⚠ ATTENTION! Live Accessible has been discontinued. Check out the NEW channel, Carrie on Accessibility - youtube.com/@carrieonaccessibibility for more on technology, accessibility, and more!
Thank you so much sweet lady. I am brand new to working with visually impaired middle schoolers. It really helps to hear someone who has been there and can articulate the how and why things work the way they do. You are right and it absolutely makes sense.
I love the way you explained it about the hand movements and placement. I had always thought of learning Braille which I have never done as counting and memorizing. And feeling dots but the way you explained it made me actually curious about this Braille course so thank you I'm actually interested in something that I never thought I would be. I really appreciate the information.
Hey Zara! Yes, it's a bit about perspective. Also, as time goes on, you just remember the shape by a quick touch, just like we do visually. And even though we have a lot of technology, I think it's a really good skill to have. What if something happens to the technology we have? And also, something interesting is that when reading braille, we're using the same parts of the brain that people use for reading print. When just listening to jaws or voiceover, it's a different part. So using both is an advantage! :D
Hi Carrie, this was an excellent, excellent video about the Hadley schools braille literacy program. I took a braille course from Hadley school prior to going to a residential school for the blind at age 13. Back then, the course was basically the alphabet grade one braille and my vision was good enough to read the braille visually. So I cheated and learned braille but not through touch. Then I went to the school for the blind and saw all those proficient braille readers! My coeds could read, read, read as fast as any sighted person and could track each line by dropping the left-hand down to the next line while finishing the upper line with the right hand, if that makes any sense. This technique, developing touch is amazing and I will sign up ASAP. Thank you for the great information once again
Hi Beverly! Thank you so much. Hahah. When my TVI wasn't paying attention, I would read it visually too! heehee. And it really amazes me to see braille readers that can read that fast. I know sighted people who read slower and I can't read that fast when I use my eyes! I'm glad you're going to sign up! They do it in a way that is very very manageable.
Whoa I never knew this about Braille, no wonder I'm confused on grade 2 Braille, I pray the program's in Florida, as I'm Floridian, thanks for this Carrie, I learned Braille in middle-high school and self taught the rest during lockdown.
Hadley is awesome! I remember taking Braille literacy one and I loved it! All of my Hadley instructors have been really awesome and helpful! Right now I'm taking Braille literacy 3 and I am almost done with the class! When I make an error in Braille on my assignment , my instructor will let me know kindly that this is what I did wrong and I will practice the letter or contraction till I get it right. Hadley has made Braille very enjoyable and I can't wait to take Braille Literacy 4 and everyday reading in ueb.
they are definitely a great organization in a great school! They do so much for the blind community and they also have a lot of different classes besides the braille classes too!
I wish you all the best with the Hadley Braille course. I learn Braille myself during elementary middle and high school. I actually had the same v I teacher the whole time. But, he was an awful teacher! after I turned eighteen, I ended up going to the North Carolina rehabilitation center for the blind in Raleigh. I took the Braille course that was offered there. The Braille teacher there was way better than my braille teacher back in school. turns out, she actually attended Governor Morehead school with my braille teacher. She couldn't stand him either. He was just a nasty mean guy. He constantly down me, discouraged me, etc. She was a much better teacher, and I learned a lot during my time at the rehab center. Good luck on your journey learning Braille! It is still useful in today's world. I think every visually impaired person needs to know Braille.
Wow! That just sounds awful! I'd hate to have a teacher like that guy! I think it's hilarious that your other teacher had him too. Why is someone like that guy teaching? Geesh! And hey! North Carolina! We live in NC. :) Yes, braille is such a great tool and I really wish I learned it before! But anyway, it's okay. I'm hoping to get more people interested in it too. A lot of people think that because of the technology we have, we don't need it anymore and it's something being lost somewhat.
I agree with Carrie! I am enrolled in the Hadley Braille Literacy 4 Contracted Braille UEB, because of your video! I highly recommend the Hadley Braille courses! The courses are paced in small segments making easier to succeed! I learned Braille when I was 22 years old and there is no comparison to the method that Hadley uses in thier literacy courses. I have been dragging my feet in making myself learn UEB. This is why in enrolled in Braille Literacy 4. This is an excellent review of what I already know of Grade 2 English American Braille Edition (EABE). The audio instructions are top notch! You will need an NLS Player and a Perkins Braille Writer. Hadley also offers other classes as well. After I complete Braille Literacy 4, I will enroll in the Braille Literacy 1 to see what I missed the first time around! There is no charge for the classes. Here is a link: hadley.edu/showCourseListing.asp?program=ACE The use of Braille is so important. Even if you have usable vision, give your eyes a rest and let your fingers read for you!
Yes, i remember you enrolling in Braille 4! I need to make a video on all the different courses that Hadley has to offer for free. It's really such a great resource! I will be going through the braille classes and then off to do a lot of the other classes too!
Live Accessible no, Because the only issue that I had was filling the braille and braille lit 1 helped me and I know most of the contractions that i youth daily.
Oh nice! That's cool. I need to go over all those darned contractions again. haha. I learned all of them, but like I mentioned, it just went out the other ear. haha.
Hey Donna! That's awesome! They have me on the waiting list for braille 2. :( Apparently they're doing some rearranging or something. I didn't even know they had a guide dog course!! What is it about? I know they aren't a guide dog school, so does it just talk about how guide dogs are trained or something? That sounds super interesting!
I think it's important that I learn Braille because of my eye conditions especially glaucoma can be serious so in case I was to go blind I would know Braille and I'll have nothing to worry about because it's already going to be in my vocabulary. I practiced my Braille everyday with my sleep shades and I have a lot of braille books and Braille paper along with the slate and stylus and Braille writer that A friend gave me. Right now I'm reading a to volume Braille book on glaucoma that's in ueb and it has helped me with practicing my Braille because there's a lot of contractions in there. My favorite type of Braille is grade 2 because I get to use more words and it's a challenge for my brain to. one of my college friends that is totally blind is teaching me the Nemeth code. While I was in college I would take my slate and stylus with me and Braille paper to the library and sleep shades to practice my Braille for how long I want. I would also read Braille in my college because they have Braille on the classroom numbers and the library elevator and other places. At my eye doctor where I see my glaucoma specialist, they had Braille on the room numbers and I would read them with my hands. so I've been practicing my Braille a lot.
Yes! That's awesome! I applaud you for all that braille practice. I finished my first braille course with Hadley, but they still have me on hold for the next course. That's really awesome and I hope to get to that level one of these days! 😊
I have heard that Unified English Braille has done away with some of the contractions. I think it may have stopped with a couple of the ones that always used to trip me up, but which now are comfortably familiar to me. I the word comfortable might be differently rendered in UEB. The word "national" has probably changed in terms of shortcuts as well. Smiley!
That's really interesting! I'm still on the second Hadley course, so I have a long way to go until then! Hahaha. I think that I will be very very confused once I start reading it though because I have been getting books from the library that are in Braille and I don't think that they are in ueb yet. Or be you be? Whatever it is. I don't understand why they had to change it anyway!
Thankfully there aren't very many changes to the literary code. Some of the changes will not be too hard to figure out when Unified English Braille is in use in a book or on something. Some of the punctuation changes and a few of the contractions which are being removed bother me a little, but I can live with them. I know it's so that there could be a more unified computer braille code along with unified literary code so that translating between computer devices and braille devices is more likely to render the translations that are typed into code from a qwerty type keyboard or the other way round from a braille keyboard similar to what a Perkins Braille keyboard is, the same, from so many newly manufactured devices. I sometimes hear voice over reading something in text that was sent from a Braille keyboard with something that seems mixed up with partial words and symbols, but I understand the gist of what the sender meant. The translator(s) in my phone or on whatever desktop is mixing braille codes. If I set my speech to "character" increments, then carefully listen to what is typed in each space, I can decipher it to what the person actually typed from their Braille keyboard, which usually offers a few braille code settings but has a default setting which is why that comes up often, because very often a person will have to restart their device maybe even from factory default with no sighted or hearing help, but simply going through a set of motions to be able to get some functionality back in their device. Also changing multiple bluetooth pairings between devices gets complicated when a person trying to just get one braille device to work even partially until they can get hold of or an appointment with another person to get their best device back to where at least settings are accessible again. My friends who are deaf and blind find this scenario happening more often because of how the need for braille access on devices, is not recognized by so many people. The blue tooth pairing access for a non hearing and also blind person really could use some innovation. It's a rough deal to have to wait for some other person to pair your devices. I have a friend going through a thing like this right now. He's barely gotten one thing to only sort of work, waiting on repairs and repairing bluetooth wise as well.
Though I can read Braille, I wouldn’t say I’m good at it. I use a slate and stylus, but I prefer using my Perkins brailler, due to my failing dexterity in my hands. Thanks to diabetes, I have trouble with feeling the dots, so I am making the mistake on still using my residual vision to read, despite its ineffectiveness. You described techniques that I didn’t learn, and I make the same newbie mistakes you mentioned, even now almost 5 years later. I need to look into this. I hear you’re going to the NFB convention in July. My boyfriend and I will be there as well. 👍🏽😃
Hey Keya! I think a Perkins brailler would also be a lot of times more efficient, so I'd use that too instead of a stylus. lol. And Yes!!! We will be at the NFB conference! That is so awesome!!! I hope we can set up a time to meet up... I imagine there will be quite a lot of people there and I hope we can find each other!! lol. But Pablo is one of the scholarship winners, so if you hear him talk or about him, I'll probably be tagging along! I'm so excited!
Live Accessible Oh really? That’s awesome! Tell Pablo congratulations! I’ll definitely try to seek you guys out. It would be wonderful to meet y’all in person. 😃
I like the Braille writer better when I'm doing my Braille Literacy for class because I can easily catch my mistakes and it's faster. I have friends that are Braille readers that can't stand the slate and stylus and they prefer the Braille writer because it hurts their hands.
Hey Javier! Yes, it's very interesting and different for me. Completely different from how I learned it as a child! Do you know braille? Just curious. :)
Thanks angel! Yes, it can be definitely a learning process. I suggest either taking a class with your Blind center or doing the Hadley training like I mentioned in the video. ☺️ I wish you all the best in your Braille endeavors!!
Hey Amy! You might like some of the videos in the interview series. It's on a playlist on my channel and I have a video that comes out around once every other week h someone else and their story. ☺️ Thanks for stopping by and checking it out! By the way, I printed out the picture r finger painting and little publicity that he civ plants and trees. ☺️ I stuck it on his door. ☺️
I do the same thing when I I am doing my Braille Literacy 4 class or I use sunglasses that are really dark so I don't pick up the Braille. I always take my glasses off when I'm doing Braille.
Thanks for your comment! Haha. Yes, I used to try to use my eyes, but now I have lost more vision and I don't have the same vision as I did when I was younger. I can't do that now anymore! 😊
i have literacy 1 but i don't know how to start so i'm just stuck with the books and everything but i didn't see any instructions on how to start or anything. :(( (i do see mainly out of my right eye but it's still not alot)
Hi there! When you signed up, they should have asked if you have a national library for the blind player. When they send the course materials, it should also come with the instructions on a cartridge. The cartridge works with the specialized player from the national library for the blind. you may need to call Hadley if you didn't get the cartridge. Wishing you all the best! :-)
Ah. Okay. Unfortunately, without the player you won't be able to listen to the instructions. You can contact the national library for the blind and they can help you get a player. :-)
My mom has macular degeneration and is getting to the point that she may need to learn some things about being blind before she loses functional vision. Thanks for your video. I am looking for some resources for us both to try.
⚠ ATTENTION! Live Accessible has been discontinued. Check out the NEW channel, Carrie on Accessibility - youtube.com/@carrieonaccessibibility for more on technology, accessibility, and more!
I do have a focused blue braille display, 40 sell, and it has changed my life. It makes my job a lot easier.
That seems to be a really popular Braille display! We have one too and so do a lot of people I know. :-) it is a great display.
Thank you so much sweet lady. I am brand new to working with visually impaired middle schoolers. It really helps to hear someone who has been there and can articulate the how and why things work the way they do. You are right and it absolutely makes sense.
I love the way you explained it about the hand movements and placement. I had always thought of learning Braille which I have never done as counting and memorizing. And feeling dots but the way you explained it made me actually curious about this Braille course so thank you I'm actually interested in something that I never thought I would be. I really appreciate the information.
Hey Zara! Yes, it's a bit about perspective. Also, as time goes on, you just remember the shape by a quick touch, just like we do visually. And even though we have a lot of technology, I think it's a really good skill to have. What if something happens to the technology we have? And also, something interesting is that when reading braille, we're using the same parts of the brain that people use for reading print. When just listening to jaws or voiceover, it's a different part. So using both is an advantage! :D
Hi Carrie, this was an excellent, excellent video about the Hadley schools braille literacy program. I took a braille course from Hadley school prior to going to a residential school for the blind at age 13. Back then, the course was basically the alphabet grade one braille and my vision was good enough to read the braille visually. So I cheated and learned braille but not through touch. Then I went to the school for the blind and saw all those proficient braille readers! My coeds could read, read, read as fast as any sighted person and could track each line by dropping the left-hand down to the next line while finishing the upper line with the right hand, if that makes any sense. This technique, developing touch is amazing and I will sign up ASAP. Thank you for the great information once again
Hi Beverly! Thank you so much. Hahah. When my TVI wasn't paying attention, I would read it visually too! heehee. And it really amazes me to see braille readers that can read that fast. I know sighted people who read slower and I can't read that fast when I use my eyes! I'm glad you're going to sign up! They do it in a way that is very very manageable.
G well Karey, manageable, that is exactly what I need, something manageable LOL!
Hahaha. It's just one assignment per month, so I know that you can do it!
Whoa I never knew this about Braille, no wonder I'm confused on grade 2 Braille, I pray the program's in Florida, as I'm Floridian, thanks for this Carrie, I learned Braille in middle-high school and self taught the rest during lockdown.
Hadley is awesome! I remember taking Braille literacy one and I loved it! All of my Hadley instructors have been really awesome and helpful! Right now I'm taking Braille literacy 3 and I am almost done with the class! When I make an error in Braille on my assignment , my instructor will let me know kindly that this is what I did wrong and I will practice the letter or contraction till I get it right. Hadley has made Braille very enjoyable and I can't wait to take Braille Literacy 4 and everyday reading in ueb.
they are definitely a great organization in a great school! They do so much for the blind community and they also have a lot of different classes besides the braille classes too!
I wish you all the best with the Hadley Braille course. I learn Braille myself during elementary middle and high school. I actually had the same v I teacher the whole time. But, he was an awful teacher! after I turned eighteen, I ended up going to the North Carolina rehabilitation center for the blind in Raleigh. I took the Braille course that was offered there. The Braille teacher there was way better than my braille teacher back in school. turns out, she actually attended Governor Morehead school with my braille teacher. She couldn't stand him either. He was just a nasty mean guy. He constantly down me, discouraged me, etc. She was a much better teacher, and I learned a lot during my time at the rehab center. Good luck on your journey learning Braille! It is still useful in today's world. I think every visually impaired person needs to know Braille.
Wow! That just sounds awful! I'd hate to have a teacher like that guy! I think it's hilarious that your other teacher had him too. Why is someone like that guy teaching? Geesh! And hey! North Carolina! We live in NC. :) Yes, braille is such a great tool and I really wish I learned it before! But anyway, it's okay. I'm hoping to get more people interested in it too. A lot of people think that because of the technology we have, we don't need it anymore and it's something being lost somewhat.
Big Len hello fellow North Carolinian..
@@kimlackey4135 hello right back to you!:-):-) can I ask what part of North Carolina you live in? I am from Southeastern North Carolina.
Big Len i’m quite a ways away from you.
@@kimlackey4135 oh! Cool.
I agree with Carrie! I am enrolled in the Hadley Braille Literacy 4 Contracted Braille UEB, because of your video! I highly recommend the Hadley Braille courses! The courses are paced in small segments making easier to succeed! I learned Braille when I was 22 years old and there is no comparison to the method that Hadley uses in thier literacy courses. I have been dragging my feet in making myself learn UEB. This is why in enrolled in Braille Literacy 4. This is an excellent review of what I already know of Grade 2 English American Braille Edition (EABE). The audio instructions are top notch! You will need an NLS Player and a Perkins Braille Writer. Hadley also offers other classes as well. After I complete Braille Literacy 4, I will enroll in the Braille Literacy 1 to see what I missed the first time around! There is no charge for the classes. Here is a link: hadley.edu/showCourseListing.asp?program=ACE
The use of Braille is so important. Even if you have usable vision, give your eyes a rest and let your fingers read for you!
Yes, i remember you enrolling in Braille 4! I need to make a video on all the different courses that Hadley has to offer for free. It's really such a great resource! I will be going through the braille classes and then off to do a lot of the other classes too!
I took The braille literacy 1 and using XL class with Hadley.
That's awesome! Did you go on to the next course yet? 😁
Live Accessible no, Because the only issue that I had was filling the braille and braille lit 1 helped me and I know most of the contractions that i youth daily.
Oh nice! That's cool. I need to go over all those darned contractions again. haha. I learned all of them, but like I mentioned, it just went out the other ear. haha.
I'm fixing to start Braille 3 thru Hadley.I've finished Braille 1&2 already. Love the courses.I'm also taking there guide dog course.
Hey Donna! That's awesome! They have me on the waiting list for braille 2. :( Apparently they're doing some rearranging or something. I didn't even know they had a guide dog course!! What is it about? I know they aren't a guide dog school, so does it just talk about how guide dogs are trained or something? That sounds super interesting!
I think it's important that I learn Braille because of my eye conditions especially glaucoma can be serious so in case I was to go blind I would know Braille and I'll have nothing to worry about because it's already going to be in my vocabulary. I practiced my Braille everyday with my sleep shades and I have a lot of braille books and Braille paper along with the slate and stylus and Braille writer that A friend gave me. Right now I'm reading a to volume Braille book on glaucoma that's in ueb and it has helped me with practicing my Braille because there's a lot of contractions in there. My favorite type of Braille is grade 2 because I get to use more words and it's a challenge for my brain to. one of my college friends that is totally blind is teaching me the Nemeth code. While I was in college I would take my slate and stylus with me and Braille paper to the library and sleep shades to practice my Braille for how long I want. I would also read Braille in my college because they have Braille on the classroom numbers and the library elevator and other places. At my eye doctor where I see my glaucoma specialist, they had Braille on the room numbers and I would read them with my hands. so I've been practicing my Braille a lot.
Yes! That's awesome! I applaud you for all that braille practice. I finished my first braille course with Hadley, but they still have me on hold for the next course. That's really awesome and I hope to get to that level one of these days! 😊
I have heard that Unified English Braille has done away with some of the contractions. I think it may have stopped with a couple of the ones that always used to trip me up, but which now are comfortably familiar to me. I the word comfortable might be differently rendered in UEB. The word "national" has probably changed in terms of shortcuts as well. Smiley!
That's really interesting! I'm still on the second Hadley course, so I have a long way to go until then! Hahaha. I think that I will be very very confused once I start reading it though because I have been getting books from the library that are in Braille and I don't think that they are in ueb yet. Or be you be? Whatever it is. I don't understand why they had to change it anyway!
Thankfully there aren't very many changes to the literary code. Some of the changes will not be too hard to figure out when Unified English Braille is in use in a book or on something. Some of the punctuation changes and a few of the contractions which are being removed bother me a little, but I can live with them. I know it's so that there could be a more unified computer braille code along with unified literary code so that translating between computer devices and braille devices is more likely to render the translations that are typed into code from a qwerty type keyboard or the other way round from a braille keyboard similar to what a Perkins Braille keyboard is, the same, from so many newly manufactured devices. I sometimes hear voice over reading something in text that was sent from a Braille keyboard with something that seems mixed up with partial words and symbols, but I understand the gist of what the sender meant. The translator(s) in my phone or on whatever desktop is mixing braille codes. If I set my speech to "character" increments, then carefully listen to what is typed in each space, I can decipher it to what the person actually typed from their Braille keyboard, which usually offers a few braille code settings but has a default setting which is why that comes up often, because very often a person will have to restart their device maybe even from factory default with no sighted or hearing help, but simply going through a set of motions to be able to get some functionality back in their device. Also changing multiple bluetooth pairings between devices gets complicated when a person trying to just get one braille device to work even partially until they can get hold of or an appointment with another person to get their best device back to where at least settings are accessible again. My friends who are deaf and blind find this scenario happening more often because of how the need for braille access on devices, is not recognized by so many people. The blue tooth pairing access for a non hearing and also blind person really could use some innovation. It's a rough deal to have to wait for some other person to pair your devices. I have a friend going through a thing like this right now. He's barely gotten one thing to only sort of work, waiting on repairs and repairing bluetooth wise as well.
Though I can read Braille, I wouldn’t say I’m good at it. I use a slate and stylus, but I prefer using my Perkins brailler, due to my failing dexterity in my hands. Thanks to diabetes, I have trouble with feeling the dots, so I am making the mistake on still using my residual vision to read, despite its ineffectiveness. You described techniques that I didn’t learn, and I make the same newbie mistakes you mentioned, even now almost 5 years later.
I need to look into this.
I hear you’re going to the NFB convention in July. My boyfriend and I will be there as well. 👍🏽😃
Hey Keya! I think a Perkins brailler would also be a lot of times more efficient, so I'd use that too instead of a stylus. lol. And Yes!!! We will be at the NFB conference! That is so awesome!!! I hope we can set up a time to meet up... I imagine there will be quite a lot of people there and I hope we can find each other!! lol. But Pablo is one of the scholarship winners, so if you hear him talk or about him, I'll probably be tagging along! I'm so excited!
Live Accessible Oh really? That’s awesome! Tell Pablo congratulations! I’ll definitely try to seek you guys out. It would be wonderful to meet y’all in person. 😃
I like the Braille writer better when I'm doing my Braille Literacy for class because I can easily catch my mistakes and it's faster. I have friends that are Braille readers that can't stand the slate and stylus and they prefer the Braille writer because it hurts their hands.
There's sometimes when I'm reading Braille under my sleep Shades I will fall asleep when I'm reading a book and I have to stop and take a break
Definitely an interesting way to learn it. Especially for adults.
Hey Javier! Yes, it's very interesting and different for me. Completely different from how I learned it as a child! Do you know braille? Just curious. :)
You do such a phenomenal job explaining things. Great video
Thanks Chris! Hahaha. And have you learned UEB by the way? How do you feel about it? And thanks again!
Nice video Carrie, am partially blind.. Am now learning how to read Braille. Is really difficult read it... Pls can you teach me how..
Thanks angel! Yes, it can be definitely a learning process. I suggest either taking a class with your Blind center or doing the Hadley training like I mentioned in the video. ☺️ I wish you all the best in your Braille endeavors!!
I Fall a sleep when I get to contraction
Hahahaha! That's funny. Maybe reading a good book would help? 😁
Hi beautiful lady it's Amy. First video of yours I have got to check out.
Hey Amy! You might like some of the videos in the interview series. It's on a playlist on my channel and I have a video that comes out around once every other week h someone else and their story. ☺️ Thanks for stopping by and checking it out!
By the way, I printed out the picture r finger painting and little publicity that he civ plants and trees. ☺️ I stuck it on his door. ☺️
@@LiveAccessible That's lovely about my picture. Thank you. I will definitely be checking out more of your videos. Big hugs to you
Hi Carrie Great video 😊
Thanks Tonie! ♥️♥️
Thanks Tonie! ♥️♥️
I am using a blindfold while doing the course so I can’t cheat and read the Braille with my eyes.
I do the same thing when I I am doing my Braille Literacy 4 class or I use sunglasses that are really dark so I don't pick up the Braille. I always take my glasses off when I'm doing Braille.
Thanks for your comment! Haha. Yes, I used to try to use my eyes, but now I have lost more vision and I don't have the same vision as I did when I was younger. I can't do that now anymore! 😊
Ive been wanting to do the hadly braille course. Did it cost any money to order the boks?
i have literacy 1 but i don't know how to start so i'm just stuck with the books and everything but i didn't see any instructions on how to start or anything. :(( (i do see mainly out of my right eye but it's still not alot)
Hi there! When you signed up, they should have asked if you have a national library for the blind player. When they send the course materials, it should also come with the instructions on a cartridge. The cartridge works with the specialized player from the national library for the blind. you may need to call Hadley if you didn't get the cartridge. Wishing you all the best! :-)
@@LiveAccessible I have a cartridge but not the player
Ah. Okay. Unfortunately, without the player you won't be able to listen to the instructions. You can contact the national library for the blind and they can help you get a player. :-)
@@LiveAccessible my mom just called a library near me to try to get me one :)
Each state has a library services for the blind and after the application, they will mail it to you. Hope it works out. 👍
Are you totally blind carrie
hi Angel, no I am not totally blind. I am legally blind with around 20 / 800 or somewhere around there. My husband Pablo is totally blind. ☺️
My mom has macular degeneration and is getting to the point that she may need to learn some things about being blind before she loses functional vision.
Thanks for your video. I am looking for some resources for us both to try.