Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBE-Q 64.4 Fall 2019

A quarterly newsletter from the Council for Exceptional Children's Division on Visual Impairments containing practitioner tips for Teachers of Students with Visual Impairments, Certified Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and other professionals.

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VIDBE-Q Volume 64 Issue 4 60 able to view her first child very differently when supported by her TVI through an IMH lens: He (first son with VI) didn't look at anything, even me; but then, he couldn't see anything. He didn't smile, didn't really have a personality that started to come out. I look at our two week old daughter and already see her little personality; and she looks right at me. Once you get a couple of weeks past the birth, after you quit riding the high of the hormones, you really need them to be interactive so that you like them! I'm so glad we didn't stop after our son. My daughter is restoring my faith in babies— that they really are nice. It's been such a different experience from the get go. I realize now that he just had no sense of whether anyone was out there. So he was terrified. He was a terrible sleeper. Now I know that his world was so small that he was terrified to sleep alone. He couldn't tell whether someone was near him. So he needed to be held. Like, all the time. He ate all the time. Now I think it wasn't that he was hungry, he just learned early on that eating came with the physical closeness he so desperately needed to feel safe. But then he had feeding challenges, so feeding wasn't this wonderful experience for either of us. And it really set us on a bad cycle. If only I'd known – it could have been so much different. (A. Bennett, personal communication, April 2016) Imagine how different things could have been for April, the mother of a 2 year old with VI and a newborn daughter. Her pain and his fear was real, but now she is able to read his subtle cues and learning style after being introduced to them through her EI/VI service provider supporting her through an IMH lens. Her son can now establish trust and attachment to his family, which will then create a positive foundation for all future learning

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