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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
To: the-conduit 
Sent: Friday, October 19, 2007 8:50 PM
Subject: The Conduit So, this blind guy walks into a revolving door...


The Herald, Scotland (UK)
Friday, October 19, 2007

So, this blind guy walks into a revolving door...

By IAN HAMILTON

My first challenge when staying at an unfamiliar hotel is, believe it or 
not, finding my way into the building. If the hotel has a revolving door my 
guide
dog, Moss, will see it as a hazard and refuse to move. I'm standing there on 
the pavement wondering why he's not responding to my commands.

It is only when a passer-by mutters something about a revolving door that I 
understand why the dog won't budge. I now start to coax and eventually bribe
him to step into the gap while the door is slowly spinning. Not easy for a 
dog to co-ordinate such a move. In the past, I've resorted to picking the 
dog
up and carrying him in. While listening carefully for the moving swish of 
the revolving door, I grab hold of the dog, and step cautiously into the 
gap.
Timing is crucial. So is a small dog. Unfortunately, I've got a five-stone 
labrador. The door picks us up like a hurricane and flicks us into 
reception.
Paws, luggage, bits of fur and I land in an undignified heap - what an 
entrance. Anyway, I'm in the first challenge in this game has now been 
completed
successfully.

The second challenge awaits; I'm in the reception area, now to locate the 
desk. You would think after making an impressive entrance like that, someone
would notice. But no. Listening carefully, I strain my ears for a clue. 
Perhaps someone will say: "Can I help you?" Nope. Maybe a doorman will come 
over
and point me in the correct direction. No! Eventually a phone rings in the 
distance. "Hello, Elvira speaking." Aha! Moss and I make our way towards the
voice.

Elvira asks me for the registration number of my car. I'm standing there 
with my guide dog - I doubt that she has even glanced in my direction. A 
porter
takes me along endless corridors, two sets of lifts, and a rope swing, 
eventually ending up at my room.

The dog thinks the room is a park. I hope the carpet isn't green

The second challenge has been completed now the third challenge. Getting 
into the room and finding my way about.

The porter opens the door with the plastic card, quickly points around the 
room and tries to leave. I force him to stay and explain every detail and 
layout
of the room, which includes how to open the door. I never know which way the 
card should go in. I've spent many an hour in hotel corridors trying every
possible combination. Now I just get the receptionist to punch a small hole 
in one of the corners.

This way, I know how the card should be inserted.

I find that I have been given the disabled room. I can understand why they 
do this. However, the facilities a blind person needs aren't the same as 
someone
who is a wheelchair-user. The room is huge and it takes me literally 10 
minutes to find the bed and a chair and another 10 to find the window. I 
hear the
dog quietly snuffling about. He thinks it's a park. I hope it doesn't have a 
green carpet or we could have a spillage.

That reminds me: it's now time for my fourth challenge: where is the 
bathroom? After wandering around the bedroom and whistling loudly I come 
across the
sort of echo only ever heard in a cathedral or a bathroom. It was designed 
as a wet room, which is great, but it is so large it takes me a further 15 
minutes
before I collide with the toilet.

Now, unbeknown to me, there was a button at waist height just outside the 
bathroom door. It was to allow wheelchair users to open the front door from 
a
distance.

I strip off in the main room and feel my way back to the bathroom. I have a 
great shower, but as I come out again I walk into that button, which 
activates
the front door little did I know, that as I dried myself, the extra-wide 
front door had very smoothly and silently opened, exposing my naked self to 
everyone
going past. It was only some days later when a colleague was pressing the 
button, out of curiosity, that I discovered what had been happening.

My penultimate challenge is to close the curtains, so that I don't expose 
myself to the whole city, as well as everyone in the hotel.

The room has electric-powered curtains, which are operated from the side of 
the bed. Very luxurious and practical for a wheelchair-user.

However, the only way I can tell if the curtains are open or closed is to 
get up, make my way across the room and physically feel for myself. If the 
curtains
were open, it would take another five minutes to find my bed again and 
activate the button and, of course, being completely paranoid now, I was 
never convinced
that they worked, so I would have to get up and check for a second time.

At last, my sixth and final challenge: sleep.

I collapse into bed, exhausted, with the day's challenges whizzing round my 
head. I have to find a way of calming the mind to get to sleep Oh, no! I've
got to find my way down to breakfast in the morning. I'd better get up now

http://www.theherald.co.uk/features/featuresopinon/display.var.1771512.0.0.php 








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