emma and i - Sheila Hocken Page 3
that ring and so on. Mr Brown, who used to visit my family
(since we were all registered as blind people), was quite a
feature of life while I was growing up. He was a nice man,
rather like an uncle. Mother used to order wool, which could
be bought more cheaply through him than at a shop. When I
was young he used to bring little presents, and one of these,
a doll with separate sets of clothes, I had treasured very much.
Mr Brown had been waiting for me for about an hour. I
explained why I was so late, and gave all the details of my
nightmare journey. He immediately asked, 'Why on earth
don't you have a guide-dog?'
They were the nine most important words of my life up to
that time. Yet the suggestion was an astonishing one. The
idea of having a guide-dog had simply never occurred to me,
which is strange considering my previous attachment to dogs,
and my hopes of finding work with them. Perhaps it was
because my sight had gone very gradually, and I had always
pretended to myself that it was not really going at all, and that
I could still see if I tried. I did not want to admit to being
blind. In fact, I couldn't believe Mr Brown when he suggested
I should apply for a guide-dog. I imagined then that people
had somehow to be very special to qualify for guide-dogs,
that only a select few had them, and, as a result I suppose, it
had never crossed my mind to consider the idea at all. But
Mr Brown went on, 'You quite obviously need a guide-dog,
and you're just the right sort of age for one.'
I really could not take the idea in. Its impact was tremendous,
as if someone had taken hold of the world and
completely reversed its direction. 'What do I do about
applying?' I said.
He replied very firmly, and in a voice full of encourageMMent
'Well, I'll tell You. I'll get you the forms, and I'll come
down with them, and we'll fill them in together. I'll do the
writing for you.'
When he'd gone, I sat back and thought about it. I thought
of the books I had read about guide-dogs. I realized it would
mean I'd never again have to face the kind of terrifying
business I had been through that day, blundering from bus
stop to bus stop in anonymous darkness with no idea where I
was. And I'd be able to go out in the evening: I could be
independent.
A few days later Mr Brown was back with the forms:
sheet after sheet of questions. How tall was I? What did I do
for a living? What sort of house did I live in? What were my
hobbies? They even wanted to know how much I weighed.
We sent the forms off, and a reply came from the training
centre at Leamington Spa to say that they would send a
guide-dog trainer to assess my personality and match me to a
suitable dog. I was excited, but nervous too, because at the
back of my mind I was wondering, 'What if they find I'm
not suitable after all?' The prospect was heartbreaking. When
the trainer came, he went along with me to see where I
worked and what I did. We went for a walk together so that
he could test my walking pace, and see I had no odd characteristics,
such as skips and hops and so on when I went round
corners. He examined the house we lived in, which had
virtually no back garden and no fencing, and said, when I
explained we were hoping to move to a council house, 'You
must have a garden well fenced-off for your dog.' Lastly, he
told me that there was a waiting-list for guide-dogs, and it
would be about nine months to a year before I finally had a
dog of my own.
This was in November, 1965. The waiting period was an
agony of frustration. Every time a letter came I seized it, and
tried to find someone to read it to me as quickly as possible.
During these months I had plenty of time to find out about the
Guide-Dog Association. It was started in 1934, but the original
idea of using dogs to lead blind people was born in Germany
during the 1914-18 war, when a doctor in charge of some men
blinded at the front one day left his Alsatian to look after a
soldier, and was struck by the way the dog carried out his task.
The idea spread across the Atlantic and back to England. Yet,
unbelievably, the use of guide-dogs was opposed here at first
because people thought it unnatural, cruel even, for dogs to
be put to work in this way. Fortunately, the Association
flourished through a lot of hard work and voluntary effort.
Today there- are four centres for training guide-dogs and their
owners, at Bolton, Exeter, Forfar, and Leamington Spa, as
well as headquarters at Ealing near London, and a Breeding
and Puppy-Walking Centre near Warwick.
I also learned that some blind applicants had to be rejected
for various reasons, and this worried me. But the letter I
wanted so much came more quickly than I had thought
possible. It arrived towards the end of the following May, and
I had only five more weeks to wait. Would I be at the training
centre, Leamington Spa, on 1 July? Would I? I was prepared
to camp on their doorstep so as not to miss the day.
At last, 1 July arrived. It was, as I thought only proper,
glorious weather-bright and sunny. Obviously I could not
have got from Nottingham to Leamington Spa on my own.
But I was very lucky. Geoff, one of the reps at the firm where
I worked, had offered to take me in his car. I was up with my
cases packed and ready long before he called for me at nine
o'clock. We took the M 1 south from Nottingham, Geoff doing
his best to describe the- scenery to me as we went. I disliked
travelling, as there was nothing to occupy me except the
business of going from A to B. Geoff's descriptions at least
stopped the boredom. Yet I couldn't really imagine all the
things he was telling me about. I had no mental picture of
what fields looked like because I couldn't remember ever
seeing one, much less a cow. I remember him saying to me,
'What do you think I look like? You must have an idea of
what I look like.'
'Yes, I get an image when I hear people, just as you must
get an image of what people look like in your imagination
when you hear them on the radio. But,' I added, 'if you later
see a photograph of what they're really like, the two images
don't match up, do they?'
'No, you're right. They don't,' he said.
'Well, don't blame me if I've got the wrong idea of you ...
I think you've got dark, curly hair, and I know that you're
about five foot seven because I can judge that when you're
standing up and you talk.'
'MM' he replied, non-committally. Then he went on,
'Do you ever feel people's faces to get an image of them?' I
told him I didn't, but not the reason. It would have been like
telling everyone I couldn't see.
About half-way to Leamington, Geoff asked if I'd like to
stop for coffee. I did not really want to. For one thing I wanted
to get to Leamington as quickly as possible. For another, I<
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hated going into strange places where I knew there would be
lots of people, because I always felt so embarrassed. But we
did stop, mainly because I thought Geoff deserved a coffee.
We drew off the motorway, and into a big car park. Geoff
wanted to be helpful, and he grasped my arm, not realizing
how unnerving it was for me being dragged along in this way.
As he was taking me from the car park, he said, 'Steps here,
Sheila, ' That was fine, as far as it went. But he didn't say
whether the steps went up or down. I assumed they went up.
I was wrong. I suppose I ought to have asked, to make sure.
Then he led me, or more accurately propelled me, through
some doors. I got the impression we were in a very large
room, full of women, all talking. I could smell their perfume,
and the coffee. I imagined it was about eleven o'clock, and
they were all in there for the coffee break.
Left alone while Geoff got the coffee, I panicked. I felt
desperately cut off, and wanted to run. Then another
embarrassment presented itself. I wanted to go to the lavatory.
But I did not want to have to ask Geoff. Although the situation
was not new to me, I always found it humiliating. Unfailingly,
it took me right back to primary school, my hand sawing the
air, 'Please teacher, can I leave the room?' When I did
summon up the courage to mention my predicament Geoff
was very good and said immediately, 'Oh, of course. I'll get
someone to take you.' Either he didn't notice my embarrassment,
or covered up very well. He left the table and went to
speak to someone. As it turned out, he must have picked the
biggest and strongest woman in the room. I had the bruises
on my arm the next day to prove it. She got hold of me and
hauled me out of my scat by brute force. 'Come along, my
dear,' she boomed, 'I'll take you. You poor thing, not being
able to see.' And she literally pushed me through the room.
I crashed into everything possible on the way: tables, chairs,
even an occasional cup and saucer, they all went flying. I felt
like a red-faced bull in a china shop. Even when I was in the
Ladies, she insisted on standing guard outside the door,
enquiring from time to time, 'Are you all right, dear?' and
'You're sure you don't need any help?' I didn't know whether
to laugh or cry. I could not wait, once released from the grip
of this Amazon, to be back in the car and driving the last lap
to Leamington.
The training centre, Geoff told me when we arrived, was
ù large, Tudor-style house, with trees all round it, standing in
ù great expanse of grounds. While we waited for someone to
come and look after me, I had a sudden moment of misgiving.
'What,' I thought, 'if I go through the course, and I can't do
whatever they teach, and they say I'm not good enough to
have a guide-dog. What then?' It was a cold, alien feeling and
I was shaking slightly when the receptionist arrived.
She instantly dispelled my momentary panic. 'Hello, Sheila,
we were expecting you round about this time. If you'd like to
take my arm, I'll show you to your room.' No pushing or
dragging here, I thought. GeofF said goodbye, and the receptionst
took me through a lot of corridors and up several
staircases. It seemed an enormous place as she guided me
along, explaining the layout of the centre, and the way to
the dining-room, the lounge, the bathroom and toilets, and
so on. Then we reached my room. 'Here we are,' said the
receptionist, 'Number Ten.' She stopped and told me to put
my hand up to the door. To my utter amazement I felt
'Number Ten' in braille. 'All the doors are numbered or
marked like this,' she said, 'so you won't have any trouble
finding your way about.' I was quite staggered. At last a place
where they really understood the business of being blind. I felt
better just at the touch of the 'Number Ten' on my door.
Imagine, I thought, as I felt the outline through my fingers,
they actually expect you to feel your way about.
Then the receptionist took me into my room, and described
the layout. I, of course, had to 'picture' it through my sense
of touch and my estimation of the distance between obstacles.
Directly behind the door was an easy chair and then a fitted
wardrobe. I felt along the wall and found my bed, and along
the bed to the radio and the table. In the corner was a handbasin
with hot and cold taps, and on the same wall was the
dressing table. I discovered a looking-glass on the dressing
table, and the receptionist must have noticed my expression.
'Ah yes,' I heard her say, 'the looking-glass. You want to
know why. Well; the reason is that if we didn't have normal
fittings such as mirrors and lamps in the rooms it would be
very odd to the sighted, particularly to those who work here.
We expect you to fit into a sighted world, *and accept these
sorts of things.' Wonderful, I thought-integration ...
There was just one more item of furniture left to examine,
and it was the most important. Next to the dressing table was
the dog-bed. It seemed massive, and I felt its interior-sprung
mattress and blanket. It was so obviously comfortable I
fancied it myself When I'd finished identifying it by touch the
receptionist said, 'Well that's it, Sheila. I'll leave you to
unpack. The midday meal will be in half an hour.' I heard
the door close behind her, and started unpacking my suitcases.
On the way to the wardrobe I had to keep passing the
dog-bed. Every time I did so I stopped and felt it. I wondered
longingly what sort of dog would soon be sleeping in it.
The sound of knocking interrupted my thoughts. When I
opened the door, a voice said, 'Hello, I'm Brian Peel. I'm
your trainer.' He not only trained the dogs, but also taught
people how to use them. His handshake felt firm and friendly;
I was sure we would get on well. 'If you'd like to come down
with me,' he went on, 'I'll show you exactly where the diningroom
and lounge are.' We went down to the lounge, and he
explained the geography of the room. 'We meet here each
morning to begin the day's training. There are chairs round
the outside. If you follow them round to the right, you'll find
the radio and television. On the opposite side are braille
books and games . . . mind that coffee table . . . if you
remember that table stands where the carpet ends, you won't
walk into it.'
As we went on to the dining-room, the prospect of a familiar
ordeal loomed up in my mind. I hated eating meals with
sighted people. It always led to some kind of embarrassment.
They usually wanted to cut my meat up, and imagined it
would be better if I ate with a spoon instead of with a knife
and fork. Or they said, 'Oh dear, if only I'd known you
couldn't see, I would have made sandwiches.' I would become
so demoralized and nervous I could hardly eat at all when a
plate of food was eventually put in front of me. N
ot knowing
what was on it, much less exactly where the food was, I would
stab away, usually missing potatoes or meat or whatever, and
ending up bringing my teeth together on the metal of an
empty fork.
At the training centre it was totally different. Brian sat
next to me and put the plate in front of me. 'Here we are,' he
said, 'Fish, chips and peas. Chips at twelve o'clock, peas at
three o'clock, and fish between nine and six.' So I not only
knew what I was going to eat, but where to find it. We talked
during the meal. 'Are there any other people here for training ?'
I asked.
'You're the first to arrive,' said Brian, 'we've three more
coming this afternoon.'
Then, before many more chips and peas had disappeared, I
asked the question which was burning in my mind: 'When do
we get our dogs?'
'In a day or two, when we know a little bit more about you
and you know more about the dogs. You know, a lot of the
people we get for training have never had even a pet dog
before they come here, and they wouldn't know how to look
after a guide-dog. So first we teach the business of actually
looking after a dog. Then, of course, you can't work with a
dog unless you know how she's been trained, and what
commands she will respond to.'
'I see,' I said. There was a pause. Then I asked, 'Have you
chosen the dog I'm going to have?'
'I think so,' said Brian, 'but over the next two days I shall
make absolutely sure. You see, I know the dogs, but I don't
know the students properly yet, even though you've all filled
in your questionnaires. The thing is, we match the dog to the
future owner as far as possible. For instance, if an owner is
young and can move quickly, we want a dog that can move
quickly. If the owner's older, we want a dog that will slow
down a bit ' and, generally, we try to match characteristics.
Your dog-or the one I think you're going to have-was
puppy-walked by a woman who had no men living in the
house; she's obviously a woman's dog-she gets on with them
better than with men. She's quite seral!ive, too, and because
you've handled dogs before, we think you might suit one
another. But even so, like everyone on the course, you'll have
to get used to her.'
After the meal, we went back to the lounge, and met the