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Kitchen tongs/Reacher Tool |
One of the things I love about teaching is I get to learn so
much. Sometimes I learn while
researching and preparing for a class.
Sometimes I learn because of the individual and collective wisdom of the
students in the class. Last year, while
teaching a class on assistive devices, one of the participants was willing to
share her ingenious solutions to a diminished range of motion she was
experiencing. The assistive devices
class is all about different items that make life easier based on changing abilities. This great student was also a vibrant
educator. She talked about common
household items she was using to make her life easier. Because of her limited range of reach, she
kept a pair of long kitchen tongs tucked between the console and passenger seat
of her car. If something dropped in the car, she’d use the tongs to retrieve it. Which reminds me to mention that for people
with limited range, there are attachments that can be placed on seat belts
making them easier to reach to pull down.
Many of us wouldn’t think that this seemingly simple task could be much
a problem, but I remember my Grandma Bernece couldn’t reach to buckle herself
into the car safely following a shoulder injury. A little, inexpensive device could end up
being a life-saver.
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Car handle aid |
I also think of the
car standing aid and handle, which is a
very sturdy-built item that temporarily locks onto door latch. Grandma Bernece’s bout with polio as a
toddler left her with one leg shorter than the other. She struggled with mobility most of her life,
but in her later years, that weak leg made getting into and out of a car more
of a challenge. I wish we had known about
the standing aid that would have given her one more place for sturdy grip
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Lotion Applier |
as
she got in and out of the vehicle. Sometimes
the simplest solutions are the best.
Last week, I was grateful the enthusiast student from the
class who also shared that she used a long-handled kitchen spatula to apply
lotion to her back. As I was home alone
several days last week, coughing and coughing, I wanted vapor rub applied to my
back. There were just a few spots I
couldn’t reach, so I went to the kitchen and got a rubber scraper that had seen
it’s better days for kitchen use, and dipped it into my vapor balm and within a
few minutes was sleeping peacefully, letting the vapor do its thing. Hooray for a student who shared a great idea!
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Talking Calculator |
Most assistive devices, it seems, are born from
necessity. They can be something as
simple as an adapted kitchen utensil to as elaborate as a talking
computer. For those who need them, they
can bring independence and relief. Many
devices can be tried for free, on loan from
MonTech or through contacting
LowVision Montana at 1-800-601-5004 or
Great Falls Blind and Low Vision Services
Team at 1 (888) 279-7527. Or, you
can contact your local MSU Extension Office because it is amazing what we have
learned over the years through the classes and students we teach.
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