Listen in as Anne describes how a question posed to her shifted her perspective for living with vision loss.
Hadley
How would you help if it wasn’t you?
Anne Rinard: Every time you lose some vision, it's almost like starting all over.
Marc: This is Hadley’s Insights and Sound Bites, where people facing vision loss share what has helped them cope and adjust.
Anne Rinard: My name is Anne Rinard, and I am currently living in Southern Maine.
I was diagnosed with macular degeneration. My mom had had it at that point for a couple of years, but she really wasn't losing vision. So, I wasn't overly worried about it. And then in 2021, I noticed in April. In fact, my kids were here for Mother's Day weekend. And I noticed that I couldn't read the clock and just a few other things that were blurry.
Then when I went back to the doctor, to the retina specialist, it had gone from dry to wet, and he gave me an injection. So, for a while, I mean, for almost a year, I was going almost every other week because it was changing so much. My left eye also had a PED, which is a pigment epithelia detachment. I have peripheral vision in it but it's just a big black hole in the central.
Every time you lose some vision, it's almost like starting all over. And so, I'll adjust to the level of vision that I have, and then I'll be doing okay, and then I lose more. And I start tripping or falling, or I don't know, something. You know, I walked into a tree. Just different things like that. And it's so discouraging, and not to mention the fact that it hurts your head, but I find the emotional adjusting and readjusting to be exhausting.
I had this woman come who, said to me, "How would you help yourself if you weren't you? How would you help yourself if you weren't you?
Once you start thinking that way, it's easier to be intentional. It really helped me to approach vision loss as, how do I cognitively deal with this? How do I shift the way my brain works so that I can deal with this? It takes it out of the emotional.
It helped me change my attitude so that this was not something that was happening to me. And it opened the door for me to say, I still have choices, I still have some control. Instead of it just happening to me, it was like I became involved with it. So that was a really big difference for me.
Marc: You never know who might need to hear your story. If you’d like to share with us, just leave us a message on our Insights & Sound Bites voicemail. By calling, 847-512-4867. Or, you can use your smartphone or computer and email us a recording to [email protected].
This week Dorrie shares how technology has made all the difference for her in living with vision loss.
Today we hear from Ed who shares how the source of hope for him has changed with time.
Listen in as Cindy shares how advice from her son helped her adjust to her new normal.
Listen in as Tim recalls a conversation with a store clerk and how it helped him adjust to life with vision loss.
Listen in as Alice shares a boyfriend's advice from many years ago. Words that give her hope, even today.
Listen in as Bill shares how a chance encounter changed his perspective on vision loss.
Listen in as Ruth shares how her frustration and impatience turned around with just one phone call.
Listen in as Sam shares how he struggled trying to hide his vision loss-and how he finally turned the corner.
Listen in as Eugenia describes how her own determination and the support of friends helped her keep moving forward.
Listen in as Zenobia shares how she found the support and strength she needed.
Listen in and be inspired as Saras explains how changing her perspective to, "Why NOT me?" helped her tap into her strengths.
Sheri shares with us how the love for her horses helped her find purpose and peace.