SEASON ONE: My Heart Is Not Blind SEASON TWO: About Hunger & Resilience MY HEART IS NOT BLIND Blindness doesn't make someone less intelligent, less capable, less competent. Perception and adaptation are deeper than we can imagine and much more mysterious. These narrative histories focus on the shifting pools of perception and deep transformation. Each eloquent voice draws us into deeper understanding. ABOUT HUNGER & RESILIENCE Why did Cornelius go hungry? What does it feel like for Tiffany to walk by a grocery store? Why does it happen? What can we learn? Everyone in this podcast knows something important and valuable, a wisdom born from experience. Michael said, “I have been profoundly inspired by each participant, as well as food banks, soup kitchens, charitable organizations, churches and so many volunteers giving unselfishly.” Please join us. Michael Nye practiced law for ten years before pursuing photography full time. He has received a Mid-America National Endowment for the Arts grant, two Kronkosky Charitable Foundation Grants and the Dr. Bolotin Award from the National Federation of the Blind. His Photography & Audio exhibitions have traveled to more than 150 cities across the country. He is currently working on a manuscript of Essays & Photographs. My Heart Is Not Blind – Published by Trinity University Press Contact: michaelnnye@gmail.com Visit website for more info: https://michaelnye.org
My Heart Is Not Blind is a weekly podcast, traveling exhibition and book published by Trinity University Press – a series of complex narrative histories of individual blind and visually impaired. How does anyone, blind or sighted understand the world outside themselves? These conversations focus on the deep and shifting pools of perception and the mystery of transformation. Our other senses, separate from sight have their own wis...
Episode 1 - Larry Johnson
What bothers me most about how people use the word blind or blindness is that they usually have in their minds a stereotype of what it represents to them. They are thinking about the limitations the inability the problems the obstacles. Sometimes it’s enfolded with a sense of pity or a sense of great admiration. And it should be neither. I don’t want to be thought of as amazing Larry or poor Larry. I jus...
Episode 2 - Wanda Austin
I really like the cognitive therapy approach in my counseling practice. It focuses on our thought processes and how we can change them to view our situation differently. One discovery I made was Erik Erikson’s Developmental Theory. This theory describes the stages of development people go through from childhood to old age. It really resonated with me. I went through these development stages, adjusting to bl...
Episode 3 - Chad Duncan
I carved out a very humdrum, predictable, safe existence when I was a sighted person. As a blind person you have to fight, and you have to be strong and confident. I feel more alive since I lost my eyesight. I don’t taste things more intensely than you do. I just appreciate what I taste more than before. Blindness has given me the opportunity to slow down and take the time to listen to what someone is say...
Episode 4 - Christina & Weston Wright
If you had asked me if Weston was flawed when he was 6 months old, I might have said yes. Now at 8 years old, I feel like he’s more advanced than I am at 33. He’s perfect. I feel like I know Weston from the inside out. He’s what completes our family. He amazes me with his sense of compassion, his sense of sensitivity for the world. When a car goes by, “Why did that car sound different than ours...
Episode 5 - Burns Taylor
Burns Taylor is a teacher, poet and essayist. He said, “My sister was probably the most important person in my life. One night we went outside. She took my hand and pointed it toward the evening star. We sang together, Star light, star bright, first star I see tonight, I wish I may, I wish I might, have this wish I wish tonight. That it was important to make a wish on a star. I couldn’t see and she gave me ...
Episode 6 - Katie Keim
In those early months of blindness, I had to relearn spatial relationships. I was walking with my mother one day near her home. It was a soundless and windless day. I experienced walking by a large ponderosa pine tree and hearing that it was next to me through my arm and my skin. Not through my ears, not through my eyes that didn’t work anymore, not through the smells or taste in the wind, but through my skin...
Episode 7 - Host Michael Nye - Preview
Preview of upcoming episodes.
Link to Transcript: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NNigQcPjEAAyajtWnjeF1SqhdrZHLBmq/view?usp=sharing
Episode 8 - Juanito Castillo
What I’m trying to say is that not everything is always going to be perfect. We’re all flawful. We all have room for improvement. There is an urgency to live while you can. I believe that no matter what you do, moderation is the key to maintaining yourself and maintaining your sanity. I can deal with some imperfections. Not every drum set is going to be in tune and not everyone is going to have duct tap...
Episode 9 - Frances Fuentes
I know how it feels to be sighted and to be blind. When I was sighted, I could see the world. And now that I’m completely blind, I just feel it, taste it. It’s just like stepping from one dimension to another. It’s just like me being bilingual. I could either speak to someone in Spanish or speak to someone in English. Blindness is a different language. I know both sides, dark and light.
Episode 10 - Virgil Stinnett
I don’t believe blindness is a disability because I am able to do things that I want to do. I am a pacific islander who just so happens to be blind and carries a white cane. I work in the food service industry as a Department of Defense contractor. I service our troops which I proudly do because they are out there risking their life for our freedom. Currently I have 43 employees.
Transcript Link: Co...
Episode 11 - Olivia Chavez
I’ve never felt ashamed or embarrassed to be blind. I had a very rare cancer, so I’ve never felt guilty. There are challenges. I have felt isolated sometimes because of my blindness. I’ve thought that if I could see, maybe people might be more accepting or open with me. Many times conversations are centered on how I read or how I get around, but they’re not interested in my life. It’s more like a curiosit...
Episode 12 - Ann Humphries
Link to transcript: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11aL_u8G-omo9VbW6bOk00wrVBs6Zse5k/view?usp=sharing
Episode 14 - Roseanne Rodriguez
Link to Transcript: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1imJCA1BVIgiAff5d7pj5SSWEoI-oQit1/view?usp=sharing
Episode 15 - Mario Aguirre
Link to transcript: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QbDKyiCJK6oh1SeS87hqkOVrxrH93DUM/view?usp=sharing
Episode 16 - Marti Hathorn
Link to transcript: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QIcoPP9aWgPC7uGQPzPWGZR9XkyP9-ND/view?usp=sharing
Episode 17 - Dominic Helm
Link to transcript: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1VP0j5ag7Wazw8KHtuiBwPuPOPFmzP1Oy/view?usp=sharing
Episode 18 - Paloma Rambana
Link to transcript: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1HFeDMKeTsdhUtcxY-uDPRtOmRswPXqbY/view?usp=sharing
Episode 19 - Cleo Carranza
I never forget that I’m blind. I think about it all the time. One time, a guy asked if I felt lonely because I didn’t have anybody to talk to. I said, “To tell you the truth, no I don’t. I feel more nervous when I have a lot of people here.” Sometimes I wish people would take off, so I could be by myself. I do my own cooking. I like beans mashed. I do my own housecleaning, and I hang my clothes outside. I ...
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