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Happy New Year

Aspire hopes that the New Year 2023 brings abundant joy, prosperity, love, and blessings!

We hope that this year is the best one yet for you.

We pray that you realize all of your goals while experiencing unending joy.

It’s time to Get rid of the old to make place for the new.

and we wish you happiness throughout the year!

Best wishes for the New Year!

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Do Blind People Dream?

Do Blind People Dream?

Written by Tom Ryan, Editor

Medically Reviewed by Heather Wright, Pathologist

 

If you are a sighted person, you likely experience most of your dreams visually, in full color . While in a dream state, you are likely to see people, places, and things that look real, just as you would see them in real life. Perhaps you’ve wondered, do blind people see in their dreams?

The answer isn’t a simple yes or no. Some blind people see full visual scenes while they dream, like sighted people do. Others see some visual images but not robust scenes. Others yet do not have a visual component to their dreams at all, although some researchers debate the degree to which this is true

Do Blind People Have Visual Dreams?

The visual aspect of a blind person’s dreams varies significantly depending on when in their development they became blind. Some blind people have dreams that are similar to the dreams of sighted people in terms of visual content and sensory experiences, while other blind people have dreams that are quite different.

The Congenitally Blind

Researchers tend to disagree when it comes to dreams of the congenitally blind, or those who were born blind. Some experts argue that people who were born blind do not see visual content in their dreams, just as they do not see anything visual while they are awake. Others, however, beg to differ. People with congenital blindness experience fewer eye movements during the rapid eye movement (REM) sleep phase than their sighted counterparts. Since most complex dreaming happens during the REM stage and eye movements are hypothesized to correlate to visual dream content, this could suggest that people with congenital blindness don’t experience visual content while dreaming.

However, people who became blind at a later age also experience fewer eye movements during the REM stage of sleep. These sleepers do experience visual dream content, suggesting the hypothesis stating that a lack of eye movements during REM indicates a lack of visual dream content is likely untrue. Eye movements made during REM may correlate to visual dreaming in sighted people, but they appear not to in blind people, regardless of when they went blind.

Other experts have noted that people who were born blind report that they experience visual dreams . Like sighted sleepers, blind sleepers can draw some of the visual content of their dreams after they’re awake. Additionally, their EEG activity during dreams they report as visual is similar to the EEG patterns of sighted people during visual dreams.

Although blind sleepers might experience some visual dream content, they likely experience quite a bit less compared to sighted sleepers. Their minds appear to make up for the lack of visual content by increasing other sensory experiences . For example, congenitally blind individuals experience more elements of sound, touch, taste, and smell in their dreams than sighted individuals do.

 

 

People Who Went Blind Before Ages Five to Seven

People who were not born blind, but went blind in early childhood, likely experience more visual dream content than those who were born blind, but less than those who went blind later in life. Researchers hypothesize that the later a person goes blind, the more visual content they experience in their dreams.

Research studies categorize blind participants according to different age ranges. People who went blind after ages five to seven tend to have fully visual dreams. People who were not born blind, but went blind before ages five to seven, could experience varying degrees of visual elements in dreams depending on how far along their development was when they went blind.

 

People Who Went Blind After Ages Five to Seven

People who went blind after ages five to seven tend to have visual dreams. That said, they might not experience as much visual dream content as fully sighted individuals. Like people who went blind at a younger age, those who went blind later often have other sensory elements become more prominent in dreams to make up for the reduced visual content. For example, they tend to experience more tactile or physical sensations while they dream than sighted people do.

The visual dream experiences blind people have aren’t only of people and places they saw prior to going blind . While dreaming, they see things that have entered their life since they’ve become blind. This suggests that while we dream, our minds construct a world rather than replicating one we are familiar with, since someone with complete sight loss doesn’t truly know what something they’ve never seen visually looks like.

What Are Dreams Like for Blind People?

What happens during sleep is similar for both blind and sighted people, although many blind people experience fewer visual images while dreaming. Both groups experience dreams that involve lifelike stories in which they are an actor, having sensory experiences, and interacting with others.

Although their visual dream content is reduced, other senses are enhanced in dreams of the blind. A dreaming blind person experiences more sensations of sound, touch, taste, and smell than sighted people do. Blind people are also more likely to have certain types of dreams than sighted people. For example, blind people seem to experience more dreams about movement or travel and more nightmares.

 

Do Blind People Have Nightmares?

Like sighted people, blind people experience nightmares. Research has found that blind people have more dreams about travel that involve unfortunate circumstances. Some of these dreams could potentially be considered nightmares. One hypothesis is that the nightmare content may mirror the difficulties blind people face while getting around in their waking life.

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Unpopular Opinion:

I think this man did a fantastic job.( Picture of referee Wilton Sampaio ) Doesn’t deserve any of the hate he’s receiving online. Granted, some decisions were questionable, but ultimately he has defied all the odds to become the first blind man ever to referee at a World Cup.May be an image of 1 person and text that says "Topper REFEREE FIFA"

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You can get a 50% reduction in the cost of a TV Licence if You or someone you live with is Blind/Severely sight impaired regardless of their age.

You can get a 50% reduction in the cost of a TV Licence if

 

You or someone you live with is Blind/Severely sight impaired regardless of their age.

You are eligible for a 50% reduction in the cost of your TV Licence, If you or someone you live with is registered Blind or Severely Sight Impaired. For a Colour TV that’s £78.75 and for a Black and White TV it is £26.50 (as 5 August 2020).

How to apply

To apply for the Blind Persons TV Licence concession you can contact TV Licensing on 0300 790 6130 or visit their website at https://www.tvlicensing.co.uk/check-if-you-need-one/for-your-home/blindseverely-sight-impaired-aud5

 

When you first apply for the Blind person concession, you will need to provide proof that you are Blind or Severely Sight Impaired, this can be either a copy of:-

 

Your CVI (Certificate of Visual Impairment) or BD8 Certificate

A certificate or document issued by a Local Authority that shows you are registered as blind (severely sight impaired)

certificate from an Ophthalmologist (eye surgeon), stating that you are blind /severely sight impaired

. Your GP (they may charge for this) or Hospital should be able to provide you with evidence of your visual status.

If the Blind Person is not the licence payer.

If the Blind person is not the licence payer, you will need to transfer the TV licence into their name, assuming they are over 18 for more information on how to do this visit the TV Licensing website or call them on 0300 790 6130. You will need to have your current TV licence number available.

How to get a refund

If you are currently paying for a full TV licence, you can apply for a refund from the date that you became registered Blind or April 2000 which is when the scheme started. You will need to be able to show that you were registered blind at the time you purchased the licence.