[PHOTO/CAPTION: The Ley family: Eileen holding Jon Carlos, Tom, and Maria]
[PHOTO/CAPTION: The Ley family: Eileen holding Jon Carlos, Tom, and Maria]
Braille Monitor
January
2005
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My Parents
Are Blind
by
Maria Rivera Ley, as told to Brooke Lea Foster
The
Ley family: Eileen holding Jon Carlos, Tom, and Maria
From the Editor: The
following article first appeared in the September 2004 issue of Parents
magazine. Eileen and Tom Ley are longtime leaders of the Federation. They live
busy, productive lives, and they are bringing up two delightful youngsters.
Now meet the Ley family as viewed by daughter Maria:
Life is surprisingly normal
when neither of the adults in the house can see, says this twelve-year-old girl.
Some kids bring their goldfish
or coin collection to school for show-and-tell. In third grade I brought my
mom. Since she's blind and I can see, my classmates wanted to know: could I
steal cookies from the cookie jar without getting caught? I had to laugh. Of
course I couldn't. She could hear the jar closing. Even now I think I get away
with less than other twelve-year-olds in the Baltimore suburb where we live.
My mom is always listening. I swear she can even hear me rolling my eyes at
her! And if I choose a low-cut T-shirt when we're shopping, she'll examine it
with her hands and make me find another one.
My
stepfather, Tom, is blind too. He lost his sight when he was eighteen because
of juvenile diabetes, but my mom has been blind since birth. She's never seen
my face, yet she knows that my hair is long and dark, my skin is mocha, and
I have her wide, almond-shaped eyes. She says she doesn't mind that she'll never
see me in a graduation cap or wedding dress because she'll always be there listening
and touching. But sometime if I have a soccer game or I'm dancing in a musical
at school, she'll admit that she's sad she can't see me in action.
I
actually didn't understand that my mother couldn't see until I was five years
old. After that I kept asking her to take me to the doctor because I wanted
to have my eyes checked. My mom realized I was worried that I'd become blind
too, and she explained that I couldn't catch blindness the way I could catch
a cold.
Kids--and
sometimes adults--assume that, because my parents can't see, I'm in charge.
For example, people think I read their email to them. But my mom and Tom read
their own email using a special computer device that talks and has a keyboard
with Braille letters. People also figure that I lead my parents across the street,
read them bedtime stories, and bathe my three-year-old brother, Jon Carlos.
Not true. To cross the street, my mother waits at the corner, listens to make
sure the cars have stopped, and then leads me across the busy four-lane intersection.
At bathtime my mom rubs a sponge along my brother's back, feeling her way down
to his toes. Before bed we read books that have words printed beneath Braille.
Like
everyone else's mom, mine is always on me about my schoolwork. She makes me
read my homework answers out loud to her. Tom used to be a math teacher, so
I ask him questions too. Mom has never let her blindness stand in her way. She
went to college at Harvard and to Wharton School of Business, and now she works
from home part-time selling advertising for a local magazine. This encourages
me to work extra hard to overcome my own challenges. I have dyslexia. Teachers
assume I'm dyslexic because I have blind parents who didn't read to me. That
really annoys Mom. We've always listened to books with our talking computer.
My
mom does most of the cooking. We love her rice and beans. Some blind people
have Braille labels or magnets on their canned and frozen food, but Mom feels
for textures instead. A short, round can is tuna. She can tell the difference
between bags of frozen carrots and broccoli by feeling the shape inside.
Mom
doesn't let her lack of sight stop us from having fun. We play versions of Monopoly
and Scrabble that use Braille. Last year we went to Walt Disney World and Hershey
Park. Jon Carlos and I went on the kids' rides, and a guide took Mom and Tom
on the roller coasters.
I
think we're closer than a lot of mothers and daughters because we've been through
so much together. When I was a year old, my sighted father left my mother, and
she was single for several years before she married Tom. My father lives a few
hours away, and I spend summers with him.
Because
my mother and Tom can't drive, she has to find creative ways to get chores and
errands done. She's made friends with neighbors who pick up our dry cleaning
and take her to the grocery store. Tom takes taxicabs to his job as a manager
at UPS's information system. I get rides to and from school. My mom doesn't
want anyone to think of us as a charity case. To repay people for their kindness,
she'll often drop off a precooked casserole for them, or Tom will fix their
computer.
But
sometimes things don't work out so easily. Recently we had to take my brother
to the eye doctor on the same day I had to go to the pediatrician because I'd
hurt my foot. After my appointment we called a cab. Mom waited on hold for more
than forty minutes, until her cell phone battery died. We were stranded and
had to walk two miles to get home. My foot was aching, and Jon Carlos was getting
cranky. Mom balanced his car seat on one shoulder so she could use her white
cane. When he refused to walk, we took turns carrying him. "Some people
get tough by playing sports," she told me. "We toughen up by getting
where we need to go."
We have our hard days.
But every day my mom teaches me how to overcome challenges, a lesson she says
is the greatest of all. I think it's really cool having blind parents. Some
of my friends are scared to be different, but I've always liked the fact that
my family is unique.
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