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Tag: Blindness

  • Tears at what senior dog still tries to do after losing vision to diabetes

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    A TikTok video showing a senior dog waking up confused and unable to see has moved people to tears, as it has drawn attention to the common complication of canine diabetes.

    Pet parent Joe LaMancuso began managing his senior dog’s diabetes over the summer, he shared in the comment section of his September 30 TikTok video. This includes giving his 12-year-old dog, Oreo, two daily insulin shots, using a glucose reader and having him eat a special diet.

    Diabetes is a chronic disease caused by high blood sugar due to insulin problems, affecting humans and animals alike. In dogs, the most common form is diabetes mellitus, or sugar diabetes, according to an article from the American Kennel Club. Most dogs are diagnosed after age five, though it can occur at any age. Early diagnosis and treatment are crucial, as uncontrolled diabetes can lead to cataracts, liver enlargement, urinary tract infections, seizures, kidney failure and ketoacidosis.

    Oreo’s blindness seemed “sudden” to LaMancuso, as if it happened overnight. In the heartbreaking video, Oreo sits by his food bowl, unsure where to go or what to do. His head hung down in defeat. Trying to stay positive, LaMancuso wrote in the caption: “Hang in there, my lil prince, there’s still so much to smell and hear!!!”

    Eye problems are common in dogs with diabetes. According to an article from South Texas Veterinary Ophthalmology, 75 percent of dogs will develop cataracts within 12 months of a diabetes mellitus diagnosis, and blindness can progress quickly when severe or left untreated.

    Oreo is now learning how to navigate this new normal. A separate video shows LaMancuso taking his dog on a walk, and how Oreo is gradually adjusting and becoming more cautious. Pet parents are advised to maintain routines and avoid moving household items, including food bowls, to help blind dogs orient themselves.

    And while some canines can use their other senses to help them through, LaMancuso shared in a comment that Oreo’s hearing has started to go, too, making adaptation even more challenging.

    With over 101,400 views, 8,811 likes and 214 comments, TikTok users flooded the video with their heartbreak for how scary it must be for not only the owner, but Oreo.

    “That’s so sad. Please give him a cuddle and belly rub from me,” wrote one person.

    Another added: “So sorry. It’s so hard watching them get older. Hugs, stay strong for your baby!!”

    LaMancuso said Oreo became cuddly for the first time after his vision went. He slept next to LaMancuso that night.

    Newsweek reached out to LaMancuso via email for additional information and comment.

    Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@newsweek.com with some details about your best friend and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup. 

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  • 10 Sci-Fi Books With Terrifying Viruses and Plagues

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    Remember during the COVID-19 pandemic we all rewatched Contagion? I’ve created this list to scratch that same viral itch. The course of human history has been shaped by deadly disease. Smallpox, the Bubonic Plague. the Spanish Flu, with each strain of infection, our culture mutates as well. Science fiction authors throughout history have utilized infection narratives to do what they do best: conjure up all the ways the future could go wrong. Humanity needs to read these 10 sci-fi books with terrifying viruses and plagues, so when COVID-20 comes around, we’ll all be better prepared.

    The Stand

    Cover art for "The Stand" by Stephen King
    (Doubleday)

    Arguably tied with It for the best Stephen King novel, The Stand is a post apocalyptic tale about a deadly pandemic, and a world that refuses to die. After a government engineered super-virus wiped out 99% of the population, the few immune survivors struggle on in a forever changed world. Like many of King’s characters, each survivor experiences “the shining” – a type of psychic attunement that appears in other works like The Green Mile, The Shining and Carrie. Depending on whichever direction their moral compass points, the survivors begin having visions of two separate spiritual leaders. The good dream of America’s oldest woman, a folk guitarist and prophet who lives in rural Nebraska. The bad dream of a mysterious man in black, an agent of chaos who is setting up shop in Las Vegas. As the survivors journey across plague-ridden nation to answer their respective callings, it becomes clear that Armageddon is only just beginning.

    The MaddAdam trilogy

    Cover art for "Oryx and Crake"
    (Anchor Books)

    Margaret Atwood’s MaddAdam trilogy begins with the end of the world, and continues from there. Told in a series of flashbacks, the series’ first novel Oryx and Crake tells the tale of a mad genius who engineered humanity’s doom. A brilliant bioengineer, the scientist Crake imagined a world populated by “Crakers,” post-human beings of his own genetic design. After patenting a wonder drug that was secretly laced with Crake’s “Jetspeed Ultra Virus Extraordinary,” the scientist distributed lab-made doom across the planet. The second novel tells an alternate perspective of the end, focusing on two women who survived the apocalypse by sheltering with a religious cult – which obviously has its pros and cons. Part Mad Max, part Children of Men, part Frankenstein, this trilogy tells the tale of the man who spliced apart the world, and the survivors left to pick up the mutated pieces.

    Station Eleven

    Cover art for "Station Eleven"
    (Knopf)

    One of the most uplifting post-apocalyptic novels ever written, Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel is theatre kid Armageddon. The novel follows the Traveling Symphony, a perambulatory band of actors and musicians who travel about a post-pandemic world performing Shakespeare. Jumping back and forth between the post-collapse present and the pre-pandemic past, the novel plays out The Tragedie of Planet Earthe in real time. Society fell due to a deadly super-virus – no government bio-weapon, no mad scientist engineering, just a freak of nature disease that our immune systems couldn’t beat. Told with all the subtle grace of a Shakespearean sonnet, Station Eleven paints a picture of humanity during our planet’s final act. The show must go on, after all.

    The Andromeda Strain

    Cover art for "The Andromeda Strain"
    (Avon)

    From the mind that brought us Jurassic Park, Michael Crichton returns with another novel about humanity’s poor decision making skills. Like building a theme park full of resurrected dinosaurs, The Andromeda Strain chronicles the ill-thought out plan to collect alien microorganisms from the far reaches of space. After a germ-collecting satellite crash lands in Arizona, scientists are shocked to discover that a small town has been entirely annihilated by disease – save for an old man and a baby. The Tyrannosaurs Rex in this novel is “Andromeda” an extraterrestrial virus capable of rapid mutation. Clever girl. Sadly, Jeff Goldblum isn’t there to stop it.

    The Girl With All The Gifts

    Cover art for "The Girl With All The Gifts"
    (Orbit Books)

    The Girl With All The Gifts by M.R. Carey isn’t your average zombie apocalypse novel, rather a subversion of the genre. After a global pandemic turns average people into flesh-eating “hungries,” scientists in Beacon set up a facility to study a special group of children infected by the disease. Unlike their mindless adult counterparts, child hungries are able to retain their mental faculties, but become hostile when exposed human scent. Melanie is one of these young hungries, a 10 year old with a genius level IQ and a love for Greek mythology. The novel is a day in the life of a little girl who, despite her occasional ravenous hunger for flesh, is just like any other kid. If Ellie from The Last of Us grew up in a Firefly research facility instead of the mean streets of the Boston DMZ, you’d have this book.

    The Last Man

    Cover art for "The Last Man"
    (Henry Colburn)

    Not to be confused with Y: The Last Man: a comic book about a mediocre dude who is the survivor of a plague that kills everything with a Y chromosome – Mary Shelley’s The Last Man is a pandemic story from the mind that brought us Frankenstein. Hailed as the first great post-apocalyptic novel, the story takes place in the late 21st century, where a resurgence of the bubonic plague is causing rapid societal collapse. The novel follows Lionel Verney and Lord Raymond, two aristocrats who travel the world with their loved ones in a doomed attempt to outrun the disease. A elegiac, grief haunted novel, The Last Man was written after the death of Shelley’s husband and their mutual friend Lord Byron. It single-handedly birthed the trope of the “lone post-apocalyptic wanderer,” further cementing Mary Shelley’s legacy as the great-grandmother of science fiction. Without her, the genre as we know it simply wouldn’t exist.

    Zone One

    Cover art for "Zone One"
    (Doubleday)

    Zone One by Colson Whitehead is a zombie apocalypse story that focuses on the minutiae of post-collapse life. Humanity has managed to stabilize itself, and the military is now mopping up the infected with procedural efficiency. In an effort to retake New York City, civilian volunteers have been tasked with eliminating a less dangerous strain of infected, who go about their un-lives in state of catatonia. Centered around an everyman named Mark Spitz, the novel swings back and forth between the bad old days of the early pandemic and the rebuilding efforts of the present. It’s kind of like a day in the life novel about Fallout NPCs, just going about their end of the world business, until things go horribly wrong.

    Blindness

    Cover art for "Blindness"
    (Mariner Books)

    Blindess by José Saramago is set in a world ravaged by an epidemic of sightlessness. Set in an unnamed city and revolving around a cast of unnamed characters, the novel details the early days of the pandemic. The government has quarantined the infected into a hospital, where rule of law breaks down as desperate people attempt to horde supplies and resources. An unrelated group of infected people (along with one woman who remains curiously immune) evolve into a tight-knit found family, and attempt to navigate their way through the claustrophobic world. A literary take on the post-apocalyptic novel, Blindness is strange, surreal, and thought provoking meditation on human nature. When things go wrong, we tend to lash out with one hand reach for each other with the other.

    Clay’s Ark

    Cover art for "Clay
    (Warner Books)

    When it comes to Octavia Butler’s Clay’s Ark, I can firmly guarantee you’ve never read a post-apocalyptic novel like this before. The story takes place in the not so distant future, where societal collapse has caused humanity to band together in small groups called “car families.” Dr. Blake Maslin and his twin teenage daughters are a car family traveling across the Mojave desert, carjacked by a spaceship crash survivor who is infected with an alien microbe. The alien disease causes anyone infected to be consumed with the desire to reproduce, the result of which is the inevitable birth of something far from human. After Blake and his daughters are kidnapped and taken to the crash survivor’s creepy ranch to meet his own “family,” things really hit the fan. Yes, this novel is about an alien sex plague that results in mutated offspring. Yes, it is as exciting, grotesque, and fascinating as it sounds.

    The Companions

    Cover art for "The Companions"
    (Gallery/Scout Press)

    Another highly unique take on the post-apocalyptic virus novel, The Companions by Katie M. Flynn takes place in a world where a deadly plague has forced humanity to remain indoors. Stuck in eternal lockdown, the living can only be visited by the dead. I don’t mean zombies, I mean the digitally uploaded consciousnesses of the deceased who are implanted into machines. The “companionship” program allows people to return from beyond the grave, implanted inside everything from rolling R2-D2 style robots to androids that pass for human. While wealthy companions are able to return to their families, the less fortunate are “leased” to strangers in order to ease the epidemic of loneliness. A sixteen year old girl named Lilac is one of these unfortunates, digitally resurrected in a mechanical body and forced to obey commands – but when she overrides her own programing, she mounts a daring escape into the post-pandemic wasteland. It’s a novel about how capitalism, like a cockroach, is able to survive and thrive in the grimmest of circumstances – and so can its victims.

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    Image of Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm (they/them) is actually nine choirs of biblically accurate angels crammed into one pair of $10 overalls. They have been writing articles for nerds on the internet for less than a year now. They really like anime. Like… REALLY like it. Like you know those annoying little kids that will only eat hotdogs and chicken fingers? They’re like that… but with anime. It’s starting to get sad.

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    Sarah Fimm

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  • ‘I can’t see the players’: Blind high school football player breaks barriers

    ‘I can’t see the players’: Blind high school football player breaks barriers

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    WE’LL GO THROUGH THE SEVEN DAY FORECAST IN ABOUT 20 MINUTES. ALL RIGHT. SOUNDS GOOD. HEATHER. THANKS. ALL RIGHT. A MODESTO TEEN FOOTBALL PLAYER IS BREAKING BARRIERS AT SEVEN YEARS OLD. JASON BRACEY LOST HIS VISION THAT DID NOT STOP HIM FROM BECOMING A HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL PLAYER. KCRA 3’S CATALINA ESTRADA HAS HIS STORY. ESPARTA 18 YEAR OLD JASON BRACEY IS UNSTOPPABLE ON THE FIELD. IT’S A LOT. I MEAN, FOOTBALL IS. FOOTBALL IS LIKE WHAT I BREATHE IN AND BREATHE OUT FROM STARTING QUARTERBACK TO NOSE GUARD. HIS GAME PLAN IS ALWAYS TO DEFY THE ODDS. NO MATTER HOW MANY TIMES I GET KNOCKED DOWN TO THE GROUND, I’M GOING TO GET BACK UP AND FIGHT. FIGHTING IS PART OF HIS DNA. AT ONE YEAR OLD, JASON WAS DIAGNOSED WITH RETINAL CANCER. HE HAD TUMORS IN THE RETINAS OF BOTH OF HIS EYES. BY THE TIME HE TURNED SEVEN, HE WAS BLIND. WALK UP, WALK UP RIGHT THERE. STILL, THAT DIDN’T STOP HIM FROM PURSUING HIS DREAM TO PLAY FOOTBALL. NUMBER 15. HE WANTED TO PLAY. HE WAS HIS OWN ADVOCATE. ONCE HE BECAME OLD ENOUGH AND STARTED CALLING AROUND TO SOME OF THE LOCAL YOUTH TEAMS, THE MODESTO RAIDERS WAS THE ONLY TEAM THAT GAVE HIM AN OPPORTUNITY DOING WHAT HE LOVES TAKES PRACTICE ON AND OFF THE FIELD, BRACEY MEMORIZES EVERY PLAY AND WHERE THE PLAYERS ARE SUPPOSED TO BE. I CAN’T SEE THE PLAYERS SO REPS IS. I HAVE A CONSISTENT AMOUNT OF REPS AND LEARN EVERY TIME I TAKE A REP TO, HEY, OKAY, SO THIS PLAY, MAKE SURE YOU DO THIS, DO THIS. MORE ON THIS PLAY. MAKE SURE YOU DO THAT. MORE FROM THE SIDELINES. HIS FATHER GUIDES HIM THROUGH A HEARING DEVICE IN HIS HELMET. GO PASS PASS PASS. LEFT LEFT LEFT. BASICALLY WHAT I TRY TO DO IS PAINT A MENTAL PICTURE FOR HIM OF WHAT EVERYBODY ELSE IS SEEING OUT ON THE FIELD. HE’S PROVEN TO BE AN OUTSTANDING PLAYER WITH HIS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM. THE EAGLES AND MODESTO. YOU CAN DO WHATEVER YOU PUT YOUR MIND TO AND I MEAN THAT FOR ME FOR A LOT OF THINGS. AND SO BASICALLY, BASICALLY, IT’S NOT OVER UNTIL YOU SAY IT’S OVER. AS HIS TIME AS AN EAGLE COMES TO AN END, THIS SEASON, HE SAYS HIS FUTURE IN FOOTBALL IS JUST BEGINNING. GO TO COLLEGE AND TAKE MY, YOU KNOW, SKILLS TO THE NEXT LEVEL. IMPROVE AND GO TO THE NFL FROM THERE. BE OUT THERE AND MAKE IT HAPPEN. BROTHER. LOVE YOU MAN. IN TURLOCK CAROLINA ESTRADA KCRA THREE NEWS AND JASON BRACEY WILL BE GRADUATIN

    ‘I can’t see the players’: Blind high school football player breaks barriers

    Jasen Bracy’s game plan is always to defy the odds. The 18-year-old high school football player is completely blind, but that doesn’t stop him from going out to the football field to do what he loves. “Football is like what I breathe in, breathe out,” said Bracy. At a young age, Bracy was diagnosed with retinal cancer. His father, Jasen Bracy Sr., said he had tumors in the retinas of both eyes and by the time he turned 7 years old, he was blind. “Now, he’s just in complete darkness,” said Bracy Sr. At the age of 13, Bracy Jr. knew he wanted to become a football player, so he took matters into his own hands. “Once he became old enough and started calling around to some of the local youth teams, the Modesto Raiders was the only team that gave him a opportunity,” said Bracy Sr.Doing what he loves takes practice on and off the field. Bracy Jr. memorizes every play and where the players are supposed to be. “Reps is a big thing for football and for me, especially reps because I can’t see the players,” said Bracy Jr. From the sidelines, his father guides him through a hearing device in his helmet. “Basically, what I try to do is paint a mental picture for him of what everybody else is seeing out on the field,” said Bracy Sr.Bracy Jr. has been a starting quarterback and is now a nose guard with his high school football team, the Enochs Eagles, in Modesto, California.”You can do whatever you put your mind to,” said Bracy Jr.Friday night was his last game with the Enoch Eagles before he graduates next year, but he said his football career is just beginning. “Go to college and take my, you know, skills to the next level, improve and go to NFL from there,” said Bracy Jr.

    Jasen Bracy’s game plan is always to defy the odds.

    The 18-year-old high school football player is completely blind, but that doesn’t stop him from going out to the football field to do what he loves.

    “Football is like what I breathe in, breathe out,” said Bracy.

    At a young age, Bracy was diagnosed with retinal cancer.

    His father, Jasen Bracy Sr., said he had tumors in the retinas of both eyes and by the time he turned 7 years old, he was blind.

    “Now, he’s just in complete darkness,” said Bracy Sr.

    At the age of 13, Bracy Jr. knew he wanted to become a football player, so he took matters into his own hands.

    “Once he became old enough and started calling around to some of the local youth teams, the Modesto Raiders was the only team that gave him a opportunity,” said Bracy Sr.

    Doing what he loves takes practice on and off the field. Bracy Jr. memorizes every play and where the players are supposed to be.

    “Reps is a big thing for football and for me, especially reps because I can’t see the players,” said Bracy Jr.

    From the sidelines, his father guides him through a hearing device in his helmet.

    “Basically, what I try to do is paint a mental picture for him of what everybody else is seeing out on the field,” said Bracy Sr.

    Bracy Jr. has been a starting quarterback and is now a nose guard with his high school football team, the Enochs Eagles, in Modesto, California.

    “You can do whatever you put your mind to,” said Bracy Jr.

    Friday night was his last game with the Enoch Eagles before he graduates next year, but he said his football career is just beginning.

    “Go to college and take my, you know, skills to the next level, improve and go to NFL from there,” said Bracy Jr.

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  • Shaw’s Sponsors Future in Sight’s 15th Annual Walk for Sight

    Shaw’s Sponsors Future in Sight’s 15th Annual Walk for Sight

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    Press Release



    updated: May 15, 2018

    Future In Sight, formerly known as New Hampshire Association for the Blind, is pleased to announce that Shaw’s is this year’s Walk for Sight Event Sponsor.

    “We are thrilled to have the support of Shaw’s as our Event Sponsor for this year’s Walk. In addition to this generous sponsorship, 17 Shaw’s stores have registered teams to walk with us on Saturday, June 2 in downtown Concord. The individual Shaw’s teams, led by each store’s director, have their competitive game faces on and are competing against one another for the largest team with the most money raised. So it can be accurately said that Shaw’s ‘walks the Walk!’ said Lucinda Williams, Director of Development for Future In Sight. This 3K Walk is Future In Sight’s largest fundraiser of the year. Proceeds from the Walk help the Organization provide vision rehabilitation programs and services to people who are blind and visually impaired in New Hampshire. The Walk is also the state’s largest gathering for awareness, support, and advocacy for people who are blind and visually impaired.  Last year, almost 500 walkers participated.

    One of the primary reasons I approached Shaw’s about partnering with us for this Walk was because I personally noticed the above-and-beyond measures they take to not only hire people challenged with a disability but also to make grocery shopping accessible for the visually impaired through the shopping service program.

    Lucinda Williams, Director of Development, Future In Sight

    “We are pleased to support such a worthy cause and Future In Sight as it works to help 4,000 people this year alone. At Shaw’s, we know these people live and work in the communities where our stores are located.  We want our communities to know we truly care,” says Daniel Moore, District Manager of Shaw’s.

    In addition to Shaw’s notable record of hiring those who are disabled, Shaw’s also offers a shopping service where an employee will accompany a blind or visually impaired person as they tend to their essential food needs. “One of the primary reasons I approached Shaw’s about partnering with us for this Walk was because I personally noticed the above-and-beyond measures they take to not only hire people challenged with a disability but also to make grocery shopping accessible for the visually impaired through the shopping service program,” states Williams. “I wasn’t surprised when Daniel responded with a strong ‘yes, let’s do this partnership’ because the company’s actions speak louder than words.”

    “You may have a friend, neighbor or relative struggling with day to day tasks because of sight loss. Making people aware of this incredible Organization is just another way we can help advocate for and promote awareness of the needs and challenges of the visually-impaired community,” states Moore, “we hope to see hundreds of people at the Walk to share the message that there is a Future In Sight.”

    Walk for Sight registration begins at 9:00 a.m. on June 2, with the Walk starting promptly at 11:00 a.m. Participants are encouraged, however, to pre-register online now at www.futureinsight.org or by phone at (603) 565-2424. Registration is $20 per walker, $5 for those under 12.  Registration includes an event t-shirt, lunch, and fun activities at the McGreal Sight Center.

    Source: Future In Sight

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