Parental Wisdom
Parental Wisdom
No Substitutes for Parental Wisdom,
Common Sense
by Barbara Pierce
Reprinted from the Fall, 1995, issue of the Buckeye Bulletin,
the newsletter of the NFB of Ohio.
Editor's Note: Mrs. Pierce is the President of the NFB of
Ohio, the editor of the Federation's monthly magazine, the
Braille Monitor, and a caring and competent blind mother whose
three adult children would make any parent proud.
With every passing year I grow increasingly aware of the
importance of our responsibility and commitment to the rising
generation of blind children.
In many ways they are more fortunate than any generation
of blind people before them. Technology gives them more access
to Braille and enables them to produce print more easily and
quickly than my generation would have thought possible as we
struggled to learn to type accurately. Closed-circuit
television systems enable students with some useful vision to
read print material that would otherwise be inaccessible to
them. Moreover, legislation now requires that blind students
receive a free appropriate education in the least restrictive
setting--a mandate that should make it possible for blind
students to take their rightful place in their academic and
social world more fully and easily than ever before. In
addition, the involvement of specially trained education
professionals in decision making about and instruction of
blind children can be a gold mine of information and expertise
for parents that previous generations never had available at
all.
At this point some of you are likely saying to yourself,
"What nonsense!" Too often technology is misused to prevent
students from learning the skills they need. Laws are only as
good as their enforcement. And we have all learned to our cost
that, though few things are more valuable to parents than wise
professional counsel, all too often such expertise is shaky at
best and often misguided. But beyond the issue of the quality
of the professional advice actually available to parents is
the temptation for them to abdicate their responsibility and
discount the value of their personal views about what their
children need and how to achieve it.
An incident at the 1995 National Federation of the Blind
Convention will illustrate my point. National Board of
Directors member Gary Wunder and I led a discussion on July 1
as part of the National Organization of Parent of Blind
Children's afternoon of concurrent workshops. The topic of our
discussion was ensuring that blind youngsters develop good
social skills. The subject is very important, and the room was
filled by interested parents with lots of questions and
problems to discuss. Not surprisingly, perhaps the most
distressing problem they raised was repetitive, socially
unacceptable behavior--head-shaking, eye-pressing, body-
rocking, and the like.
Afterwards, I talked for quite a while with a father
whose eight-year-old daughter presses her eyes with great
regularity. She maintains that it is a habit which she cannot
and does not wish to break. He told me that he and his wife,
the child's teachers, and even her friends pester her about
this behavior steadily. But to date they have had no success
in modifying the activity in any way. We talked about working
to make her understand why stopping the eye-pressing really is
important to her, even if she doesn't think so now. I then
suggested some methods of making it both possible and
attractive to her to change the habit using behavior
modification methods and rewards. These seemed to be things
that the family had not tried, and I hope they may be helpful.
The reason I bring the subject up at all is that I questioned
this father about the role being played by his daughter's
friends. He explained that, when he uses the word "friends,"
he was thinking of a neighbor couple who care deeply about the
little girl and have joined the family in fussing at her about
taking her fingers out of her eyes. I agreed that it could be
constructive to have other adults augment the parents' effort
but asked about her school friends and what they thought of
the eye-pressing. (She attends her local school and is part of
a regular class in a local public school.) The father paused
to consider and then announced, as though it had never
occurred to him before, that he didn't know the names of her
friends. I questioned him a little: did children come to their
house to play? No. Was she invited to birthday parties and
other outings with classmantes? No. Does his daughter mention
the names of other children when she talks about school? He
thought he could remember a name or two, but nothing
consistent.
I didn't say this to the father, and maybe the eye-
pressing provides a partial explanation for the dearth of
friends, but I view the loneliness of this child as an even
more serious problem than the eye-pressing.
In thinking over this conversation, I began to appreciate
with new insight and gratitude the role my own mother played
in my social development as a child. We lived on a dead-end
street with fewer than twenty-five houses. Amazingly, eight of
those families had daughters within two years of each other in
age. Mostly we played in groups of two to four, and I moved
freely among the various combinations. Our house had a large
side porch, and it became a favorite gathering place on hot
summer afternoons. We played house and office and later
canasta and (after my grandmother taught me the rudiments)
bridge as well. In the early spring, before my father painted
the porch and put the furniture out for the season, we roller
skated on it, and several times a summer we slept there all
night--or rather, tried to stay awake there.
But mostly what I remember is my mother coming out of the
side door carefully carrying a tray. On it were balanced tall
glasses of something cold to drink and some home-baked treat--
a plate of warm cookies, small pieces of cake, popcorn. It
didn't matter. The treats didn't appear every time we were on
my porch, but they were frequent enough to make playing at
Barbara's an attractive notion.
Not long ago I thanked my mother for all those treats and
glasses of lemonade and told her that I had appreciated them
then but that, having now done my share of providing snacks to
neighborhood children as my own three were growing up, I now
understood better and admired the quality of her love through
all those years.
She then told me something I had never known. There was
a time when my parents decided to move to a larger house in
another suburb. Mother was never happy with the small living
and dining rooms in our home, and she very much wanted to live
in another house. But it was she who decided that they would
stay for me to have those friends as the basis of my social
group in school. I know now what a sacrifice my mother made
for me, but neither of us can ever know the full extent of the
gift to me that her sacrifice made possible. I was never the
center of the socially elite group of girls in school. I was
too interested in good grades and not attractive enough to the
boys. But I had friends, lots of them; and I knew how to get
along with different kinds of people--both products of early
neighborhood experience.
My mother had no experts on blindness to advise her, but
she knew that it would be harder than normal for a blind child
to make friends in a regular class and even more important
that it be done. She couldn't do the job for me, but she could
help me get the practice I needed. She could make our home
attractive for other children. She could bring birthday treats
to school and have parties for groups of my friends. After
that I was on my own. It wasn't easy; growing up is never
carefree; and children who are obviously different have
additional complications to negotiate.
But every parent is equipped to help with the process.
Common sense is the guide, and love is the motivator. The
problem is that, when parents begin to depend on the views of
professionals only, they begin to doubt their own ability to
draw accurate conclusions and deny themselves the benefit of
their own, more personal, detailed observations.
Like all other children, blind kids need vast amounts of
reassurance and help in order to make it through childhood and
adolescence. Let's be sure to give them all the help to which
they are entitled. Technology, law, and professional
expertise--valuable as they can be--are a poor substitute for
parental wisdom and loving common sense. Blind youngsters need
all the support we can give them.
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