Friday, March 26, 2010

Superintendent MaryEllen Elia introducing Virginia Jacko at Hillsborough High


In my last blog, I invited you to hop aboard the Blind Visionary Express and join our party, including my co-author, Virginia Jacko, on the first leg of our travels around Tampa Bay on February 19.  Our mission:  to introduce Virginia and our new book, The Blind Visionary, to the Tampa Bay community.  You’ll recall that our first stop was Hillsborough High School, where Virginia was introduced by Superintendent MaryEllen Elia to around 200 students and faculty.  I have to tell you I was amazed, as the day went on, by Virginia’s energy, considering she’d left Miami that morning at 4 a.m.  She was just as upbeat at 8 p.m. that evening, when our final event ended, as she was at Hillsborough High ten hours earlier.  As soon as our new Blind Visionary web site is up in the next few days, you’ll be able to see videos of Virginia speaking at various events that day, and you can see for yourself that her incredible energy never flagged. 

From Hillsborough High, the Blind Visionary Express headed for The Lion’s Eye Institute in Ybor City, on Tampa’s east side, where Virginia spoke to some 150 parents and students participating in the Braille Challenge.  I’d sum up Virginia’s message to the kids and their parents as:  “Go for it!  You can do it!”  Virginia told about living alone, doing her own shopping, choosing her outfits in the morning, traveling by plane to Tallahassee – in other words, living a full, normal life despite being completely blind.  She encouraged the parents in the audience to let their girls and boys spread their wings and to resist being “helicopter” moms and dads, hovering protectively over their visually-impaired kids.  “Sighted kids can fall out of trees,” she said, “why can’t blind kids?” – paraphrasing her friend and the author of the Foreword to our book, Jose Feliciano.  The audience loved Virginia’s stories, including one we tell in The Blind Visionary about her falling from the sea wall in her condo complex into Biscayne Bay while walking with her new guide dog Tracker.  Virginia’s message:  Sure, things like that can happen, but you’ve got to get right up, dry yourself off, and get going again.

From the Lion’s Eye Institute, the Blind Visionary Express made its way to the Hillsborough County Public Schools headquarters on Kennedy Avenue in downtown Tampa, where we filmed Virginia’s dialogue with Superintendent MaryEllen Elia.  Then we sped across the Bay to PARC, an agency serving children and adults with disabilities, in St. Petersburg, where we filmed Virginia talking with PARC’s president & CEO, Sue Buchholtz.  Among other things, MaryEllen and Virginia talked about how technological advances were helping to level the playing field for the visually-impaired (MaryEllen’s son is a highly successful software architect planning to attend law school), but how finding teachers certified to work with visually-impaired students was tremendously difficult, in no small part because of the decline of college programs in this field.  Sue and Virginia talked about the importance of positive thinking in overcoming barriers and challenges, and how critical it was to maintain relationships with key stakeholders, like the members of their boards of directors.  Sue and Virginia both, by the way, have aggressively helped their boards become more engaged and effective governing bodies, using my High-Impact Governing Model.

The clock struck 4:30 p.m., so we said goodbye to Sue and headed north to Safety Harbor, where Virginia was scheduled to speak and sign copies of The Blind Visionary at the elegant Syd Entel Galleries on Main Street.  I’ll tell you about that in my next blog.  Meanwhile, I’d appreciate knowing how we might introduce Virginia and our book in your community.


Sue Buchholtz, CEO of PARC, talking with Virginia Jacko

3/26/2010 2:20:23 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Monday, March 01, 2010


I wish you could’ve traveled around Tampa Bay with the Blind Visionary Express on Friday, February 19.  In this and the following blogs in this series, I’ll be sharing highlights from this really power-packed day that saw Virginia Jacko, co-author with me of The Blind Visionary,   and I and our little entourage trekking from Tampa to St. Petersburg to Safety Harbor from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., introducing The Blind Visionary and Virginia to hundreds of new admirers. If you agree with me that the lessons in our book are worth sharing widely, I’d really like to have your thoughts about ways we might introduce Virginia and The Blind Visionary in your community.  You can send your ideas to Doug@DougEadie.com.

The Blind Visionary Express stopped first at Hillsborough High School in Tampa, where Virginia spoke to 150-plus student leaders in the Social Media Center.  MaryEllen Elia, superintendent of the Hillsborough Public Schools – one of the 10 largest districts in the country – gave Virginia a truly heartfelt introduction.  She focused on Virginia’s courage and tenacity in turning a tragedy – losing her eyesight to retinitis pigmentosa – into a triumph – becoming  president and CEO of the Miami Lighthouse.  By the way, as the mother of a highly accomplished son who also lost his eyesight to retinitis pigmentosa, MaryEllen not only easily relates to Virginia’s story, but she’s also passionate about meeting challenges head-on and about the responsibility of public schools to serve their blind students.

“Go Terriers!”  Virginia’s opening words – greeted by enthusiastic cheers – got the students’ attention, and, looking around while she was talking about her amazing journey from Purdue to the Miami Lighthouse, I could tell that she wasn’t ever in danger of losing her audience the least bit – a testimony to the wonderful stories in The Blind Visionary and Virginia’s skill in telling them.  Virginia touched briefly on each of the four lessons from Part Three of The Blind Visionary – reaching out aggressively; taking action; not giving in to fear; and keeping things in perspective – telling a vivid story from our book for each lesson.  You could’ve heard a pin drop, for example, when Virginia explained how she decided, on her way out the door of the president’s office at Purdue University, that she couldn’t keep going in her job and needed start all over at the Miami Lighthouse as a vocational rehabilitation student.  I could tell that her core message was really hitting home:  Take Action!  Don’t let yourself be a victim!  Overcoming challenges, whatever they are, is what gives life meaning, so go for it, boys and girls!

The Blind Visionary Express was even more special to me because of the family members who climbed aboard and worked really hard to make February 19 a great day.  In addition to myself and Virginia, our entourage included my wife, Barbara Krai, my son, William, representing our publisher, Governance Edge, who flew in from Cleveland and my sister Kay Sue Nagle, who flew in from Chicago for the party. 

From Hillsborough High School, the Blind Visionary Express headed to the Lions Eye Institute in Tampa, where parents and students were participating in the Braille Challenge.  But I’ll tell you about that in my next blog.  Don’t forget:  I want your ideas for getting out the word far and wide on Virginia’s amazing journey and the powerful lessons in it for all of us.


3/1/2010 10:35:38 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
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