughly enjoyed learning to assemble it. It took

a weekend of intermittent fiddling to be able to identify all the

states. After watching me explore the puzzle pieces, Margy decided

to try putting it together with her eyes closed. Of course she had

the advantage of knowing the map well to begin with, but she was

surprised to discover that she could not immediately identify many

of the states by touch even though she had a mental image of what

she was looking for. She is bright and as the daughter of a blind

woman has had lots of tactile experience, so she mastered the skill

quickly.

Like all other kinds of education, educating the fingers takes

practice. But the more experience they get, the more easily fingers

learn. Often you don't even realize how much your fingers know

until they are put to the test.

When my children were small, I came home one day to discover

that the baby-sitter had not kept as close tabs on the three as I

could have wished. The labels had systematically been removed from

all my canned goods. I have never bothered to label my cans in

Braille as I would if I lived alone or with another blind person.

I can usually identify the can I want by knowing its size and

shaking all the cans of the right dimensions. When I ask a member

of the family to confirm my choice, I am pretty frequently

confirmed in my choice.

It is one thing to have your guesses confirmed by having

someone read a label and quite another to check your guess by

opening the lid and living with the consequences. On the whole,

however, I did pretty well in this emergency. There was no way to

distinguish among the various kinds of condensed cream soups, but

pumpkin, kidney beans, and black olives all sound different from

each other when shaken.

Folks often assume that blind people depend on always having

things returned to their original position in order to manage their

lives. There are certainly advantages to being able to glance

around a room and see where your toddler has shed her socks or the

dog has dropped your slipper. But actually in our household and

among my friends I am often the one to find things that have gone

missing.

One day I was out with a friend who had dropped her car key

into her purse, but when we were ready to leave, she couldn't find

it. She searched and researched her handbag and then got out and

began looking on the ground around the car. I picked up her bag and

fished out the key in about ten seconds. It had fallen into a

letter. As soon as I moved the folded sheet, I knew it was too

heavy to be a single piece of paper. When I slipped my fingers

across the surface of the letter, I felt the outline of the key.

She had been so busy looking for the key that she had not paid

attention to what her fingers were telling her about the weight and

balance of the paper.

Having educated fingers provides wonderful benefits. When our

children were babies, I could get up at night and feed and change

them without ever opening my eyes or waking up fully. The

disadvantage was, of course, that my husband had a strong argument

for giving me the lion's share of the night duty.

One of the reasons we bought our current home was the

fireplace in the dining room. We were assured that it functioned

well, but when we tried to build our first fire, we discovered that

the damper, which was obviously quite new, would not open. The

previous owner had repaired the fireplace and then not used it for

years. Debris had sifted down over time and now prevented the

damper from swinging open.

I covered the screen with a drop cloth and reached through

with one hand. Working back-handed, I forced the damper open enough

to slip my fingers through. Then I began flicking bits of ash,

brick, and bird's nest out through the slit and eventually, as the

damper opened wider, through the widening crack on the hinge side.

It was hard work, and I banged up the backs of my hands and

fingers, but I was eventually successful in freeing the damper so

that we could use the fireplace.

Even though I had a little vision when my mother taught me to

iron, I could not see the wrinkles in the pieces I was working on.

From the first I had to learn how to smooth a panel of the garment

and work close to the iron without burning myself. Though most

sighted people don't believe it, this is actually quite easy to do.

Now my favorite time to iron during the summer is late in the

evening when a breeze blows through the windows of the converted

sleeping porch that is my laundry room. I can read a talking

cassette book in the darkness and iron while the birds go to bed

and the crickets begin their chorus.

Our neighbors seem finally to have adjusted to the fact that

I often weed the lawn and flower beds beginning at twilight. At

first they questioned me about what I was doing sitting in the

middle of my lawn in the dark and listening to a cassette book.

Buckets of dandelions and ground ivy have convinced them that I

actually am accomplishing something useful out there in the cool of

the evening.

I was not always so comfortable letting others observe how I

do things. Society exerts lots of pressure on blind people to do

things like everybody else. It was members of the National

Federation of the Blind, at ease with who they were and how they

did things, who taught me that it was far better to get things done

efficiently than to look like everybody else while I did nothing.

This attitude makes eminently good sense, but it helps to know that

members of the general public are now reading books like this one

and learning why I search for things with my educated fingers and,

as often as not, find them.

Let The Medals Jingle

by Tonia L. Valletta

Tonia Valletta is a superb gymnast. She has also found and

come to realize the importance of the National Federation of the

Blind. Here is what she has to say about both:

I remember how surprised I was when, during my eighth grade

year, a fellow student in my Spanish class approached me and said

admiringly, "Hey, I was doing some research, and I found a picture

of you in National Geographic World magazine. I didn't know you

used to do gymnastics!" My Mom has collected all the newspaper

articles about me since I was three years old; they are tangible

proof that being blind, let alone a blind gymnast, is a big deal to

the rest of the world. But, it was not the numerous articles, the

swell of being notorious, the people who said, "You've inspired me

so much," or the medals and ribbons that I loved so dearly: it was

being a gymnast.

Mr. Roltsch was the coach who agreed to take me into his gym

and teach me gymnastics when I was seven or eight years old. "I had

never taught a blind gymnast before," he told me later, "so I was

hesitant and a bit skeptical when your Mom called me and asked me

to teach you. But, when your Mom brought you over, and I took you

down into the gym to test you out, I decided it was worth the

challenge to take you on as a pupil." He had a deep, powerful voice

that I was drawn to because it said, "I expect 100 percent grit

from you, and if you don't give it to me, I will be disappointed."

At the same time, his voice was gentle and reassuring. He never

hesitated to correct me, and he had a not-so-subtle way of telling

me when he knew I was cheating him out of valuable time by slacking

off. I rejoiced at every compliment I got from him, for he gave

them only when my performance was nearly-perfect enough to merit

them.

Mr. Roltsch was a demanding coach and a darn good one. Those

of us on the team who appreciated gymnastics as both a sport and an

art, just as Mr. Roltsch did, gave him every ounce of strength and

determination that we had, and he, in the course of a few years,

transformed us from hesitant, clumsy little marionettes into

gymnasts.

The Roltschs' gym was built into their basement, and to get to

it, you had to walk down a steep, spiraling sidewalk that curled

around the house and led straight to the door of the upper deck of

the gym. Up there, we all pulled off our sweat suits and socks,

tossed our shoes against the wall, and scampered down the thirteen

planked stairs onto the floor mats below. The gym had its own smell

which I came to automatically associate with the sweat of grueling

workouts and the sweet, paralyzing exhaustion that always

accompanied them.

I quickly became addicted to the anesthetic effect of the

draining workouts, so much so that whenever I entered the gym, even

before I had stripped down to my leotard, I could feel tender,

invisible fingers gently massaging and stretching my muscles in

preparation for the next two hours of leap, tumble, and swing.

My first victory in gymnastics came when I turned my first

cartwheel. Someone had tried to show me what a cartwheel looked

like by using a Barbie doll, but I could not understand. In my

eight-year-old mind, I was a little girl, not a doll, and I was not

able to imagine my body manipulating itself the way the doll moved

in the hands of my coach. For weeks, maybe even months, I tried

mechanically to turn a cartwheel, putting down slowly first one

hand, then the other hand, then one foot, then the other foot. I

felt like a long-limbed gorilla slapping the mat with my hands and

clumping with my feet as I tried to force my body to turn itself

properly.

Then, one day it happened without my even trying; in fact,

that must have been why it happened. All of a sudden, I found

myself sliding smoothly through the air and landing in the same

position I'd started in. I knew as soon as I landed that this was

how a cartwheel was supposed to feel. I still did not understand

exactly how I'd done it, much less what it looked like, but I did

know what one felt like, and that was all that mattered.

The next challenge was to train myself to do a straight

cartwheel, so I turned wheel after wheel using the crack between

the mats as my guiding line. It took the horse a while, but finally

it learned to pull the cart straight down that line.

The "floor ex," short for floor exercise, was my second

favorite event. I didn't like doing balance beam because I couldn't

keep myself from falling off; and, because I could not run straight

down the 30-foot runway to the vault, I could not build up enough

power to hurl myself over it. But the "floor" (I especially liked

its more modern version, the spring floor, that was carpeted and

bounced slightly when you fell on it) for me consisted of gravity,

the expansive flatness, and the infinite space above it through

which I could leap and twist and somersault to my soul's content.

Truly, to be off the ground, buoyed up in the air, restrained

by nothing, and surrounded by an exhilarating nothingness for just

an instant, is the sweetest liberation I have ever known. For that

reason, my favorite "move" on the floor was the double front

handspring, because keeping my body in constant motion during those

three to four seconds electrified me every time I did one. I would

launch onto my right foot as though I were skipping, then after my

left foot hit the ground once, I lunged forward and boxed the floor

with open palms as my feet sailed in an arc over my head and landed

in front of my hands which sprang from the floor rocking me forward

into a standing position once again. I would then repeat the move,

except this time without the skipping start, because the momentum

of the first handspring catapulted me into the second handspring.

For the record, I admit that throughout my six years as a

gymnast, I had to work extremely hard at being both flexible and

graceful. However, when it came to the floor and the uneven bars,

I was the queen of brute strength and aggression: the two bars

levitated in space, the gravity, the nothingness, and the expansive

flatness were all my subjects, and I forced them to work as hard

for me as I did for them.

My favorite event, as well as my best, was the uneven bars. I

received my highest score ever, an 8.25, doing a class four bar

routine. Other coaches worked with me on floor, beam, and vault;

but when it came time to work on the uneven bars, Mr. Roltsch was

my coach to the exclusion of all other coaches and assistant

coaches. When he realized that I loved the bars the best and was

strong and daring enough to take them on, he dedicated himself to

the challenge of helping me to perfect my bar routine.

Gradually, yet unmistakably, "the bars" ushered themselves

into the center of the gym as I visualized it--and I, the bars, and

Mr. Roltsch pressed on toward ultimately unachievable perfection.

At my first gymnastics meet, I did only my bar routine because

it was my best and most practiced. I remember that day well. The

rest of the team was already at the meet doing their other three

routines. It wasn't yet time to join them, so Mom dropped me off at

the Roltschs' house. Mr. Roltsch met me at the door and took me

through his house and downstairs into the gym. There, he helped me

warm up on the bars and run through a few routines so I would be

ready at the meet. Then we went back upstairs, I dressed, and we

sat outside on his porch drinking lemonade. I don't remember what

we said, but I know that I felt loved and protected sitting with

Mr. Roltsch on his porch. We then drove to the meet, and I did my

routine. I was scared, but I made it through and got a score of

6.65. My coach was happy with that score.

A few years passed, and I turned eleven on May 13, 1985. I was

a fifth-grader, and school was almost over. Some time before that,

a friend had told me, my Mom, and Mr. and Mrs. Roltsch about a

national sports competition for the blind that happened every year

during the first week of June. This year, "Nationals," sponsored by

USABA, the United States Association for Blind Athletes, would be

held in Trenton, New Jersey. By now, my bar routine had improved

considerably along with my other three routines; I now competed

all-around doing all four events in the meets I went to. So, my

coach, my Mom, and I talked it over briefly and decided that I

should go to New Jersey.

Soon, I was sitting quietly in the back seat of the Roltschs'

car as we drove north; my parents followed the next day.

On the morning of the competition, I was more terrified than

I had ever been in my entire life. I felt sick to my stomach, and

I could hardly swallow the chocolate milk Mr. Roltsch told me I had

to drink. All had gone well in practice, but now was the real

thing, my one and only chance to prove myself to all those who

would be watching, including my parents. Floor, beam, and vault

came and went in a haze; I fell off the beam four times, and set a

national record with my score on the floor exercise. Then came the

uneven bars. I was psyched, I was ready--and I was scared. There

was one move in the routine I was particularly worried about. It

was the hardest move in the routine, and if I didn't get the timing

absolutely right, I would miss it completely.

Perching on the low bar facing forward, I would do a "single-

leg shoot through" to straddle the bar, then reverse grip, and

raise myself from off the bar to circle swiftly around it. This

move was called a "mill-circle catch" because in mid-rotation I

would let go of the low bar about 7/8 of the way around to reach

for the high bar. If I let go too early or too late, I wouldn't

catch the bar, and Mr. Roltsch would have to touch me to keep me

from falling. If he touched me, the judges would deduct half a

point from my score. We had practiced this move hundreds of times,

and I knew I could do it perfectly. But, would I? Or would I clam

up and not let go at all?

I was up. I splashed chalk on my hands and positioned myself

standing on the mat in front of the low bar. I touched the bar,

saluted the judge, and began my routine. It was swift, tight, and

powerful. Pausing not even for an instant, I shot my leg through to

straddle the low bar, reversed grip, raised myself off the bar, and.

whapp! I had done it: I had caught the high bar. The audience

gasped in a hushed voice, and I heard my Dad exclaim in

astonishment, for he had never seen me compete before. I finished

my routine, and Mr. Roltsch hugged me as the applause raged and

surrounded me with its love.

As I stood on the top level of the make-shift platform with

one girl standing below me to my right and another below me to my

left, I cautiously lifted my hands to my neck and felt the thick,

wide ribbons that cascaded down my chest. There were five medals

spread out just below my chest: four gold and one silver. I had won

the first-place all-around medal, which meant that I was now the

reigning national champion blind gymnast. I kept smiling while

pictures were snapped of me with the second and third place

winners--it was so wonderfully easy to smile.

As we all left the gym victoriously, the medals at my chest

began to jingle rhythmically as I walked. After a few steps, I put

my hand over them to quiet them, because I was afraid that the

people walking with me would think I was being obnoxious. "Tonia",

my friend exclaimed jubilantly, "take your hand away. For goodness

sake, let those medals jingle!" The others agreed heartily, so I

removed my hand, and the medals at my chest began to swing and

bounce wildly with a glorious chink ... chink ... chink ...

The blind athlete's competition was my first encounter with a

national organization involved with blind people. More recently I

have come to be a part of the National Federation of the Blind.

After being urged by my friends to attend the National Convention,

I decided that the most godly and appropriate thing for me to do

would be to attend with an open mind and heart. To my great

surprise and delight, as I met one Federationist after another, I

encountered blind people who were friendly, polite, and confident

in their own abilities. And I noticed other characteristics of

Federationists that impressed me very much. Most notably, I

observed a contagious enthusiasm and energy, together with a

strong, binding sense of commitment to bettering the position of

blind persons in society.

I found myself compellingly attracted to this group of people

who shared my enthusiasm and willingness to work hard to accomplish

set goals, so I decided to join the National Federation of the

Blind and to search for ways to use my own special gifts and

abilities to further the independence, goals, and aspirations of

all blind people.

There are many ways to let the medals jingle.

Sewing

By Ramona Walhof

Ramona Walhof grew up in a small farming community in rural

Iowa. She and her brother and sister were born blind. Yearning for

something to do during one long, dull summer, Ramona asked her

mother (who was an accomplished seamstress) to teach her to sew.

The story that follows is her account of a lifetime of satisfaction

and practical good--from hobby, to employment, to family budget-

stretcher--gained from this rapidly disappearing art.

Along the way, Ramona (who was widowed in her early 20's) also

raised two children, owned and managed a commercial bakery, taught

school, and directed employment programs for the blind. Today she

operates a very successful public relations business and is

President of the National Federation of the Blind of Idaho. She

also serves as a national officer in the National Federation of the

Blind. Here is what she has to say:

When I learned to sew, I never thought much about blindness.

I didn't avoid thinking about blindness. It was a part of me. But

when I needed a method to do something that others did visually, I

just did what seemed most likely to work. Nobody suggested that

blindness should prevent sewing until I knew better.

As I grew older, I came across blind girls and women who had

been actively discouraged from doing things I learned as a child.

Sewing for me has provided employment, relaxation, challenge, and

accomplishment. It has helped me to learn about fabrics, styles,

and colors. There are things I never attempted (some because of

blindness) but most because of lack of time. Perhaps one day I may

still take up some new kinds of sewing such as quilting. I know it

would be delightful to do if I ever get to it.

When I was a young child, summers were boring. My brother,

sister, and I attended the School for the Blind during the school

year. We were very glad to go home at the end of May each spring,

but we didn't have a lot of friends in our home town, and we got

tired of not having enough to do. We took swimming lessons,

participated in local church activities, helped with cleaning and

cooking (washing dishes was the worst), visited with grandparents

and cousins. We hauled as many Braille books home from school as we

could fit in the car with all our clothes and other possessions.

My brother managed to talk our Dad into some ham radio equipment

and entertained himself with that. My sister and I generally

rationed our books some and got Braille magazines, but there never

was really enough to do.

One summer, (the one after my fifth grade year), I decided to

try to solve the problem. I announced to my mother with the

diplomacy customary for me at the time, "This summer you are going

to teach me to sew." My mother had been making clothes for us as

long as I could remember. We got some school clothes from stores

and from catalogs, but the ones she made were always nice, and we

could help decide what they would look like. Several people in our

family sew, and my mother had a buttonholer on her machine, so

people would bring their garments to our house to do the

buttonholes. So it seemed natural for me to want to sew.

My mother didn't resist at all. She responded with a question,

"What do you want to make?" I never asked her what she thought

about it, but I really don't think she was shocked. Perhaps a

little uncertain about some of the techniques. Actually, techniques

were not a problem. I told her I wanted to make gym clothes. I

figured a few mistakes could be tolerated in gym clothes. I think

that neither my mother nor I knew that blindness was much of a

factor, so it wasn't.

We decided that the gym shirt should have a plain round

neckline with cap sleeves. This was my idea so that I would not

have to gather the sleeves and set them in. My mother cut a pattern

out of newspaper, designing it from something else she had. I

pinned the pattern on the material and cut it out. Then my mother

realized that she had forgotten the cap sleeves, so they had to be

set in after all. This made the project more complicated for a

beginner, but the gym shirt looked great to me. I learned to guide

the material through the sewing machine using a quilting guide my

mother had. I learned to pin seams and hems closely and remove the

pins just before they came to the presser foot. I learned to move

the gathers on the gathering thread and put them where they should

be when I pinned the gathered piece to the one it needed to be

sewed to. Really, it wasn't as hard as I had feared. I wore that

gym shirt all through sixth grade. I don't think we ever got to the

shorts.

Marking darts could be done with pins or basting threads.

There were so many different kinds of darts that it took me some

practice to get them all figured out. Gradually, I got so I could

judge the size of darts pretty accurately without having to use the

marks from the pattern itself.

When we came home for Christmas that year, I made a yellow

skirt. It turned out all right, too. This time I used the tissue

paper pattern. My cutting technique seemed obvious to me, and my

mother never commented on it. Only later did we learn that blind

people weren't supposed to be able to cut around tissue paper

patterns.

I held the scissors with my right hand the way most people do.

I looped my left hand over the top of the scissors with the thumb

and fingers opposite each other right at the part of the scissors

that did the cutting. If the edge of the pattern was at the top of

the bottom scissors blade, I could feel tissue paper on one side

and fabric on the other. If the scissors were not right at the edge

of the pattern, I would have paper or fabric on both sides of the

bottom blade. The more practice I got, the better I got, but even

as a beginner, I could cut reasonably well along the edge of the

pattern.

Patterns come in an envelope in big sheets, and my mother

would cut the pieces apart and trim on the cutting lines. She never

really read the instructions to me. Rather, she taught me basic

concepts about how to set in sleeves, turn down a skirt band over

the seam, set in a zipper, assemble and attach a collar, etc. She

also taught me to identify pieces of garments by their shapes.

Sleeves would tend to be round at one end and square at the other.

Blouses and dress tops had big arcs cut out where the sleeves would

be attached. The curves at the front and back of slacks and shorts

were shaped differently from sleeve curves. The curve at the back

was bigger than the curve at the front for slacks patterns, but the

curve in the front of the top where sleeves are in-set is bigger

than the one at the back.

Much later I learned that the instructions printed with the

patterns could often be helpful when taking on a new style of

garment. I am sure my mother read the instructions, because she

often used them when we were laying out fabric before we cut it

out. But we often found better ways to make efficient use of the

material than the patterns showed. I don't remember what I made

during the summer after my sixth grade year, but I am sure there

was something.

In any case when I enrolled in home economics in seventh

grade, I already knew some of the basics about sewing. Our teacher

was new that year and had no background working with blind girls.

Our first project was to make an apron. There was no cutting.

Everything was on a straight line and could be torn with the grain

of the fabric. The aprons had a blue border at the bottom with a

flowered print above. The bands and sashes were straight pieces.

The sashes had to be hemmed, and aprons had to be gathered and

attached to the bands.

There were eight girls in my class, and most of us could sew

a hem fairly straight by the time the aprons were done. The teacher

really didn't want us to run a machine without having her present

to watch. I disregarded this instruction without too much teacher

protest.

I learned about the seam guide in that class. You can buy a

little metal hump that screws into the top of the machine cabinet

which is better than my mother's quilting guide. For the rest of

the first semester our home economics class cooked. Second semester

was the real sewing class. My friend and I decided to make

tangerine skirts, but they were different patterns.

The teacher's first notion was that she would cut out all the

patterns. Unfortunately for her, I was there to object. So I cut

out my own pattern. I also offered to help other kids learn to do

it. Some of the girls really didn't have much trouble. Some tended

to place the fingers of their guiding hand at the end of the

scissors instead of where the cutting occurred. They were

constantly being warned to be careful not to cut themselves. Since

I thought everybody knew better than to close the scissors with

fingers between the blades, these warnings seemed unnecessary.

Certainly, some of the students were more fearful of scissors than

they needed to be. We also learned how to assemble all our

different patterns.

When I cut out my blouse, I made an error. I should have laid

the back on the fold, but I cut it on the edge of the fabric, thus

requiring a seam where there should have been none. If I had not

been so determined to do it myself, the teacher doubtless would

have found this error before it was done. Some students were much

too cooperative in my judgment and did not do as much of the work

themselves as they could and should have.

We could all thread a regular needle using a needle threader

with a fine wire loop. When the wire loop is in the eye of the

needle, the thread is brought through the loop. When the needle

threader is removed from the needle the thread passes through the

eye. Large eye needles made this easy. Our teacher encouraged

basting, but most of us didn't like to do it. We all learned to

baste, though, because we were required to baste zippers. We also

learned to hem garments with an overcast stitch. It was desirable

not to see the thread on the outside of the hem. With practice,

some of us got pretty good at this.

Threading the machines presented another challenge. When

threading the machine, one needed to pass the thread through

several metal or plastic loops. No one had trouble learning where

to put the thread, but we would not notice loops of thread that got

caught in other places while we were doing the threading.

It took me a while, but I finally realized that if I kept the

thread taut from spool to needle while doing the threading, I could

tell if there were errors or loops where they should not be. We

always blamed the tension if something went wrong, and I feel sure

that we did inadvertently turn the dial at the tension sometimes.

With experience, I learned to tell from the stitching itself

when the top and bobbin tensions were balanced. My mother was

casual about making constructive suggestions about things like this

and more helpful than anyone else before or since. She would tell

me what she looked for, and I could try to learn the same

information by touch. More often than not it worked. Everyone

(including me) tended to rely on somebody's eyesight for certain

judgments at first. If a sighted person wasn't conveniently

available to help when wanted, this became a nuisance and provided

motivation for all of us to develop techniques that a blind person

could use independently.

It is surprising for me now to think about how difficult it

sometimes seemed to feel proper stitching. If we had expected to be

able to do it from the beginning, we all would have found it

easier. As it was, this took some time and experience.

I continued to make clothes during vacations and in home

economics. I enjoyed the making and the wearing of the clothes. I

also enjoyed making things for others, but seldom had enough

confidence to do it. I made a shirt for my dad and a baby dress for

a cousin, and I think they were OK.

During college I did not have access to a sewing machine and

did very little sewing. Shortly after I was married, though, a

sewing machine seemed important to have. We bought a cheap one, a

portable one that weighed a ton. It was very heavy to lift on and

off the dining room table, so it stayed at one end while we ate at

the other during many weeks. I usually put it away on weekends.

I took a set of big bath towels that had been wedding presents

but were not being used and made my husband a bathrobe. He was

pleased and wore it a lot which pleased me. We still have a picture

of him sleeping in a recliner in that bathrobe with our first baby

on his shoulder also asleep. When I got pregnant, I knew I could

save money by making maternity clothes. I did make some, and my

mother made me some, too. We didn't spend much. Then, of course, it

is even more fun to sew for your children.

Knits were the big thing in the early 70's so I took a short

course at the YMCA in stretch and sew. We didn't sew during class.

We took our assignments home, so the teacher had no occasion to

worry about blindness. If she didn't explain something, I asked,

but this was easy for all. I made pants and a shirt for my daughter

who was a toddler and a matching set for my son who was a tiny

baby. I also made a shirt for myself. I offered to make my husband

a shirt, but it never got done. It was already cheaper to buy

t-shirts than to make them.

After my husband died and I returned to work at the Commission

for the Blind in Iowa, I was immediately assigned to teach sewing

along with Braille. My students all wanted to sew with knits, so

the stretch and sew class was far more valuable than I had ever

dreamed. Some of my students were beginners, and some had far more

sewing experience than I. This concerned me at first, but I found

that we could learn from each other in wonderful ways.

Several of my students went home and took up sewing a lot.

Others did less but enjoyed it. One young woman had been a

professional seamstress in an alterations department for a big

store. She chose to make a jacket that had three parallel rows of

top stitching for trim that were supposed to be done in three

different colors. I cautioned her about this, but that is the kind

of thing she liked. I thought that her control as a newly blinded

seamstress might not be as good as desirable for something that

showy, but it really turned out fine. I cannot say how many

students I taught sewing or how many outfits I made for myself and

my children during the next several years, but I gained a lot of

experience.

It was during that time that people began using machines with

cams and other kinds of fancy stitches. These made sewing even more

fun! Making decorative items or decorations on clothes was

something we had to do. We just couldn't ignore these interesting

new sewing machine features.

When my daughter was in second grade, she joined Bluebirds.

They were supposed to make red felt vests, and none of the mothers

wanted to take on this project. I thought felt vests were not

sensible for second graders. One slip of the scissors would be

ugly, and felt was expensive. I offered to have the group make

skirts at my house. Other mothers thought I was crazy, but agreed.

It was simple--use navy blue rectangular pieces of polyester knit

fabric. Turn down the top enough to pull three-quarter inch elastic

through. Turn up the bottom two inches and sew red rickrack around

at the top of the hem. There was only one seam required and no hand

sewing. The girls could use the sewing machines if their mothers

would let them. The skirts were cute as they could be, and the

girls were proud as peacocks.

By the time my daughter was in sixth grade, it was clear to me

that she wanted more clothes than I was willing to buy. I told her

she could probably have more clothes throughout junior high and

high school if she would learn to sew. She was more than eager. She

chose to make a three-tiered white skirt with purple trim. The

gathers on three tiers wore her out, so I helped, but she did the

rest. She wore it for her sixth grade graduation and looked great.

When she was called to the front for the top award from the school,

I had tears and wished one more time that my husband could have

been there to share it with us.

Anyway, Laura was a confirmed sewer, although she still had a

lot to learn. We began to learn about new kinds of patterns

together. While she was in high school, she made casual clothes,

but I did the more formal ones. When kids need something for

school, you don't always get much notice. When Laura joined the

orchestra, she needed a black formal. Her friend's mother knew the

right pattern, and I made it. For her first formal dance, I made

her a mint green long satin dress with puffed sleeves and an

inverted "v" below the bust. She had a good bustline, and the dress

looked good on her. She took it to college with her, when the time

came.

Now, Laura does more sewing than I do. She got practice during

college and made a friend's wedding dress. Today, for me sewing is

a hobby, but it is there when needed or wanted.

I love to share this experience with others. It is a way of

being creative and busy. One summer I went looking for clothes and

just couldn't find much. Before long I switched to shopping in

fabric stores and had the clothes I liked. Making a work dress can

be done in about the time needed for two shopping trips, and if

shopping isn't going well, sewing is more satisfying. I also can

make clothes fit the way I want them to. If I ever have

grandchildren, there will probably be things to do for them. Time

will tell.

If I ever have an opportunity to teach sewing again, I will be

much more confident about what projects my students should attempt.

One more thing. For a blind person who likes to read recorded books

and magazines, sewing is one of those things you can do while

reading.

You can help us spread the word...

... about our Braille Readers Are Leaders contest for blind

schoolchildren, a project which encourages blind children to

achieve literacy through Braille.

...about our scholarships for deserving blind college students.

...about Job Opportunities for the Blind, a program that matches

capable blind people with employers who need their skills.

...about where to turn for accurate information about blindness and

the abilities of the blind.

Most importantly, you can help us by sharing what you've

learned about blindness in these pages with your family and

friends. If you know anyone who needs assistance with the problems

of blindness, please write:

Marc Maurer, President

National Federation of the Blind

1800 Johnson Street, Suite 300

Baltimore, Maryland 21230-4998

Other Ways You Can Help the National Federation of the Blind

Write to us for tax-saving information on bequests and planned

giving programs.

OR

Include the following language in your will:

"I give, devise, and bequeath unto National Federation of the

Blind, 1800 Johnson Street, Suite 300, Baltimore, Maryland 21230,

a District of Columbia nonprofit corporation, the sum of $______

(or "_____ percent of my net estate" or "the following stocks and

bonds:________") to be used for its worthy purposes on behalf of

blind persons."

Your Contributions Are Tax Deductible

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