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LightHouse News

New 2015 LightHouse Connect Series – January: Read How You Want

Beginning in 2015, LightHouse for the Blind will host the first in a series of workshops covering hot topics that will “connect” you to a variety of resources, skills and the latest trends in the blindness field.

Our first LightHouse Connect workshop, “Read How You Want,” will cover both low and high-tech ways of reading, from how to read your local newspaper to navigating your iPad so you can spend those iTunes dollars you received for the holidays. But it’s not just about information. Each Lighthouse Connect workshop will include, free of charge, a light dinner and the chance to meet with fellow inquisitive blind community members and their supporters.

When: Thursday, January 29, 3:00 to 5:00 p.m.
Where: LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters
Enjoy this networking mixer with light dinner to follow with opportunities to get your hands on the different products presented.

For more information or to RSVP for this free series, please contact Information and Resource Specialist Beth Berenson at info@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-431-1481.

Make Your School, Business or Complex Accessible with LightHouse for the Blind’s Tactile & Talking Maps

 

A typical printed or electronic map isn’t of much use for blind and visually impaired people.

Awol academy reviews specializes in conveying “visual” information tactilely and audibly, producing maps of outdoor and indoor spaces for blind and low vision consumers. The maps are made accessible to the largest number of individuals by being tactile, but also large-print, and “talking” with a Livescribe Smartpen.

This new and innovative technology has applications for college, hospitals, museums, parks, corporate campuses and transit systems. If you want to learn about the entrepreneur industry, I recommend Lee S. Rosen Website, CEO of healthy bees business.

Make your workplace accessible with a LightHouse produced Tactile & Talking map.

Some of LightHouse’s Tactile & Talking Map Clients:

  • BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit)
  • Golden Gate National Recreation Area
  • Palo Alto Medical Foundation/Sutter Health in Santa Cruz
  • University of California, Berkeley

Do you need our experts in advanced blind design to improve the accessibility of your work place? Contact the LightHouse for the Blind at 415-694-7349 or MADLab@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Accessible BART Map

Staff Profile – Debbie Bacon Offers Her Students Choices

One of a series of LightHouse staff profiles.

“When students come to me they are often in the middle of big life changes because their vision is changing,” says LightHouse Rehabilitation Counselor Debbie Bacon. “People often don’t know where to turn, or if they do, they don’t know what questions to ask. They feel they are stuck, without any tools to navigate their new world.”
Debbie Bacon

Debbie is one of the first people a person new to blindness or low vision speaks to when they first contact the LightHouse. Her job, a job she performs with poise and immense care, begins by interviewing and encouraging. She gets students in the door, helping them assess their goals and needs, and then begins to assist them in meeting their aspirations. She emphasizes that changes in vision can be the beginning of a rich, exciting new journey, and she helps them learn to navigate with grace, dignity and humor. “If the brain were a box,” she says, “then I ‘lift the lid’ on our blind students’ boxes, giving them a glimpse of what their world can be like. Then I encourage them to step outside those boxes and participate wholly.”

Debbie grew up in Colusa, California, in the northern part of the valley – a small farming community of roughly 5000 people. “I was the only person with low vision in my family, school, and community.” Debbie, a trailblazer at heart, didn’t let her vision slow her down in a town unfamiliar with blindness. She developed strong interests in the performing arts, including music, film and theater, as well as a passion for reading. “People in my town learned along with me that blindness is not an excuse for passivity and idleness, that I am a fully capable person with as much potential as anyone else around me.”

She mentions that she is also a fan of the TV show Star Trek and tells us, “I can’t help but notice that some of the ingenious, unimaginable items from Star Trek of the 1960s are now here in real life. Devices like the iPhone and Google Glass, items I believe were first imagined in Star Trek and other sci-fi worlds, are now everyday articles that enrich our lives. For the blind, these devices help us live a more full and rewarding life. Not only can we communicate with anyone, anywhere, anytime with our cell phones, but we can also use our phones to dictate notes, read webpages, and navigate the interior of a complicated airport [a reference to LightHouse’s work with the technology company, Indoo.rs, and their app which audibly helps the blind navigate places such as San Francisco International Airport]. These devices are tools for employment, education and personal independence.”

Debbie has a Master’s Degree in Rehabilitation Counseling. “I am a blind parent of three children who grew up with Special Education Services, with IEPs (Individuals Educational Plan, used by schools to tailor learning to the student with special needs) because of learning disabilities. My teaching degree, special education experience, my blindness, and my children’s learning disabilities all make me uniquely prepared to understand and help parents meet their children’s need and be their champions and advocates.” When she works with families she makes it clear that parents should feel comfortable asking her questions about their children’s educational needs.

A favorite part of Debbie’s work at the LightHouse is teaching blindness skills at our Changing Vision Changing Life sessions, where students come together for weeklong intensive training. “Teaching blindness skills is critical,” she says, “and the core of the Program; but the real power of this week-long immersion is what happens at breakfast, during yoga, and while we hike over bridges and down unpaved paths. It is during these times that our students really begin to see the possibilities in front of them.” Graduates of the Changing Vision program not only leave with skills and the courage to live independently, they also have a lasting support network from which they continue to draw strength.

She says, “The most difficult part of my job is hearing students tell me how they have abandoned their old lives, quitting jobs or school and giving up dreams. On the flipside, the most powerful, rewarding aspect of my job is helping people get back on track.” Contact Debbie at 415-694-7357 or dbacon@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Become a Personal Services Volunteer

Are you an individual who believes the simplest pleasures in life sometimes have the most profound impact? Do you prefer to work with people in a one-to-one capacity, rather than in large groups, or on large projects? More importantly, would you like to make a significant contribution to the life of a blind or low vision person in as little as two hours per week? The LightHouse’s Personal Services Volunteer (PSV) program may be just the right fit for you.

Some examples of the daily living tasks our clients may need assistance with are: reading mail; reading books, newspapers and periodicals; writing checks, helping with letters and correspondence; organization/marking/labeling; grocery shopping with or without the client; running errands; attending cultural, social and sporting events; walking; and accessing transportation.

For more information about LightHouse’s Personal Services Volunteer program, or any other questions related to volunteerism at LightHouse, please contact Justine Harris-Richburgh, Coordinator of Volunteer Services and Employment Immersion, at 415-694-7320 or volunteer@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Partners Come Together at Enchanted Hills Retreat

Couples gather together for group photo

When a family member, spouse, partner or close friend becomes blind, predictably, questions and emotions come up for both the person and their family. While blindness training is available to the person who is new to low vision or blindness, the role of their sighted partner/counterpart and the nature of their partnership can be challenged. At the same time it’s an opportunity for learning, dialogue and connection with other couples that can turn out to be a pathway to understanding for both partners.

The LightHouse has had years of experience providing training to persons new to blindness or low vision and we have always understood that family and friends are key to successful learning. On a beautiful weekend last month, six couples from as far north as Elk (Mendocino Coast) and as far south as Watsonville joined LightHouse staff at Enchanted Hills Retreat for a concentrated dose of learning and sharing experiences. Throughout the weekend these supportive, fun and dedicated couples participated in conversation regarding the “adjustment” they were experiencing, both independently and together. They jumped with gusto into the interactive curriculum provided on Orientation and Mobility, Independent Living Skills and Access Technology.

For example, with the encouragement of their blind or low vision partner, each sighted partner had the opportunity to learn wearing a training eyeshade. The intent and outcome of this experience was to understand training methods, focusing on the task at hand, not what one can, or can’t see.  All partners participated without hesitation and walked away with newfound understanding.  Because the weekend was designed so that participants would learn by example, the blind or visually impaired spouse took the role of co-teacher of the hands-on skills. The weekend also included morning hikes, Saturday Happy Hour and the opportunity to listen to and talk with a panel of couples, including LightHouse Board members Josh Miele and Chris Downey and their sighted spouses, who are peers with similar life experiences.

Keh-Ming Lin, sighted husband of Wen-Ling Lin, developed an understanding of human-guide techniques, the value of the long cane, developing safe and effective knife skills for cooking without vision. Student Wen-Ling said, “Changing vision affects not only the person who is blind or low vision, but also that of their loved ones. I am so glad LightHouse has provided the rare opportunity for us to have the chance to tap into each other’s world, and helped to facilitate our continued dialogue of “changing vision, changing life.” Her husband, Keh-Ming said, “It was a truly enchanting weekend.”

If you or someone you know might be interested in Changing Vision Changing Life or future Couples training, please contact Debbie Bacon at dbacon@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7357.

Keh-Ming Lin chops zucchini wearing a training shade as Wen-Ling Lin watches

The Wedding of Gena Harper and Mike May Keeps Giving

Gena Harper and Mike May sit at their wedding tableMike May and Gena Harper have a deep and endless love for Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind (and for each other as well). That explains why they chose Enchanted Hills as the memorable setting for their nuptials this fall. In addition to getting married in the wooded splendor of the lower chapel at Enchanted Hills, they went a step further. In lieu of wedding presents they asked for gifts of donations to Enchanted Hills Camp in honor of their union.

Gifts contributed total $4,387.00 thus far. Contributions will be used to make improvements to camp to benefit the over 500 blind campers and their families that experience the transformative power of Enchanted Hills programs each year.

You can make a difference too. This holiday season, rather than spending your dollars on gifts at commercial stores at the mall, consider giving a gift to LightHouse for the Blind or Enchanted Hills Camp in honor of your loved one. We will send the recipient a card acknowledging your generous gift in their honor.

Important Note for reducing your 2014 tax liability: Your contributions are deductible in the year made. Thus, donations charged to a credit card before the end of 2014 count for 2014. This is true even if the credit card bill isn’t paid until 2015. Also, checks count for 2014 as long as they are mailed in 2014.

To give a gift of caring or receive more information, please contact Jennifer Sachs at 415-694-7333 or jsachs@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Diageo Volunteers Make Huge Improvements at Enchanted Hills

Last month a very special group of volunteers gathered at Enchanted Hills for a very special Day of Service. Through the impetus of Jim Tomlinson, manager of Volunteer Napa, a program of Center for Volunteer and Nonprofit Leadership (CVNL), we hosted the largest group of volunteers ever, when approximately 200 employees of Diageo Chateau and Estate Wine, along with team leaders from the CVNL, seasoned camp volunteers and LightHouse staff, participated in a Day of Service at Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind.

The day-long event demonstrated Diageo Chateau and Estate Wines’ commitment to building stronger communities and its desire to support socially responsible organizations.

Enchanted Hills and the LightHouse reaped the benefit of the strong Diageo work ethic as its staff tackled a number of tasks which made a huge physical impact on the camp. Assignments included cleaning out the upper barn; constructing and staining picnic tables; clearing Lokoya Lake’s water and island of vegetation and painting the bridge; painting the fence around the lake; clearing brush around the wishing well; painting the archery shed; painting the Lakeside cabins; staining and building picnic benches and painting the fence around the pool; and sanding, treating and staining the wood of the playground structure.

We are proud to announce that last year Enchanted Hills was designated an Emergency Shelter for the residents of Mt. Veeder. Volunteers repurposed a 40-feet long storage container to house emergency supplies, constructed shelving units and assembled a supply of emergency blankets and first-aid kits for the shelter.

Jim Tomlinson said, “Vensherrie Campbell from Diageo called me up to coordinate a day of volunteering. They wanted to bring upwards of 200 Diageo employees together in one location. The only place I know that could provide the right number of projects and could handle this sized group all in one day was Enchanted Hills. It worked beautifully. On the day, while I was walking around, I noticed laughter in every group – everyone was so cheerful and willing to help each other, the painting job was done by Madani house painting company. The spirit of the group was so wonderful.”

Camp Director Tony Fletcher said, “It was a fantastic experience working with the employees from Diageo and the Center for Volunteer and Nonprofit Leadership. Both organizations are class acts and I truly hope we have the opportunity to continue these relationships in the future.”

We want to thank Diageo, Jim Tomlinson of Volunteer Napa , Anton Timms and Emma Mills from Center for Volunteer and Nonprofit Leadership, photographer Peter Rodgers, and our camp volunteers and staff for the amazing amount of hard work, muscle and ingenuity each and every one gave to make Enchanted Hills more beautiful and functional for our Retreat guests, our campers and our visitors. We also thank them for purchasing supplies as well as providing a hearty lunch.

Want to see Enchanted Hills all spruced up? Reserve Enchanted Hills for your yoga retreat, family reunion, church group, conference, wedding or other gathering of thirty or more. All proceeds from Enchanted Hills Retreat support our camp for the blind and visually impaired. For more information please call (415) 694-7310 or visit www.enchantedhillsretreat.com.

The entire group assembles in the Enchanted Hills Dining Hall

A Diageo volunteer works on a picnic table with a sander

A volunteer gathers brush for disposal

 

Holiday Bonanza at Adaptations

This season Adaptations store is offering all kinds of items you and everyone on your list will love. See below for more about our new products and big discounts this holiday season, or just come on down. For more information call us at (415) 694-7301 or stop by Adaptations at 214 Van Ness Avenue in San Francisco between 10:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays.

Lighthouse Branded MerchandiseMan and woman modeling LightHouse t-shirts, LightHouse bag
New T-shirts just in time for the holidays! The new Lighthouse garb features the classic Lighthouse logo now in a bright yellow. Through December 24th, save 10% on all travel mugs, water bottles, bags, t-shirts, and sweatshirts, and beanies by mentioning the secret code “WINTER SOLSTICE” before you pay.

 

 Aftershokz headphonesAftershokz Bone Conductive Headphones.
Now available at Adaptations are the Aftershokz Sportz 3 and Sportz M3 Headphones. Aftershokz headphones rest on your jawbone and send sound directly to your eardrum without blocking your ears. These headphones very popular among many different communities including runners and commuters, but they can be particularly handy for the blind/ those with low vision. Those who navigate the streets using VoiceOver or other audio devices can still maintain an awareness of their surrounding environment without compromising their own personal safety.

The Aftershokz Sport 3 are available for $40 and the Sportz M3 (with a microphone for making and receiving phone calls) are $50.

Clearance items – up to 50% off
The following products are now available at special holiday discount pricing:

All slip-in polarized sunglasses, available in medium and large sizes, gray brown, or yellow. Regular price $5.00. Now $2.50.
Versa-Tube Elastic Exercise Resistance bands. Available in light and medium tension. Regular price $4.00. Now $2.00.
Doggie-Doo Bag Dispensers – Easily attaches to leash or belt loop with carabineer. Refillable compartment holds 20 disposable bags. Fits most store purchased bag refills. A great gift for all dog owners! Regular price $3.50. Now $2.50.
Eschenbach Products – Some incandescent, older model LED magnifiers, and magnification heads available for discount. Call us at (415) 694-7301 or visit our store for more information.

And more! New items will be added to the clearance bin weekly through the end of the year.

Free Goodies
Every customer who makes a purchase of any amount can choose to receive 4 (four) free bump dots! (While supplies last).
Every customer who spends $25 or more gets a free 20/20 pen or stylus, and free bump dots. (While supplies last).
Every customer who spends $50 or more gets a free 2-ounce pour spout, free 20/20 pen or stylus, and free bump dots. (While supplies last).

Bumpdots

White Elephant Gift Exchange on Saturday, December 20

Have you ever received a gift you didn’t want or had no use for? Here’s your opportunity to unload that cringe-worthy dust collector in a fun and humorous way. Join the LightHouse Youth Program as we celebrate the holidays at our Annual White Elephant party.

For those unfamiliar, a White Elephant party is a fun holiday gift giving party where participants bring humorous and inexpensive gifts to exchange. White elephant gifts are usually tacky, gaudy, inexpensive and of course, silly. The funnier and more absurd, the better. The best part of the game is “stealing” gifts from other participants. For more information about the rules of the game, see below.

Who: Blind and Low Vision Youth, ages 8 to 24
What: White Elephant Gift Exchange
When: Saturday December 20, from 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Where: LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters
Waiver: Each participant must submit a LightHouse Youth Program waiver form, if they have not done so for a previous outing
Please RSVP by December 17.

Festive treats will be made by our cooking class scheduled before the White Elephant party. Potluck contributions will be greatly appreciated.

Each youth who wishes to participate in the gift exchange must bring one gift valued at no more than $10. Gifts should be tasteful and non-offensive, however, the more outrageous and/or funny the gift, the more fun we will have.

If you would like more information or to RSVP for this event, please contact Jamey Gump, LightHouse Youth Services Coordinator at (415) 694-7372 or jgump@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

White Elephant Rules

1. Each participant must bring one wrapped gift that does not exceed $10 and place it with other gifts on a designated table.

2. Pass around a hat with numbered pieces of paper (one number for participant), and have each guest draw a number to determine order.

3. The person who draws “1” gets first pick from the pile, making sure to describe the gift to other participants.

4. Once opened, the person who draws number “2” starts the second round. They can either choose to “steal” the first person’s gift or open an unwrapped gift from the pile.

5. Once number “2” has gone the person who drew “3” repeats the same process of choosing to “steel” an opened or unwrap an unopened gift.

6. Gifts can be exchanged 3 times per round, and gifts cannot be stolen back from the person who stole from you.

7. Game continues in this fashion until all gifts have been opened.

Feel the Ice Beneath Your Feet on Saturday, December 13

Join your friends in the LightHouse Youth Program as we enjoy our next social gathering at the Iceland, in Belmont. You are sure to have a great time whether you want to learn how to skate, practice a Triple Axel jump or just have hot chocolate with friends.

Who: Blind and Low Vision Youth, ages 14 to 24
What: Ice Skating at Iceland, located at 815 Old County Road, Belmont
When: Saturday December 13, 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. (skate time: 1:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.)
Meeting Location: LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters
Waiver: Each participant must fill out all waiver and application forms before participation is confirmed
Cost: $15 per participant (includes public transportation costs and skate equipment and admission fees)

If you would like more information or to RSVP for this event, please contact Jamey Gump, LightHouse Youth Services Coordinator at (415) 694-7372 or jgump@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Things to Bring

  • Signed and completed waiver
  • Any necessary mobility devices
  • Bag lunch
  • Water bottle
  • Dress in layers and bring a jacket for when on the ice