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Colleen Ashby - Interview with Seeing Eye Dogs Show

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On this episode of the Seeing Eye Dogs Show we're joined by two guests:

  • Dr Ashe Mooney of the Seeing Eye Dogs vet team joins us to talk about the foods to avoid over the holiday season. We talk about which foods to keep your dogs away from, familiarise yourself with these foods to keep your dog happy, healthy and safe!
  • Then we're joined by Colleen Ashby talking about the release of her second book Ya Gotta Laugh which is now available on Booktopia, and Amazon, in different formats, or you can find more info and stories on Colleen's website and blog/ or in our interview on this show from January 2022. Colleen's second book is a series of humorous anecdotes about her life which includes her journey with her vision, and her Seeing Eye Dog Xian.

If you'd like to find out more about Seeing Eye Dogs head to our website: https://sed.visionaustralia.org/

We are looking for puppy carers now so if you're keen to raise a puppy to hopefully become a Seeing Eye Dog we'd like to hear from you! It's an incredibly rewarding experience, with training provided. Carers need time, patience and love to give to a puppy, so if you want to commit to a year of puppy raising, we would love your help. If you live in the North Brisbane or Sunshine Coast regions of Queensland or in Victoria in Geelong, Bendigo and select areas of metro Melbourne (listed on our Website) get in touch to find out about volunteering with us or apply now via our website.

If you'd like to find out more about Seeing Eye Dogs head to our Click to visit Vision Australia:

Have you listened to my 6PR interviewl? You can find it by clicking below:

Do people really feel different when a life changing event happens to them? Here I share my personal insights from becoming legally blind.

Do you feel the same person that you were before?

Lovely picture of colleen in front of a painting with a white faded border

Just recently, I was asked a question requiring some deep reflective thought. It was after I had finished playing a much-enjoyed game of blind canasta with friends.

They were Hon’s (aka Sharon) best friends. even though we all knew one another at a personal level through Hon, we had never met or interacted with one another. These friends were also great fans of canasta, so after Hon explaining to them how we play, they decided to give it ago.

Apprehension with meeting someone with a disability

Initially a bit apprehensive as to how I would be, what do they have to do around me, and all of those familiar frequent questions people have when meeting someone with a disability is encountered. Hon reassuring them that I can take a joke and give back as much as I get and certainly never takes offense at anything, our Grande maiden introduction was arranged.

Questions about being legally blind and having a heart transplant

Picture of colleen with a cocktail in her hand and her guide dog by her side.

The game was filled with an extreme amount of politically incorrect language and comments. Being endearingly nickname Helen Keller, even though I assured them I had no problem with hearing or talking, I enjoyed this extremely humorous banter. It was not only me, but derogatory comments and insults were flying around the room to one another, echoed with raptures of laughter. Intermingled with playing the game, they had curiosities about how I do things and life now in general. Open and happy to share insights of my life now with not only having a heart transplant but waking up legally blind from it.

I told them funny stories of things that have happened with learning my new normal as blind, they were both intrigued and grateful while having a good laugh for my openness and honesty. I also enjoy sharing these insights with people, as I too Had never met anyone who had been transplanted or was blind before me. I also would be curios myself if in their position.

Soul searching questions

Then checking if I minded being asked a personal question, he inquired if I feel like the same person I was before all this happened?

My initial response was to blurt out, that of course I did. I am still the same old Colleen I was before. Wanting to be truthful and open, I paused for a moment to check in with myself before opening my mouth. I had never been asked this question and I didn’t want to simply just brush it off as something of no importance. That would not be authentic or true to myself, nor would it shed real light for others to understand the significance of such a life changing event. In that pause, I searched deep inside trying to find my truth.

My response was “At first, I thought I was the same old Colleen that I was before. I jumped quickly into normal mode with getting on as if nothing had happened. Learning to do the things I had previously done, going out with friends, and getting on with life as best I could. I thought people would treat me exactly the same as before I was back in the game of life and never made an issue of it. I never expected people to not want to interact with me or to walk by quickly obviously hoping I wouldn’t notice them and engage in an uncomfortable conversation. When I would go to shopping centres with friends, they would always comment on the stares that people gave me. It didn’t bother me as I couldn’t see them, but whoever was with me, got upset by it.

The emotional impact of not receiving social cues

After a while, I also began to feel that I was something unusual to be looked at and treated differently. I don’t get the facial or body language feedback that tells us what people are expressing, the social cues are not there. Not knowing if someone is smiling, frowning, crying, angry or even interested when engaging with me. I didn’t understand the significance of this for quite some time or how it was impacting me emotionally, it gives you a sense of alienation, a feeling of not belonging in the norm of social acceptance. It’s a strange feeling but I do feel unconnected from others without this subtle but crucial feedback.

Acceptance of change

I have come to accept that things are not the same, nor am I the same old Colleen that I was prior, That’s not a bad or negative thing, it’s simply different. I do things differently now and life has opened in other ways for me, and I am loving my new me.”

With that, I found itself empowering and healing with accepting and expressing to them how I truly feel. There is nothing wrong with that for it simply is what it is.

If you are feeling alienated, not fitting in to where you were before. Don’t try and fight it or make it the way it was. Accept where you are and what has bought you to this point and try to integrate and understand what you are feeling. Often once we acknowledge the situation and can tell someone else about it, then healing and a chance to move forward in life can happen. Even journaling about how you are feeling can release tremendous stress and emotions that simply need to be acknowledged.

It's ok to feel different

No matter what the circumstance is that has brought you to this point in life, remember it’s ok to not have to feel the same as you were before. You now have a wonderful opportunity to reinvent yourself and journey down a new path in life and be excited about what adventures are installed for you. Invite the unknown and unfamiliar in and be open to opportunities that come your way. Let go of your old patterns and ways to invite new beginnings in. Shine your light and become the change you want to see in the world.

Thankyou for joining me and reading my Peacock Tale. I look forward to being with you again sharing stories and insights.

Next time I am taking a stroll down memory lane when I went on an outing to Araluen tulip festival. Be sure not to miss this stunning encounter of the beautiful display of tulips and the gorgeous grounds.

With love and no regrets

Colleen Ashby

Learn more? I highly viting the following website; Vision Australia, What is mental Health, Transplant Australia

Wondered what challenges a legally blind person on a catching public transport could have? I present a blind challenge to achieve a goal!

I would like to share with you my fellow travellers, a story of me wanting to retain my feisty independent way of being, when a bit of patience would have served me far better.

Some may call me stubborn, or pig headed with my determination to soldier on ahead with trying to achieve my goals, I call it being focused on what needs to be done to attain it.

Sometimes however the trials and tribulations involved in ones’ endeavour to do so, can be quite over whelming.

Filled with enthusiasm and zest for wanting to keep the ball rolling toward my goal, I decided to take on this task by myself.

Picture of Colleen sitting on a garden seat with her dog Rhian in front of her.

My friend who usually helps me with things, was not available for another two days and Mum had medical appointments, along with the day planned to execute this job was going to be a bright sunny day. The weather forecast was important as being wintertime the days had been filled with rain. My friend telling me to wait until she was available to help, my enthusiastic response was “Don’t worry, it will be an adventure.”

A newfound confidence

I had just launched my second book “Ya gotta laugh” and was eager to get it on the local bookstores shelf. My destination was a shop in Fremantle, hours’ drive from where I live. I knew how to find it once I was in Fremantle, it was the commute there that was my challenge. I am not particularly familiar with catching trains or buses but had recently found a newfound confidence since participating in a cooking class in Perth with Vision Australia. I had no problem with catching the bus into the Elizabeth Quay station in the city and then the train along the Mandurah line. That however was the extent of my public transport experience.

I recalled a cooking participant telling me to get to Fremantle, all I had to do was catch the Fremantle line from the city and the train stops right there. ‘Simple,’ I thought. ‘I can do that ‘was what I reassuringly told myself. ‘How wrong could I go with that? Yep, I’ve got this ‘was my confident self-talk.

Confident like a strutting rooster

Rising early as I needed two hours travel time to get to Fremantle, along with a twenty-minute walk from my place to the bus that only runs every hour into the city, I didn’t want to miss the bus. With my book in hand, and ready to walk out of the door, I had a little brainwave. I contacted a friend that lived in Fremantle and asked if she was available to have a coffee catch up while I was down there? Her excited response was that she would meet me at the train station for a coffee, after I had dropped the book off at the shop. Yep, I was showing her how independent and confident I was in engaging on such big tasks. I felt like I was strutting like a rooster, chest puffed out, tail feathers held high and proud, owning my stuff.

Nearly missing the bus and having to frantically wave it down to stop again, At least I had Rhian by myside who makes for a good visual attraction. Rhian and I safely on the bus, we were on our way to starting our adventure. Rhian knew exactly where to take me to get me to the train station. Confidently strutting our stuff together through the bus port and down to the train station, we boarded the train in no time at all. Settling down for a forty-minute ride, all was well.

When the rooster feathers fall out

Hearing the names of the stops along the way, my brain began thinking how do I actually get to Fremantle from one of these stations ? Alarm bells began ringing as the names being announced were well past my destination point. When I heard Rockingham announced, the bells were really clanging in my head. I was a Half an hour’s drive further south from Fremantle! As I alighted from the train, I asked a passenger if they knew how to get to Fremantle from here. They had no idea bit would help me find someone to assist me. Now in the hands of a trusty transit guard, he told me that I had to catch the train all the way back into the city station, one stop past Elizabeth Quay.

Then go to platform seven and catch the Fremantle line. To get back to where I had to catch my bus on my return trip, I would have to go back to the city station, go to platform two to get back to Elizabeth quay. It was at this point that all of my fluffed-up rooster feathers not only drooped down but completely fell out. It was then that I remembered the cooking participant telling me that I had to catch the Fremantle line from the city. A small oversight that had slipped my mind but of such importance to my planned trip! Deflated, daunted with such a huge and unfamiliar challenge required, I was almost at tears. Thank God I had sunglasses on so no-one could see my welled-up eyes.

A ride of defeat

Back on the return train, I called my friend and told her that I would have to cancel as I was currently in Rockingham! Telling her of my adventure and dilemma of not being able to not only navigate the large Perth train station bit the time it would take to do so just wasn’t worth the effort. She offered to meet me at Murdoch station, which I was semi familiar with and pick me up there. At least that way we could still have our catch up.

Now in the car with her, she offered to drive me down to Fremantle. I told her that I was not going to worry about it as the day had already been long and stressful enough. We enjoyed a lovely lunch together, along with her buying the book off me.

Rhian and I back on the train to go home, I was beginning to settle down after the mornings events.

Feeling a little relieved that I would at least be able to catch an earlier bus home and miss the school run, Rhian and I waited at the bus stop.

Picture of the head of seeing eye dog Rhian looking arround.

Ten or so minutes later, a transit guard came along and asked me which bus I was waiting for? Telling him the 282, he informed me that I had a forty-minute wait. Now getting confused once more, I replied that I thought the 282 ran twenty past the hour.

He confirmed that it wasn’t coming until ten past. With that information, I really felt deflated.

Not only did I completely muck up my train ride endeavour but now my intended early ride home was also bumbled. This hole public transport thing is simply too hard for me! Was my defeated mind talk.

A long trek home

After Rhian and I sat patiently sitting by ourselves, like a shag on a rock, with not a soul around us, eventually another passenger ventured down to our bus stop. Thank God I thought, at least I know somebody else is wanting to catch the same bus. Finally, a bus pulls up and the passenger asks the driver if they are stopping at the Kalamunda depot? With hearing his confirming answer, I confidently boarded my ride home.

Weary from my mentally challenging days events. I began to notice that glimpses of scenery weren’t familiar. My brain too tired to comprehend what was going on. Then I realised I was on the 283 which takes a different route.

Picture of Colleen happily looking down on seeing eye labrador Rhian woth her hand on his shoulder

Now I didn’t know where the bus was going to stop from where I needed to get off. Asking the driver some questions, I eventually got off the bus but with quite a long trek home.

Feeling absolutely shattered both physically and mentally, of which I am sure Rhian felt the same way, we were both glad to be back home. When my husband came home and asked how my day went, my simple answer was “I don’t like catching public transport anymore.”

Moral of my story

This story of my planned exciting adventure of independence, is not to tell you that catching public transport with a vision deficit is a difficult and arduous task to do. There are plenty of blind people catching transport regularly and with ease.

My lesson here is that if I had used some patience and waited for a sighted person to go with me and familiarise my planned route with Rhian, then things would have been different.

A little forward planning goes a long way when you can’t see where you are going! One day I will endeavour to try this again but with somebody by myside to orientate me, along with Rhian being familiarised with a new route to remember.

My one consolation was that I had my bestie and closest confidant giving me comfort and a sense of security, by myside the entire day through. Thank you Rhian.

Thankyou for joining me and reading my Peacock Tale.
I look forward to being with you again very soon sharing stories and insights about my life.

Next blog I will be writing about is when I was asked a very profound and soul enquiring question. Do I feel the same person that I was before I lost my sight?

Colleen Ashby smiling through a bunch of peacock feathers

No regrets
Colleen Ashby

@seeing-eye dogs Australia
@Vision Australia

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