IT'S HARD TO BE HIGH -- HIGH PARTIAL THAT IS 
 by Netagene Kirkpatrick 

 I'm sure it's hard to be a total, but for me, I feel as if I am in limbo. It 
probably sounds dumb, but sometimes I wish I had less sight than I have. 

 When I was 54, with no warning, my left retina tore while I was driving to 
work. After nine operations, the doctors and I gave up, leaving me with light, 
dark, and motion. I also had "preventive maintenance" on my right retina. At 
the end of October 2003, four years to the day of the preventive surgery, the 
doctors were reattaching my right retina. I was almost total for awhile. 

 Early that month, I attended a free public seminar. The speaker was a man born 
totally blind, a counselor at the local office of the Alabama Institute of Deaf 
and Blind. Less than a week before my right retina detached, I met with a 
counselor for the blind at the Alabama Department of Rehabilitation Service. I 
had arranged for him to come to my house, just in case something happened to my 
good eye. 

 After a total of 15 operations between December 1998 and March 2005, I became 
a high partial. Some think I am not blind because I can read a lot of things 
even without magnification. Just because I have to hold things a certain way, 
but can still make them out, means to them that I am not blind. They don't 
understand that I compensate in many ways. And that I ride paratransit doesn't 
mean a thing. 

 I did not want a cane, but was given reasons for it. (Some of you have a copy 
of my poem, "Lady with a Long White Cane.") That cane has saved my life many 
times in the almost four years I've had it. I have almost no depth perception 
and have lost a lot of peripheral sight. 

 Once in a while, I ride the fixed-route buses. If it's a route I'm not 
familiar with, I'll ask the driver to let me off at a certain place, only to be 
told, "You have to ring the bell." So I sigh, point out my cane, tell the 
driver that I do not see well enough to read the street signs, at which time, 
other riders invariably will offer to ring the bell for me. 

 In trying to find another job after I lost mine when my good eye went bad, 
I've been told, "But you have to have reliable transportation." I tell them 
that the bus is almost as reliable as their car. Doesn't their car sometimes 
break down? 

 Not being able to read a menu board has caused me to pay more for a meal than 
if I could see well. So often, the young people who work in fast- food places 
slur their words and don't seem to care. Often there is no printed menu. The 
fact that I also have a slight hearing loss doesn't help. 

 I have never been clothes-conscious, and I am worse now. I know that I should 
stick with high contrasts instead of trying to match colors and shades! Luckily 
I've never cared for wearing makeup. With poor eyesight, I finally quit wearing 
the one thing I did wear: lipstick. No one has noticed yet. 

 I thought for sure that I could ride an adult tricycle. Wrong! A friend took 
me to a bike shop. There was a beautiful three-speed trike with a big leather 
seat and a big basket on the back for packages. I tried it for a few feet -- 
and got off and had the salesman ride it and show me that it would not turn 
over. I tried it again and again. Me, who in my 40s had my own motorcycle, 
could not ride an adult trike! It scared me out of my wits! Intellectually, I 
knew that it would not turn over, but that's not what I saw! I'm sure I was 
entertainment for the other customers. I have since learned the word 
"stereopsis" but am still not too sure about the meaning. 

 I often get so frustrated when shopping that sometimes I just give up and walk 
out. I seem to be the careful one; fully sighted people talking on cell phones 
while they shop have been the ones who bump into me! 

 I have had people think I was uppity when I didn't speak. They thought that 
because they were standing 10 or 20 feet in front of me and waving, that I 
could tell they were waving to me. Sure, I could usually see them and usually 
see a wave motion, but that wouldn't mean I had eye contact with them. But 
because I often CAN recognize someone 20 feet away, others think I have no 
vision problem. A good example is at the church house. People do not realize 
that I can usually tell if it's a man or a woman, and sometimes tell hair 
color. I've learned that I can often tell who someone is by the way they walk! 
I can't see the details of their face or clothes, but I can tell who it is. 

 Today I unplugged my old printer and hooked up a new one. Therefore I must not 
be blind. Right? The fact that it took a powerful electric lantern, switching 
glasses back and forth, and doing a lot by feel and by process of elimination 
doesn't count. I ought to be out driving a car! 

 At least I have quit apologizing. I don't say, "Excuse me, but I don't see 
well" or "I'm sorry, but I'm legally blind." I just say, "I am legally blind." 


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