you should be committed.  it's your fault for assuming.  learn to communicate 
and all of your listed issues will be resolved.

Good luck, Go nfb   :(

On  Dec 1, 2009, at 9:44 AM, Chris Hofstader wrote:

> I am so sick of teaching random citizens about guide dogs, blindness, that I 
> don't need a wheelchair or assistance walking up a jet way, how I can dial a 
> telephone, how I can pee into a urinal without missing - you name it, that I 
> can almost explode.
> 
> An anecdote:  In Harvard Square, the rapid transit terminal has both bus and 
> subway connections.  I was working in Watertown (one town to the northwest of 
> Cambridge, and I rode a bus to work.  After getting down the stairs, I 
> started walking to the indoor bus stop.  Some random do-gooder came upon me 
> and said, "You're going the wrong way."
> 
> I made the assumption that he was someone who took the same bus as me and 
> that somehow I had become disoriented.  No such luck - this bugger led me to 
> the subway where I proceeded to start hitting him with my cane as I had 
> missed my bus and would need to wait another half hour for the next one 
> because of his moronic assumption.
> 
> Sometimes violence can feel real good.
> 
> cdh  
> 
> 
> On Nov 30, 2009, at 4:17 PM, Mark BurningHawk Baxter wrote:
> 
>> I love conversations like that! It's a rare treat for me when  
>> someone comes up and says, basically, "You're different from me and  
>> that fascinates me, and I want to learn."  Usually what I get is  
>> "You're different from me and that makes me afraid, so I'm going to  
>> control what I fear so that it can't hurt me."
>> 
>> Growing up, I was taught that "It's your task to educate the sighted  
>> about the blind."  In adult life, I realized that not only was this a  
>> pointless and thankless task, but it was a very heavy cross to bear,  
>> one that I had not asked for.  Now, when someone is courageous enough  
>> to confront me as different and therefore stimulating, I feel  
>> privileged to talk to them; the rest of the people I don't bother  
>> trying to educate, because all the words in the world will not  
>> convince a scared or superstitious or xenophobic person to change  
>> their thinking patterns.  Spent a half an hour with such an individual  
>> explaining how blind people use a computer or a dog, and they'll still  
>> shriek in panic and grab at you when stairs are present, or start  
>> talking to people around you about what you need, etc.  Being cute and  
>> female never hurts, either. :)
>> 
>> 
>> Mark BurningHawk Baxter
>> 
>> Skype and Twitter:  BurningHawk1969
>> MSN:  burninghawk1...@hotmail.com
>> My home page:
>> http://MarkBurningHawk.net/
>> 
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