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Life Unscripted

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Life Unscripted

Monthly Archives: June 2015

Nine days

27 Saturday Jun 2015

Posted by blindbeader in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

On Monday, June 15, I received my layoff notice, and my life nearly flipped upside down.  Nine days later, on June 24, I received a job offer from my second interview.  No one is more surprised than me!  My first day was today, and I am still coming down from the emotional and mental overload that arriving at a new workplace always brings.  Even something as basic as setting up my desk the way I want it seems like this impossible task when coupled with figuring out who’s in which office, updating my screen reader so that it can be used on their system, and dealing with the sheer amount of information that looks so effortless when it’s being processed by someone else.  That having been said, I am thrilled to be employed again, so quickly, and based on my own description of my capabilities.  They’ve welcomed Jenny and I with open arms, given me a great space to work in, and put an air purifier at my desk because another coworker has allergies to dogs.  I feel like I can use my own experience in both administrative work and customer service and improve on skills that have gone by the wayside (writing by hand, for example).  Words cannot express my joy at the way my life has turned around so quickly.

And yet…

Alongside that joy and relief and complex sense of nervousness comes a strange feeling of guilt.  Guilt because I have succeeded while many I know are still struggling.  Some I know and love have struggled for months to find consistent work, some forced to do day jobs to help make ends meet; others (primarily visually impaired friends( have struggled and fought for years for an opportunity like mine.  There are even those who have been turned down for job after job after job, been turned down so many times that they have given up.  I have no idea what to do with this feeling, beyond being the best hardest worker I can be at whatever I do.  People talk, and while I know I am not the only topic of conversation at the office, the fact is that I DO represent blind people to those who work with me.  I will never be perfect, after all (like Meagan so eloquently put it, it’s a human thing), but it is a very small professional world out there; every job I have ever had almost creepily – if peripherally – included someone who had a connection to a job I had before.  My previous employer went to university with someone who was also visually impaired, and I firmly believed that experience enabled him to advocate on my behalf.  So without putting too much pressure on myself, I hope my own experience, work ethic, and willingness to make things work will enable me to push back and advocate by proxy for you, whoever and wherever you are.

Pounding the Pavement: Receiving a Pink Slip

20 Saturday Jun 2015

Posted by blindbeader in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

On Monday, I was escorted into the board room of my place of employment and handed a half a dozen sheets of paper, effectively saying that my services are no longer needed.   It was quick, brutal, yet oddly compassionate in a way; I somewhat expected it at some point, but not on Monday, and certainly not in the way it was done.

From noon on Monday, I’ve joined the ranks of the unemployed here in Alberta, a province (like my previous employer) heavily reliant on oil.  Oil prices have declined sharply over the past six months, and I am by no means the only Albertan in this position.  That doesn’t make it any easier to handle.  For two or three days, I was an emotional wreck, crying at everything, not really allowing myself to grieve the loss of my job.  Poor Jenny picked up on my through-the-roof stress levels, and it was pretty ugly.  It was like a pop bottle effect – you are stressed, dog picks up on it, misbehaves, you get more stressed, dog misbehaves more, and around and around we go.

I hate job hunting.  I hate it with a passion rivaled by few other activities.  I hate looking through job ads for jobs that don’t require a driver’s license or who aren’t way out in the boonies with unreliable transportation.  I hate feeling qualified for a job just to be told at an interview that an employer thinks I can’t type 80 words per minute, talk to people nicely, or keep papers or electronic files organized because I can’t see.  I hate being over-qualified for some jobs and under-qualified for others.  But persevere I must, because my own dignity is on the line; without working, I feel incredibly inadequate as a person… there, I’ve said it!

Thankfully, there are some very serious positives to this whole situation.  I did not leave on bad terms, nor was I let go for incompetence; through no fault of my own, I am without work.  I can choose to take this opportunity to make jewelry (thanks for the encouragement, guys!), take supplementary training courses to make myself more employable, and the job market is good enough that I can get my foot in the door for plenty of interviews.  Ben recently got hired to work up north, so I will take this time to spend with him when he IS home, and with friends when he’s gone.  I told one of my former coworkers yesterday when I picked up my things that one day, I will think this is the best thing that’s ever happened to me.  But I am not quite there yet, and for now, that’s OK.  The fact that I can say this at all is all I need to know that I will come out the other side stronger and wiser for this experience.

For those – especially those who are blind or visually impaired – who are job hunting, keep going.  Send out that resume.  If you don’t have experience, take the opportunity to get some training if you can.  If you get figuratively kicked in the teeth during an interview because of perceptions of your skills and abilities, push back and make them account for their perceptions.  Above all, pick yourself up and don’t give up!  This has served me well before, and it will serve me well again.  I will be brave and strong and informed, and fight another day.

“But I know I saw you…”

12 Friday Jun 2015

Posted by blindbeader in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Very few people, when you get right down to it, like being mistaken for someone else.  Sure, if the comparison is favorable, it might stroke the ego, but at the end of the day it can be a little disconcerting.  I can’t imagine the complicated feelings faced by identical twins or siblings with a strong resemblance, since I am neither.  But I am blind, and as such, I – and those like me – seem to be interchangeable, even though some of us look nothing alike.

I have been in stores, malls, or on the bus, and had people come up to me asking when I got my “new” dog (apparently my “old” dog last week was a Golden Retriever), or when I dyed my hair darker (never), or how they swore I took the #52 bus last Tuesday (which goes to a part of the city I’ve never been to).  My friend Meagan, who I reference here often, used to get asked where her “sister” was, or people would just assume she was me and I was her (apparently we do resemble each other somewhat).  Most of the time I just shrug it off, but it seems I am not alone in being confused for someone else.

Brandon told me about traveling to another city and frequently being called by the name of someone who lived there.  Allison describes being called the name of every other local blind woman she knows.  Kelly used to sing at church with another blind woman; they look nothing alike, but the pastor always called them by the wrong name.  Michelle has a guide dog the same colour as someone else in her city, so sighted people constantly either get them confused or ask if they know each other; but the blind community in the same city can tell them apart just by voice.  Steve thinks this “mistaken identity” happens with every blind person who’s ever taken a taxi, though chose not to provide personal anecdotes.

So, why does this happen?  Perhaps because we are a very very small percentage of the population, or generally highly visible.  Perhaps it’s because some of us have similar mannerisms, use a cane or guide dog, or have nifty cell phones that talk to us.  Either way, it is by turns amusing and annoying, especially with how often it happens.

But what if you, like me, have a lookalike?  For years I have heard the “I saw you there!” and put it down to the inevitable, common comparisons outlined above.  But it wasn’t until about a year ago that I thought it might be true.  A bus driver I know reasonably well told me the story.  At that point, I had ridden his bus once or twice a week for several months, and we would have conversations on the road, so he recognized me on sight.  One day, he saw me at the University campus with my guide dog.  He took a detour out of his way, called my name, I turned around… and it wasn’t me!  He told me about this a couple of days later, and how embarrassed he was by the whole incident.  So anyone who knows someone who had this happen to them in Edmonton, you have my sympathies!  And by the way, it’d be neat to meet you, because I’m sure you’ve got stories about where people tell you you’ve been.  Who knows… it might have just been me!

She talks to me… REALLY!

06 Saturday Jun 2015

Posted by blindbeader in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

bonding, communication, guide dogs

About ten years ago, I remember being really REALLY mad about something.  After that length of time, I honestly can’t remember what I was so angry about, but I do distinctly remember Annie running away and hiding in her “secret place” for several hours.  Annie – the cat who spent weeks following me around the apartment, who yowled every time I left her alone, who was so terrified I would never ever come back – picked that moment to tuck herself away in a never-to-be-found hiding place.  I had been angry before, and over the years I would be angry again, but Annie never again shied away from it.

 

Science has not been able to draw a definite conclusion about whether animals sense human emotions in and of themselves or react to our facial expressions, body chemistry, or other indicators that give them clues into our moods, fears, or medical status.  But from what I have observed – both from my pet cats and my service dog Jenny – there is some inexplicable way I communicate with them, and they with me.  For the sake of clarity – and because I’ve been asked more about Jenny’s role in this – \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\I will address a guide dog’s intuitiveness in the next few paragraphs.

 

Jenny LOVES babies.  They are her downfall.  We get on a bus and there’s a stroller on board, she HAS to calmly, sweetly, take me to the baby carriage and show me the baby.  Normally, when she is excited about something, she goes insane, wagging her tail, maybe pulling, maybe whining, but with babies she is calm and collected.  I’ve had people who are terrified of dogs thank me for having such a calm dog around their baby.  This calmness was further exhibited last weekend when we visited with two other couples, one of whom brought their toddler daughter.  Jenny was game to play with her, and the cutest half hour of doggie-baby playtime ensued.  I don’t know why she is this way with babies and small children – perhaps she is trying to tell me something? – but even if she is excited when she notices them, when they are near her, she has this zen calm that defies explanation.

 

I am by no means the only guide dog handler who has experienced inexplicable calm from her guide.  Jackie told me of an instance where she had major surgery, and was away from her guide dog (matched for only five months) for several days.  She was very concerned her guide would jump on her or be otherwise too rambunctious for her that could complicate the healing process by breaking her stitches.  When Jackie got home from the hospital, instead of the welcoming committee, Tulip ran toward her, stopped and sat, and waited for Jackie to call her forward.  During the course of Jackie’s recovery, Tulip gradually became more playful, but Jackie thinks that Tulip just knew that she wasn’t in a position to jump and run and play.

 

I don’t have anything nearly so dramatic with Jenny, but there are many ways in which Jenny communicates with me, especially when we’re working.  Sure, there are the obvious things (how she moves in the harness, I verbally praise or correct her), but it’s so much more than that.  It’s like having a dance partner who intuits the next six steps before you have time to get your shoes on.  When we have bad weather, or I am sick, it’s like Jenny knows that I need her to be extra focused.  We once had a whole bunch of freezing rain in the afternoon, and my walk from work to the bus stop took half an hour (normally five minutes) because the sidewalks were veritable ice rinks; Jenny worried about me the first three times I fell, then took an initiative, dragged me across the street to a safer sidewalk.  I had to get us back on our original path, but I loved her initiative, no matter her motivation.

 

But it’s so much more than that.  Even when she is out of harness, we are always communicating, whether it’s a scratch behind the ears, her resting on my feet, or the incredibly hilarious “mrrrrrrrrrrph” sounds Jenny makes when she is bored out of her mind and wants the whole world to know it.

 

But recently, a troubling trend began to manifest itself in Jenny – she began to bark in harness.  This has occasionally happened before, but in the beginning of March it began happening more frequently, nearly daily.  I knew we were in big trouble one day when I was at work, and Jenny and I were walking toward the back door to go outside.  Jenny turned around and let out a low bark at the two people who were behind us walking to the same back door.  After that, I called BC Guide Dogs, not even being sure what I should worry about.  The prevailing theory was that she was suspicious of people, but that didn’t sound quite right to me, and I couldn’t quite figure out why.  I was advised to make a “barking” log, marking down where we were, when it happened, what was going on, etc.  Within 48 hours, I had part of my answer: anything she barked at was on her left, and Jenny started frantically scratching and pawing at her face.  Her vet diagnosed her with seasonal allergies, and with a combination of allergy medication, personal observation, and Rescue Remedy, we’ve been able to almost eliminate the problem.  On the occasions these days (much more rare) when she does bark on approach, it’s to someone she knows on a day where her ears are sore (I can now tell based on how she holds them) and she wants to tell THEM that she’s hurt.  The irony of all this is that if my own ears weren’t so sore on those days, I doubt I would’ve made the connections I have.  I wish she’d picked another way to show me all this – you know, something less dramatic and startling – but I am glad she tells me these things.

 

As I write this, I wonder if the mystical connection between me and Jenny – or any animal and its “person” – is far less mysterious than I have made it out to be.  But whether it’s magic, observation, or pure dumb luck, I wouldn’t have it any other way.

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