Woman happier than ever after fulfilling lifelong dream of being blind

Avani

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Jewel Shuping says she is happier than ever after becoming blind. The North Carolina woman told Barcroft TV that becoming blind has always been a lifelong wish of hers and she is happy she has now fulfilled it.

According to Barcroft TV, the 30-year-old suffers from Body Integrity Identity Disorder. BIID is a condition where able-bodied sufferers believe they are meant to be disabled.

Shuping's obsession with being blind began when she was a child.

"By the time I was six I remember that thinking about being blind made me feel comfortable," she told Barcroft TV.

She soon began wearing thick, black sunglasses as a teenager. When Shuping was 18, she purchased her first cane. By 20, the North Carolina woman was already fluent in braille.

She said she was 'blind-simming':

"[I was] pretending to be blind, but the idea kept coming up in my head and by the time I was 21, it was a non-stop alarm that was going off."

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Shuping felt like she needed to lose her vision. Those feelings only got intensified as she got older.



At 26, Shuping found a psychologist who was willing to help her fulfill her dream. She claimed the doctor put numbing drops in her eyes followed by drops of drain cleaner.

"It hurt, let me tell you. My eyes were screaming and I had some drain cleaner going down my cheek burning my skin...But all I could think was 'I am going blind, it is going to be okay.' " Jewel Shuping




The 30-year-old said the blindness didn't kick in overnight.

"When I woke up the following day I was joyful, until I turned on to my back and opened my eyes – I was so enraged when I saw the TV screen," she told Barcroft TV.

It wasn't until over a year later that it took full effect. One of Shuping's eyes had to be removed, the other one suffered from glaucoma and cataracts.

The woman originally told her family it was an accident. But since learning the truth, Shuping says her mother and sister have cut off all contact with her.

But the North Carolina woman said she has no regrets about her decision. She told Barcroft TV that she even hopes to help other blind people live independent lives.

"When there's nobody around you who feels the same way, you start to think that you're crazy. But I don't think I'm crazy, I just have a disorder," she said.

Shuping hopes her story raises public awareness of BIID. She encourages people who suffer from BIID to seek professional help.


Someone tell me it's a fake news.... Please.

Not sure who is more stupid and crazy - woman or her psychologist..

Some people are are living a little too comfortable a life for taking trouble to invite some.

:yeah:
 

Bimbonium

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I don't think I'm crazy, I just have a disorder[/QUOTE]

Lol @above

To think people take medications for their disorders and she just chose to embrace hers.

Well at least she's happy, I guess that counts for something.
 

Avani

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That's how she feels, I think people should let others live how they choose as long as they don't affect other people.
Well does your country provide disability benefits? Wouldn't you wish a really needy person gets it rather than a person who deliberately disables himself? If there are too many such people, you will start to notice the economic and social effects and question government use of the tax money you paid too.

I had heard of gangs who kidnap little kids and disable them deliberately by blinding them or cutting their arm or leg, so that they can use them for begging. But I really hope people do not do them to themselves just for attention or money or both.

And don't people tell fat persons to get help instead of being happy with their disorder?

She wants to be blind? Whats next? A wheelchair?
The link has case of another woman- she uses a wheelchair because she too wanted disability. Well at least that ensures a seat in a bus.
 
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Netflix and Chill

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Well does your country provide disability benefits? Wouldn't you wish a really needy person gets it rather than a person who deliberately disables himself? if there are too many such people, you will start to notice the economic effects and question use of your tax money too.

I had heard of gangs who kidnap little kids and disable them deliberately by blinding them or cutting their arm or leg, so that they can use them for begging. But I really hope people do not do them to themselves just for attention or money or both.
Well it doesn't seem like she's doing it for the disability benefits, it seemes like she just wanted to feel "comfortable" in her own skin ya kno? Kinda like when a boy grows up feeling like a girl in a boy's body and doesn't feel "comfortable" until they get a *** change. I guess that's sorta how she felt about her eyes lol, a little bit of an extreme comparison but I'm sure you get where I'm coming from.

Edit: she seems to take pride in her independence too, I doubt she'll accept much help people when it come to her disorder/disability.
 
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Avani

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Well it doesn't seem like she's doing it for the disability benefits, it seemes like she just wanted to feel "comfortable" in her own skin ya kno? Kinda like when a boy grows up feeling like a girl in a boy's body and doesn't feel "comfortable" until they get a *** change. I guess that's sorta how she felt about her eyes lol, a little bit of an extreme comparison but I'm sure you get where I'm coming from.
I only hope that you guys do not start exporting these disability disorders. :| We cannot afford them. Not enough money and resources even for real disabled.
 
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Akuma

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Big deal, so the woman finally feels free and happy. Who cares if she decided to be blind, it's her life. We should focus on crime and shoot outs, not people who have diferent life styles and views than us.
 

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Becoming disabled by choice, not chance: ‘Transabled’ people feel like impostors in their fully working bodies


OTTAWA — When he cut off his right arm with a “very sharp power tool,” a man who now calls himself One Hand Jason let everyone believe it was an accident.

But he had for months tried different means of cutting and crushing the limb that never quite felt like his own, training himself on first aid so he wouldn’t bleed to death, even practicing on animal parts sourced from a butcher.

“My goal was to get the job done with no hope of reconstruction or re-attachment, and I wanted some method that I could actually bring myself to do,” he told the body modification website ModBlog.

His goal was to become disabled.

People like Jason have been classified as ‘‘transabled’’ — feeling like imposters in their bodies, their arms and legs in full working order.

“We define transability as the desire or the need for a person identified as able-bodied by other people to transform his or her body to obtain a physical impairment,” says Alexandre Baril, a Quebec born academic who will present on “transability” at this week’s Congress of the Social Sciences and Humanities at the University of Ottawa.
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“The person could want to become deaf, blind, amputee, paraplegic. It’s a really, really strong desire.”

Researchers in Canada are trying to better understand how transabled people think and feel. Clive Baldwin, a Canada Research Chair in Narrative Studies who teaches social work at St. Thomas University in Fredericton, N.B., has interviewed 37 people worldwide who identify as transabled.

Most of them are men. About half are in Germany and Switzerland, but he knows of a few in Canada. Most crave an amputation or paralysis, though he has interviewed one person who wants his penis removed. Another wants to be blind.

Many people, like One Hand Jason, arrange “accidents” to help achieve the goal. One dropped an incredibly heavy concrete block on his legs — an attempt to injure himself so bad an amputation would be necessary. But doctors saved the leg. He limps, but it’s not the disability he wanted.

The transabled are very secretive and often keep their desires to themselves, Baldwin says. One 78-year-old man told Baldwin he’d lived with the secret for 60 years and never told his wife.

Some of his study participants do draw parallels to the experience many transgender people express of not feeling like they’re in the right body. Baldwin says this disorder is starting to be thought of as a neurological problem with the body’s mapping, rather than a mental illness.

“It’s a problem for individuals because it’s distressing. But lots of things are.” He suggests this is just another form of body diversity — like transgenderism — and amputation may help someone achieve similar goals as someone who, say, undergoes cosmetic surgery to look more like who they believe their ideal selves to be.
.

In the late 1990s, Scottish surgeon Dr. Robert Smith amputated the legs of two patients at their request. While the surgery involved National Health Service staff, each patient paid nearly $6,000 for their procedures.

As the public begins to embrace people who identify as transgender, the trans people within the disability movement are also seeking their due, or at very least a bit of understanding in a public that cannot fathom why anyone would want to be anything other than healthy and mobile.

But this has been met with great resistance in both the disability activist community and in transgender circles, argues Baril, a visiting scholar of feminist, gender and sexuality studies at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut.

“They tend to see transabled people as dishonest people, people who try to steal resources from the community, people who would be disrespectful by denying or fetishizing or romanticizing disability reality,” Baril says, adding people in both transgender and disabled circles tend to make judgmental or prejudicial statements about transabled people. “Each try to distance themselves.”

Baril — who is himself disabled and transgender — believes the transgender community distances itself because it has worked very hard to de-pathologize what’s known as ‘gender dysphoria,’ and sought its removal from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

Transability is also known as Body Integrity Identity Disorder, which was only just added to the “emerging measures and models” appendix section of the DSM-5 in 2013. Many transabled people want to see it fully added to the psychiatric bible because it might legitimize their experience in the field of medicine, Baril notes.



..... Its a new trend it seems Ira.
 

Karna

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Eventually a day will come when all I could say to people would be '****** please', these people have it too easy, and yet they whine. smh.

Anyway if it's a real disorder then it's a matter of time before it garners the support that trans and homos get, if you ask me she should've just donated her eyes instead of 'breaking' them.
 

Avani

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..... Its a new trend it seems Ira.
Yeah- and psychologists should help them recover not facilitate the disorder.

I am also familiar with the trend of mass suicide if you can give them enough reason and attention. (e.g.- several people killing themselves up over reservation bill or a death of politician in the South. ) Not everything people need should be justified and facilitated. Otherwise you will only be increasing number of crazies who think they are following a trend.

I have started to think it's just doctors increasing their business by 'helping' people disable themselves.

Wow, I've never heard of anyone not wanting one of their senses. She has some kind of skeleton in her closet to not want to see anything again.
Most probably she just needed to lose weight or made peace with it. :| Seriously with so many real problems and struggles in life- poor people do not have luxury to develop such disorders. They wouldn't want to be a burden for their family and society.
 
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