Lots to think about this time…
I feel really accomplished today. I had the chance to begin working in my building, the College of Business. I was really excited for the challenge, but once the blindfold came on, I was more nervous than I thought I should be. I guess the idea of entering a building I’d never seen kinda got to me. It seemed like such an enormous task. Once inside, I had something tangible to tap or touch, and the anxiety left. Having something to do really helped me feel more secure. I really liked learning the route, and I loved working out the puzzle. I typically have a really great sense of direction, but I wasn’t sure it would extend to working under blindfold. I didn’t know how much of my sense of direction was driven or reinforced by my vision. Apparently I still retained some sense of direction, but I can now see the tremendous impact of vision on maintaining orientation. It took so much more focus to do what I typically do so naturally.
I found that the building being busy was both quite intimidating and really helpful. I was just sure that I’d run into someone or we’d have an awkward moment, so I tended to freeze up when hearing people approach. I wonder if blind people do this too? It makes you seem totally inept, though, like you’re afraid to approach a person. On the other hand, having the people around gave me so much information. I was dreading the open stairs on the first floor, but hearing others go up and down them, I felt confident that I was far enough away. (Plus, you know, the cane helps too.) Many times, I was able to hear doors open or people moving down the hall to give me clues as to what direction I needed to go.
I was just blown away at how quickly I began to depend on another person for help. It kind of disgusts me. But it’s so easy to see how well meaning people (including me) let that happen. I think it started off as I verbalized my internal dialogue, you know, “What was that?” or “Where’s the door?.” As I moved on and I put together that checking out things tactually is way less efficient than having someone else tell me, I began to unconsciously solicit the information, because really, they can see it and I can’t, so they should tell me. Right? Wrong. Figuring it out on my own was so much better. My concept of the place was more fully formed when I did the discovering. After Mickey called me on it, I walked with the “I’ll show you who can do this without ANY help” purpose, and it felt good.
So, those stairs… I don’t even know where to start in describing the experience. The anxiety was through the roof, way higher than doing the stairs in Stone, I think because I’d never seen these. After I heard that the stairs spiraled, I had in my mind a tight spiral, but what I expected and reality were quite different. I was totally disoriented on the steps. There were times I thought I’d squared off on the steps and then noticed I was crooked. It was like I was in a weird place without right angles. Horizontal and vertical seemed tilted and wobbly. Crazy disorienting. I even froze at the top of one set, just totally unable to move for a few seconds. I wasn’t thinking about how to approach; I was scared and didn’t want to move. I’ve frozen like that before, but generally at much greater hights. These are just stairs, right? No mountain repelling involved. It should be easy. When Mickey said, “Want do the route again?” I didn’t think: “Man, I might not be able to find the bathroom,” or “Man, I don’t wanna bounce off walls.” Nope. I thought: “Crap. There are stairs on this route.” Going down the stairs again helped, but I really had to fight hard to push back the fear and anxiousness.
After the stairs, I was so totally wrung out. I had a really hard time keeping the rest of the route in my head. I suppose this is because I first learned it after the stress of doing the stairs for the first time, so the route wasn’t terribly well engrained in my mind, and then the second time, I was still so distracted by my anxiousness that I was missing important things and I ended up totally disoriented in my route. Thinking back, I’m still not sure how I got to the front door of the building from the stairs, and while doing it, I didn’t even know I was at the front door when I was standing right in front of it. Oh boy. Lots to learn.