I’m planning to meet with my local Department of Services for the Blind tomorrow; the stated purpose of the meeting is to discuss upcoming life changes/needs/etc. This appears to be exactly what I need at the moment, but I’m concerned that I’m not going to be optimally prepared, so I’d like to post some details here to increase the chances of useful feedback.
(For transparency’s sake: I’m legally blind, unemployed, living with my parents until they take the necessary steps to get me moved into the place I own, with student loan payments outpacing my SSI benefits by over $200/month, and stuck in the bible belt.)
The plan to move out will doubtless frame the conversation.
I’m unsure as to whether this conversation will be private (me talking to a DSB representative), or if one of my parents will sit in. Who is in earshot matters, since for all the problems I have with my parents, they are the entirety of my support system at the moment, and the less risk to that relationship the better.
Most important topic: Training. My skills across the board are pathetic, yet I’ve been unable to improve them independently in the time since I’ve realized this (most of the past year and a half, IIRC). I find myself drawn toward the National Federation of the Blind’s training centers, but those involve a hefty time investment (six months), and the prices I’ve found suggest it would cost ~$3600/month, not to mention travel. This is exactly the sort of thing I would expect DSB to help with, but at the same time, I don’t consider it unlikely that I’ll be pushed toward cheaper, more local options. (My research over the past several months has reduced my confidence that the more local options are of much value.)
I feel I would greatly benefit from a functional Notetaker. The one I was previously using has stopped functioning. I’m worried about this one; I expect that anything for which DSB provides assistance will need directing toward a tangible goal, possibly with a narrower subset than “I can get much more done with it than I could hope to with just a laptop”. (I could write an entire post on why I think Notetakers are awesome, but this is already quite lengthy.)
I’m unsure as to how I will approach these topics, or the meeting as a whole, or if there are other issues I’ve missed/neglected/been mistaken about.
I do not like being a net drain on resources; managing this correctly seems the most viable path to reversing that.
I was absurdly lucky: the counselor I spoke to is new and motivated to put in the necessary effort for everything, and went to high school with my stepmother; it also turns out that the in-state training center has a thirty-day trial period, during which commitment is a non-issue. They also offered to provide any required technology, be it laptops or note takers or whatever. It could start as early as the first week of February, which is early enough that I wouldn’t need to worry about security at my property. So on the whole, a surprisingly good day.
If you have not dealt with something the DSB before, you’re probably drastically overestimating how much mental effort they are willing to expend to help you. (I dealt with a similar agency, the California Department of Rehabilitation, many years ago.)
Although it is of course good for you to try to estimate how much mental effort they are willing to make in real time during the interview, I suggest the plan you go into the meeting with assume it is low. E.g. you might consider just asking for a notetaker over and over again.
Try to appear a little dumber than you actually are.
I would not risk alienating your parents to try for a deeper conversation with DSB staff.
My impression is that some people want children very much, but the majority have children as a result of liking sex plus being willing to raise children once the children exist plus social pressure.
You do get the occasional sperm substitution scandal which seems like a very pure example of a desire to have children.
It looks like you’ve already got a list of things you want to answer in the meeting, so you’ve already done the most important preparation.
I’m unsure as to whether this conversation will be private (me talking to a DSB representative), or if one of my parents will sit in.
This is probably under your control. I expect you have the right to a private meeting, if you ask the DSB rep. If you’re worried about how your parents would react to such a request, maybe try framing it as practicing your independence, or something appropriately harmless and fuzzy-sounding?
I’m planning to meet with my local Department of Services for the Blind tomorrow; the stated purpose of the meeting is to discuss upcoming life changes/needs/etc. This appears to be exactly what I need at the moment, but I’m concerned that I’m not going to be optimally prepared, so I’d like to post some details here to increase the chances of useful feedback.
(For transparency’s sake: I’m legally blind, unemployed, living with my parents until they take the necessary steps to get me moved into the place I own, with student loan payments outpacing my SSI benefits by over $200/month, and stuck in the bible belt.)
The plan to move out will doubtless frame the conversation.
I’m unsure as to whether this conversation will be private (me talking to a DSB representative), or if one of my parents will sit in. Who is in earshot matters, since for all the problems I have with my parents, they are the entirety of my support system at the moment, and the less risk to that relationship the better.
Most important topic: Training. My skills across the board are pathetic, yet I’ve been unable to improve them independently in the time since I’ve realized this (most of the past year and a half, IIRC). I find myself drawn toward the National Federation of the Blind’s training centers, but those involve a hefty time investment (six months), and the prices I’ve found suggest it would cost ~$3600/month, not to mention travel. This is exactly the sort of thing I would expect DSB to help with, but at the same time, I don’t consider it unlikely that I’ll be pushed toward cheaper, more local options. (My research over the past several months has reduced my confidence that the more local options are of much value.)
I feel I would greatly benefit from a functional Notetaker. The one I was previously using has stopped functioning. I’m worried about this one; I expect that anything for which DSB provides assistance will need directing toward a tangible goal, possibly with a narrower subset than “I can get much more done with it than I could hope to with just a laptop”. (I could write an entire post on why I think Notetakers are awesome, but this is already quite lengthy.)
I’m unsure as to how I will approach these topics, or the meeting as a whole, or if there are other issues I’ve missed/neglected/been mistaken about.
I do not like being a net drain on resources; managing this correctly seems the most viable path to reversing that.
I was absurdly lucky: the counselor I spoke to is new and motivated to put in the necessary effort for everything, and went to high school with my stepmother; it also turns out that the in-state training center has a thirty-day trial period, during which commitment is a non-issue. They also offered to provide any required technology, be it laptops or note takers or whatever. It could start as early as the first week of February, which is early enough that I wouldn’t need to worry about security at my property. So on the whole, a surprisingly good day.
That’s awesome. Go you!
Glad to hear it!
If you have not dealt with something the DSB before, you’re probably drastically overestimating how much mental effort they are willing to expend to help you. (I dealt with a similar agency, the California Department of Rehabilitation, many years ago.)
Although it is of course good for you to try to estimate how much mental effort they are willing to make in real time during the interview, I suggest the plan you go into the meeting with assume it is low. E.g. you might consider just asking for a notetaker over and over again.
Try to appear a little dumber than you actually are.
I would not risk alienating your parents to try for a deeper conversation with DSB staff.
My impression is that some people want children very much, but the majority have children as a result of liking sex plus being willing to raise children once the children exist plus social pressure.
You do get the occasional sperm substitution scandal which seems like a very pure example of a desire to have children.
I think you replied to the wrong comment.
You’re right.
It looks like you’ve already got a list of things you want to answer in the meeting, so you’ve already done the most important preparation.
This is probably under your control. I expect you have the right to a private meeting, if you ask the DSB rep. If you’re worried about how your parents would react to such a request, maybe try framing it as practicing your independence, or something appropriately harmless and fuzzy-sounding?