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Content provided by Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, COMS, Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, and COMS. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, COMS, Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, and COMS or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
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For far too long adults have held an unrealistic expectation that blind babies will walk independently without the protection of a white cane.

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Manage episode 398130807 series 2868703
Content provided by Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, COMS, Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, and COMS. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, COMS, Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, and COMS or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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This is the soundtrack of the video posted on YouTube. It shows footage from 1960s and audio tape interviews of children born blind in the 1950s. Marcia new she was blind when she entered kindergarten. She noticed her peers ran around and she didn’t. Running without a two-step safety buffer is not recommended. A 1966 blind high schooler is shown being shadowed for safety by a sighted peer. This sends the same message- sighted kids are more capable. But that is only true because he uses his vision for safety. Give the blind child a white cane for safety and you even the playing field. A white cane reduces the need to stay close to the wall - to ‘hand trail’ for safety. The job of the white cane is to follow a shoreline, locate objects and drop offs before your feet do. I am Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken. I am an orientation and mobility specialist who has taught white cane travel for 30 years. I invented the belt cane so that blind toddlers could grow up knowing only safe mobility. Join me in making 2024 the year we understand that blind babies really hate running their bodies directly into furniture and walls. They would much rather greet the world with their two-step safety buffer between them and it. Safe Toddles invented a safety buffer that works best for blind babies – more white cane designs are needed.

Visit our website: Email: [email protected] TikTok Facebook YouTube
Thanks for listening! Please, leave us a review, ask questions and share with your friends!!
Please donate to help Safe Toddles Inc. achieve our mission to provide blind toddlers with a solution for walking independently with safety.
If you know anyone who needs a belt cane - go to ObtainCane

  continue reading

61 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 398130807 series 2868703
Content provided by Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, COMS, Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, and COMS. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, COMS, Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken, and COMS or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

This is the soundtrack of the video posted on YouTube. It shows footage from 1960s and audio tape interviews of children born blind in the 1950s. Marcia new she was blind when she entered kindergarten. She noticed her peers ran around and she didn’t. Running without a two-step safety buffer is not recommended. A 1966 blind high schooler is shown being shadowed for safety by a sighted peer. This sends the same message- sighted kids are more capable. But that is only true because he uses his vision for safety. Give the blind child a white cane for safety and you even the playing field. A white cane reduces the need to stay close to the wall - to ‘hand trail’ for safety. The job of the white cane is to follow a shoreline, locate objects and drop offs before your feet do. I am Dr. Grace Ambrose-Zaken. I am an orientation and mobility specialist who has taught white cane travel for 30 years. I invented the belt cane so that blind toddlers could grow up knowing only safe mobility. Join me in making 2024 the year we understand that blind babies really hate running their bodies directly into furniture and walls. They would much rather greet the world with their two-step safety buffer between them and it. Safe Toddles invented a safety buffer that works best for blind babies – more white cane designs are needed.

Visit our website: Email: [email protected] TikTok Facebook YouTube
Thanks for listening! Please, leave us a review, ask questions and share with your friends!!
Please donate to help Safe Toddles Inc. achieve our mission to provide blind toddlers with a solution for walking independently with safety.
If you know anyone who needs a belt cane - go to ObtainCane

  continue reading

61 episodes

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