
-_- And now I'm going to see how well I can write with my eyes closed. I've been pretty lazy today, so that's how it's going to be. It's kinda interesting, trying to understand how you're making mistakes without seeing them. It's pretty easy when you're looking at them, but without sight, it's quite difficult. I won'der how blind people go about it. That reminds me of something that's kinda interesting to me: sight as a measure of good things. Not to dis on those who don't have good sight, but I think it's important that a person be ablet o see their world clearly. Without it, how can a person think, do, or react? I think that my eyesight is extremely important to me.I like hearing things like music or speech, but reading with my eyes is important and my thinking processes have almost melded with my eyes. Being able to make small changes is only available through sight. I assume there's a way to go about without sight, but I wouldn be interested to see the differences. My right index finger has been hurting since dinner. I don't know what I did to it, but I'm going to stop using it now. How does my spelling and typos increase as I lose a finger? My typing is certainly slower and it's harder for me to know if what I'm typing is right, but it seems to be working. But I don't now ecause I'm also blind as I type this. Odd isn't it? My father onc asked me if I had ever teied closing my eyes as an exercise, tring to find my way by touch and memory. I had, siince my stairwell is pretty dark when our light is out. It'sd interesting that a person loses a lot of mobility and thought when they are blind and injured or differently abled, but there always seems to be a way to do things. That is the human nature, to adapt to your life and environment. Given lemons or oranges, one can make a tasty fruit juice because our minds are not limited, but rather expanded by our limitations. Judt try to get me to draw a picture with nine fingers and no sight...
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