Sarah Russell

@blindbat84@disabled.social
281 Followers
217 Following
13.3K Posts

Totally #blind living in west Central Illinois. #Accessibility and #usability tester. Hobbies include devouring all kinds of #audiobooks including #fantasy, #litRPG, #cultivation and others as well as video games and #crochet. I have a wonderful other half and we have a beautiful diva of a #cat named Kayla.

In loving memory of Taffy, our beloved green-eyed black cat. June 23, 2021 - July 1, 2023, who left this world far too soon. His bright soul & loud engine-like purr will forever be missed.

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@baxaphobia It was very good as usual.
If you are Deafblind, and use live captioning on the iPhone, you can get it to caption your aira calls. I took a covid test last night and called an agent and had the live captioning on and it captioned everything perfectly! This is a game changer for me!
@baxaphobia It is indeed!
Impossible quiche in the oven, today's is bacon and diced ham chunks with mild cheddar and seasoned with salt, pepper, paprika and sofrito. I put it on a baking sheet in case it decides to try and overflow because frankly it is a lot of ham. But it will be amazing and meak great breakfast leftovers for tomorrow as well.
@FreakyFwoof No, but I did earlier, and evidently it started the cat because she suddenly ran away from near my seat.
@lulu_bear That twenty dollars is likely several ponuds of meat to be honest.

Today's the first time in my life I ever saw an audio described bathroom.

It's a pretty cool concept, if a bit pointless. When you enter (there's a motion sensor near the door that detects this), it asks you to wave your hand in front of the sensor located to the left of the door if you need a description of the room. The sensor then beeps a few times to make it easier to find.

If you do wave your hand, it then promptly describes where all the objects in the bathroom are, along with some instructions on how to use them.

@amy0223 Today is laundry day for me too. We're getting Chinese for lunch/dinner and I plan to do some good cleaning tomorrow to finally move and fill the new storage thing we got for my crochet supplies.
In the 1700s, teens were accused of being… addicted to novels.
Not alcohol. Not gambling.
Reading.
Across Europe, a strange fear gripped adults. Young people were devouring novels at a pace never seen before. They read at the dinner table, in bed, even while walking through the streets.
This wasn’t seen as a harmless hobby.
It was called “reading fever” or “book addiction.”
Some claimed it would rot their minds.
Others worried it would damage morals, ruin posture, or lead to dangerous daydreaming. Fiction was accused of causing everything from laziness to madness.
Moralists and educators sounded the alarm.
Pamphlets warned parents. Schools debated limits.
It wasn’t just what teens were reading — it was who was writing it.
Books like Samuel Richardson’s Pamela (1740) or Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774) stirred emotion, imagination, and independence.
They were often written by or for women — a major threat to the era’s social order.
But despite the panic, teens kept reading.
And quietly, something revolutionary was happening.
This “reading mania” helped fuel mass literacy, gave rise to the modern novel, and encouraged generations to explore new ideas through story.
The so-called crisis?
It laid the foundation for modern literature as we know it.
Funny how things change.
Today, we beg kids to pick up a book.
Had you ever heard about the 1700s reading panic?
What do you think society would say if teens got “addicted” to books again?
Ă—

🌍 Global perspective. Local impact.

Meet Fawaz – a multilingual Cloud Consultant and accessibility pro who’s passionate about building tech that works for everyone.

With over 3 years of hands-on Salesforce and accessibility auditing experience, Fawaz brings sharp technical skills and a strong focus on clarity, collaboration, and equitable solutions.

Now open to work, he’s looking for opportunities where innovation meets equity.

đź”— Reach out to connect: fawaz.abdulrahman@blindit.org