bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
There are also people, like my friend with visual disabilities, who have slow adjustment times going from light to dark, or dark to light. So if we go from daylight into a dark ride, it might take the first 5 minutes inside for her to even be able to see. We'll try to step aside and let enough people go by us to let her eyes adjust. She might wear dark sunglasses on a bright day to speed it up a little. Point is, she has to go out of her way to adjust to seeing in the dark.
Then we get inside, get on a ride, and someone takes a flash picture. And she can't see for the rest of the ride. Last trip, on It's a Small World, someone was using the light on their video camera, and she nicely explained to them why it was ruining her experience. They looked at her like she was lying, but did turn the light off.
Honestly, she should not have to ask, beg or explain when it's common courtesy, as well as the instructions on many rides.
Yep. I'm getting better, but that's how I was for quite a few years. Dang Lasik (it caused my problem). Flashes still *hurt*, though, even though my eyes are recovering faster from light/dark or dark/light.
for your friend, just in case it ever comes up, I would *not* recommend sitting at a waterside table in Blue Bayou. It's so dark in that area, but if you turn your head as the door opens you can be blinded, and then the fun of sitting waterside is lost until your eyes recover.