A blind Perspective
Blind,  Photography

Common Blind Questions Answered: My Journey

What It’s Really Like to Be Blind: Honest Answers from Someone Living It

Have you ever paused to truly wonder what life is like without sight? As someone that’s legally blind with five degrees of residual vision in my right eye, I’ve heard these questions countless times. I only became legally blind about a year ago, so I straddle both worlds: the sighted one I knew for most of my life and the blind one I’m navigating now. 

In this post, I’ll share straightforward, personal answers to the most common curiosities about blindness, drawing from my experiences and conversations with friends in the community. My goal? To dispel myths, highlight realities, and show that blindness is a spectrum of adaptation, not limitation.

Do Blind People Blink?

Yes, we do. Blind people have eyes (real or prosthetic), and blinking is a natural reflex to keep them lubricated and free of debris. Sight has nothing to do with it; it’s basic eye physiology.

Do Blind People Dream?

Dreams are highly individual and depend on when (and if) someone lost their vision. People blind from birth often don’t have visual dreams at all. Research shows that congenital blindness means the brain doesn’t develop the same visual processing pathways, so visual imagery in dreams is rare or absent.

For those like me that had full vision for decades and only recently became legally blind, dreams remain crystal-clear, often in perfect 20/20 detail. Many of my blind friends who’ve been without sight longer report no visual elements in their dreams anymore; visual memory fades over time, and dreams shift to rely on other senses. It’s fascinating how the brain adapts.

Can a Blind Person See Anything?

Blindness isn’t all or nothing, it’s a wide spectrum. Legally blind covers a range from severe low vision to total blindness. The common claim is that only about 10% of legally blind people have no light perception at all (complete darkness, or rather, no visual input whatsoever). In my experience and from what I’ve heard, the number of people in total, absolute blindness (no light sense) is even lower, perhaps closer to 5% or less in many cases. Most people labeled “blind” retain some light perception: they can tell light from dark, notice bright sources, or even see vague shapes or contrasts. Those blind since birth often still sense light in subtle ways. The idea of “seeing nothing but black” is a myth; many experience no visual field at all, complete absence rather than darkness.

How Do Blind People Read?

Accessibility tech has revolutionized reading for us. Screen readers turn text into speech or braille output:

iPhones dominate in the blind community thanks to VoiceOver.  It’s intuitive, powerful, and widely loved for seamless navigation.

Macs use VoiceOver, too.

Windows machines in the workplace often run JAWS (a paid screen reader) or the free, NVDA.

For tactile reading, braille displays are invaluable. They range from compact 20-cell models (like the NLS eReader for basic use) to advanced 40-cell ones (like the HIMS Braille eMotion). I rely on mine daily to read texts, emails, books, and articles.  It’s direct, private, and fast. Braille isn’t dying; it’s evolving with refreshable displays that pair with phones and computers.

How Do Blind People Navigate the World?

Getting around is a mix of mental mapping, sensory awareness, and technology. I memorize routes: how many steps to the end of my street, which direction to turn at corners. Sounds are huge, traffic flow, echoes off buildings, audible pedestrian signals at crosswalks. I absorb a ton of environmental info without visual clutter.

Apps like Apple Maps with VoiceOver are game-changers: spoken directions, precise distance announcements, and haptic vibrations guide me turn-by-turn. Guide dogs, white canes, and orientation & mobility training help too. It’s about building reliable systems—once a route is learned, it’s second nature.

Do Blind People Have Better Senses?

No, this is a persistent myth. Our hearing, smell, or touch aren’t superhuman.  We don’t magically gain enhanced senses. What changes is attention: without visual input dominating, we tune in more deeply to audio cues, vibrations, scents, and textures. My hearing is not great, but I pick up on subtle footsteps or air shifts when someone approaches because I’m not distracted by sights. It’s focus and practice, not biology.

How Do Blind People Cook or Shop?

Daily tasks like cooking become routine with adaptation and tools. Mornings, I often make my wife scrambled eggs: crack carefully (shells are the enemy), stir, melt butter, and gauge doneness by sound (sizzle changes), spatula feel, and timing from our specific stove setup. I’ve cooked eggs forever, so muscle memory kicks in. Instant Pots are lifesavers.  Set timers and walk away. Helpful gadgets include talking thermometers, liquid level indicators (beeps when coffee reaches the rim), and cut-proof gloves for safe chopping.

Shopping? Online ordering handles most needs conveniently. In-store, Meta smart glasses read labels aloud and describe surroundings (aisles, products, signs)—tech like this boosts independence dramatically. It’s empowering.

Do Blind People Work?

Yes, and many excel in diverse fields: teaching, law, programming, entrepreneurship, counseling, and beyond. Assistive tech levels the playing field when workplaces embrace it.

That said, employment challenges are real and frustrating. Statistics vary by source and definition, but recent U.S. data (from places like the American Foundation for the Blind and National Research & Training Center) show employment-population ratios around 40-50% for working-age people with visual impairments, far below the 75-80% for those without disabilities. The true “unemployment rate” (among those in the labor force actively seeking work) is often around 8-10%, double the general population’s. However, a large portion (sometimes over 40%) aren’t even in the labor force.  Older or outdated claims of “70% unemployed” often misapply stats by including everyone not working, not just the job-seeking unemployed.

Underemployment is huge as well, many capable blind people end up in part-time or lower-level roles. Why? Assistive tech (screen readers, braille displays, specialized software) can cost thousands upfront. Small businesses can’t afford the expense; larger ones hesitate over accommodations. 

Vocational rehabilitation programs exist in every state, but outcomes vary. Some lead to fulfilling careers, others to low-pay box assembly jobs.

Blind people aren’t lacking intelligence or drive. In my biased view, the blind people I know are among the sharpest, most resilient, and wisest people out there. We’ve adapted to a world not built for us.

Stigma lingers: entering a coffee shop or store, I sense the stares, the awkward silences. But that’s okay, awareness changes minds. Technology advances daily: AI, better apps, inclusive design. All we ask is opportunity, a fair shot to contribute.

If this post sparked curiosity or shifted your perspective, that’s the win. Blindness reshapes life, but it doesn’t define it. We’re capable, creative, and ready when given the chance. Got more questions? I’m here to talk.


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