Smells and Sounds
Smells and Sounds
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THE SMELLS AND SOUNDS OF SIXTY YEARS
by Kenneth Jernigan
Everybody knows that change is probably the only
constant in life, but I think we don’t fully understand what that means until after
we’re fifty. At least, that is how it has been with me.
As readers of the Kernel Books know, I grew up on
a farm in rural Tennessee in the 1920s and ‘30s, and it seems to me that almost
nothing today is the way it was then. Since I have been blind all of my life, I am not
talking about how things look but how they smell, taste, sound, and feel.
Start with smell. The world smells different
today from what it did then. Nowadays I spend much of my time indoors, breathing
conditioned air, whether heated or cooled. But that wasn’t the way it was when I was
a boy.
Since we didn’t have electricity, we
couldn’t have had air conditioning even if we had been able to afford it. So in the
summer the windows were open, and usually so were the doors. The air was rich with
odors—the smell of growing things, of the barnyard, of the dust and gasoline from an
occasional passing car, and of creeks. These were the smells of summer, but there were
also the smells of winter— wood burning in the fireplace, the smell of the unheated
portions of the house, and the smell of the country in winter.
And it was not just the odors of that time but
also the sounds—the mixture of stillness, bird songs, distant cattle, and the
aliveness of the land. Today, whether indoors or out, one thing is always present—the
sound of motors. There are automobiles, office machines, fluorescent lights, power tools,
lawn mowers, vacuum cleaners, kitchen appliances, air conditioners, and heating units.
When I was a boy on the farm, I might go a whole week without hearing a motor—but not
today. In the world of the ‘90s, there is never a minute without a motor. Sometimes
it is an avalanche of noise, and sometimes only a vibration in the background—but it
is always there—always a motor.
And I mustn’t omit taste and touch. At first
thought, it might seem that there would be no difference between then and now, but there
is. It isn’t necessarily that I can’t touch most of the things today that I
touched in the 1930s. It is just that I don’t. And as to taste, it may simply be my
imagination or my aging taste buds, but it certainly doesn’t seem that way. Food is
prepared differently, and the ingredients take a different path from origin to table.
But what does all of that have to do with
blindness? After all, that is what this book is about. Certainly blindness and blind
people are not treated today the way they were sixty years ago. The blind of that
generation had almost no chance to get a job, and very little chance to get an education.
In my case, I was allowed to go to college, but I
wasn’t permitted to take the course of study I wanted. I attended elementary and high
school at the Tennessee School for the Blind in Nashville, graduating in 1945. One day in
the spring of my senior year, a state rehabilitation counselor came to the School to talk
to me about what I wanted to do and be.
I remember it well. We sat in what was called the
parlor—a room, incidentally, which deserved the name. The School was housed in an old
southern mansion, and the front parlor, which was used as a general reception area for
visitors, was the very essence of elegance.
The counselor and I sat on the elaborately carved
sofa, and he asked me to tell him two or three areas of study that I might like to pursue
when I went to college. I told him that I didn’t need to pick two or three, that I
wanted to be a lawyer. He didn’t make a direct response but wandered off into a
conversation about the weather and the world.
Then he circled back and asked me again to pick
two or three areas. My answer was the same. I told him that I wanted to be a lawyer. He
said that he wouldn’t say that a blind person couldn’t be a lawyer but that he
thought it wasn’t realistic. I would not be able to see the faces of the jury, he
said, and I would not be able to do the paperwork and the travelling. I argued, but I was
only a teen-ager—and I didn’t have any money.
Ultimately he told me (with big words and gently,
but with absolute finality) that I could either go to college and study law and pay for it
myself, or I could go and prepare to be something else and be assisted by the state. Since
I was a teen-ager and didn’t have any money, I went and prepared to be something
else.
Of course, I now know that he was wrong. I am
personally acquainted with at least a hundred successfully practicing blind lawyers, and
most of them are not noticeably more competent than I am. But I would not want to create
the wrong impression. This man was not trying to do me harm. Quite the contrary. He truly
believed that what he was doing was in my best interest. He was trying to help me. He was
acting in the spirit of the times and doing the best that he knew.
Today it wouldn’t happen that way, for
although there are still roadblocks and failures to understand, any blind person who is
otherwise qualified can go to law school. And there are other opportunities, a whole range
of options and possibilities for the blind that simply didn’t exist in the 1930s.
Many things have made the difference, but
principal among them is the National Federation of the Blind. Established in 1940 by a
handful of blind men and women from seven states, the Federation has conducted a
never-ending campaign to educate the public and stimulate the blind. I joined the
organization in 1949, and it changed my life.
Today the Federation is the strongest and most
constructive force in the affairs of the blind of this country, but its work is by no
means finished. The job that still has to be done is not so much a matter of legislation
or government assistance as of handling the interactions of daily life. We have come a
long way in public acceptance, but sometimes the attitudes of sixty years ago are still
with us.
Let me illustrate by what at first may seem to be
trivial examples. Over fifty years ago, when I was a boy on the farm in Tennessee, I often
found time heavy on my hands during the summer months when I was not in school. To relieve
the tedium, I would sometimes ride with a truck driver, who collected milk from local
farmers to take to a nearby cheese factory.
The days were hot, and when we could afford it,
we sometimes bought a bottle of Coca Cola. (Incidentally, it cost five cents.) I
didn’t have much money, but now and again I had a little, and I wanted to pay my
share. One day I said to the driver (a young fellow about twenty), "I’ll buy a
coke for each of us."
"Okay," he said, "stay here. I’ll go in and get it."
"No," I said. "I’ll go with you."
He was obviously uncomfortable and didn’t want me to do it. Finally he said, "I
can’t do that. How would it look if people saw a blind person buying me a coke?"
I was a teen-ager, not yet accustomed to the ways
of diplomacy. So I told him in blunt terms that I would either buy the Coca Cola publicly
or I wouldn’t buy it at all. After greed and pride had fought their battle, he
decided not to have it, and we drove on—after which I was not welcome in the truck.
But that was more than fifty years ago. It
couldn’t happen today. Or could it? Well, let me tell you about an incident that
occurred less than six months ago. My wife and I were entering a restaurant—an
upscale, classy place with plenty of glitter and lots of manners.
It so fell out that another couple and we reached
the door almost simultaneously. I happened to be positioned so that it was natural for me
to open the door and hold it while the other couple entered, but the man was obviously ill
at ease. He insisted that he hold the door and that my wife and I go first. Since I
already had my hand on the door and was holding it open and since I was not in the mood to
be treated like a child or an inferior, I dug in my mental heals and stayed put. It was
all done on both sides with great politeness and courtly manners, but it was done. As I
continued to hold the door, the other couple preceded us into the restaurant. But the man
was obviously uncomfortable, showing by his comments and demeanor that he felt it was
inappropriate for a blind person to hold a door for him and behave like an equal.
Trivial? Not related to the daily lives and
economic problems of the blind? Not a factor in determining whether blind people can hold
jobs or make money? Don’t you believe it! These incidents (the one fifty years ago
and the one this year) typify and symbolize everything that we are working to achieve.
But again I must emphasize that we are not
talking about people who are trying to cause us harm. We are talking about people who,
almost without exception, wish us well and want to be of help. Our job is not one of force
but of giving people facts.
And key to it all is the National Federation of
the Blind—blind persons coming together in local, state, and national meetings to
encourage each other and to inform the public. Sometimes we are tempted to believe that
our progress is slow, but in reality it has been amazingly rapid. We have made more
advances during the past sixty years than in all previously recorded history. And there
are better days ahead.
It is true that the smells, sounds, touch, and
taste of today are not what they were sixty years ago—but it is equally true that
despite occasional nostalgia, we wouldn’t want them to be. We wouldn’t because
today is better—and not just in physical things but also in the patterns of
opportunity and possibility. I say this despite all of the problems that face our country
and our society. We who are blind look to the future with hope, and those who are sighted
are helping us make that hope a reality.
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