Jessica,
I lost my eye sight when I was 12, and believe me, there are plenty of fully
sighted adults who have no manners what so ever when they go out to eat.
Learning how to discretely use fingers or utensils to find and navigate your
food is one thing, and I'm sure you are much better than much of the sighted
population who have no excuse. I'm currently 25, but I was also 16 not too
long ago and much more sensitive to how people looked at me when I was in
public. The truth is that most blind people are a lot neater than many
people with sight because we naturally have to work and think harder about
it. Don't stress so much, just practice and the confidence will come.

Drew
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of jessica
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2012 7:33 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CnD] cutting food

It is me who thinks I look like  a 4 year old.

sent from my BrailleNote

 ----- Original Message -----
From: "Lisa Belville" <[email protected]
To: <[email protected]
Date sent: Tue, 24 Jan 2012 08:33:01 -0600
Subject: Re: [CnD] cutting food

Jessica, who is telling you touching your food makes you look 
like a four
year old?  Because if it's your parents, they need to learn the 
difference
between sloppy eating habits and well used alternative, nonvisual
techniques.

IMO, there's a huge difference between discretely touching a 
piece of meet
versus running your hands all over the plate to locate the meet 
and pushing
it into other food or right off the plate in the process.

One is a quick nonvisual way to locate the meat while the other 
is more of a
sloppy action that would cause attention to you if you pushed off 
the food.

Here again, the advice you're getting is from blind people in all 
walks of
life in all stages of blindness and in all levels of proficiency.  
The
common thread here is that you will need, at least initially, to 
touch your
food.  If you're too embarrassed to do it in public, then do it 
in the
privacy of your kitchen when no one is around.


Lisa Belville
[email protected]
[email protected]

----- Original Message -----
From: "Jessica Brown" <[email protected]
To: <[email protected]
Sent: Monday, January 23, 2012 2:41 PM
Subject: Re: [CnD] cutting food


 It is not just what works for me. It is also about not looking 
like a
 4 year old in public. I understand that exceptions need to be 
made for
 blind people but touching your food is taking it too far!

 On 1/23/12, Tom Dickhoner <[email protected]> wrote:
 Again, as far as the fingers are concerned, I can't remember 
anyone
 frowning
 on me using them except for teachers of the blind who made a big 
deal out
 of
 doing that. I believe that good eddiquette is important. I don't 
believe
 in
 picking up food from the plate and putting it in my mouth unless 
it is
 fried
 chicken, a hamburger, french fries and the like. As long as you 
use the
 fork
 or spoon and use the fingers as a guide, I see nothing wrong 
with that.

 We're blind, others in the restaurant or meeting are eating and 
watching
 what they are eating or talking to others. The only gawking 
would be if
 one's head is in the plate, picking up food that should be eaten 
with a
 fork
 or just bad manners. Other than that whatever else you do is 
fine.

 Jessica, I didn't know you are only 16. In time you will mature, 
and you
 will learn to do what works best for you.

 -----Original Message-----
 From: Sisi Ben-Simon <[email protected]
 Sent: Monday, January 23, 2012 2:25 PM
 To: [email protected]
 Subject: Re: [CnD] cutting food

 I use bread sometimes but I try not to use fingers when I'm not 
alone,
 especially in a restaurant. I prefer to cut a piece and eat it 
and then
 cut
 another one, not the whole stake or pancake at once. This way it 
really
 doesn't matter where I started and where I should be cutting. 
When I'm in
 a
 restaurant or a hotel eating an omlet or some other fluffy egg I 
just put
 it
 on a piece of toast so I don't have to struggle with food 
sliding down
 the
 plate or on the table. Jesica you're only 16 so you have a lot 
of time to
 learn and find out whatever works for you.

 Take care
 Sisi
 ----- Original Message -----
 From: "Tom Dickhoner" <[email protected]
 To: <[email protected]
 Sent: Monday, January 23, 2012 9:07 PM
 Subject: Re: [CnD] cutting food


 AA pusher is a piece of bread or a eating utensel such as a 
knofe that
 allows you to be able to get the food from the late to the fork. 
You
 hold
 the bread to the food, you find it, and you guide the bread to 
the fork.
 It is supposed to look dignified, and it is suppose to avoid 
using
 fingers. I have no problem with fingers. They work better than a 
knife
 or
 a piece of bread
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