The Copilots Project
Life Skills for Blind Guatemalans
Losing sight is a profound and constant grief. Every day is thick with challenges both physical and emotional. Simply walking DOWN THE STREET can be dangerous if there aren’t sidewalks, audible traffic cues, or where there are unexpected obstacles in one’s path. Blind people tend to suffer more scrapes and bumps than the average pedestrian. The emotional bruises, though, can be far more damaging. Those of us that are non-visual often feel isolated, vulnerable, and denied opportunities to actively engage with a world that is vastly visual and unaccommodating.
In developed countries, the mix of daily blind challenges is frustrating and demoralizing. In struggling countries, like Guatemala, this mix is overwhelming and debilitating. Due to fear, misperceptions, and a nearly total lack of supportive infrastructure, blind Guatemalans too often remain confined to their homes, isolated from society. Disability is largely ignored and rarely discussed in Guatemala. As a result, blind Guatemalans are left to deal with their difficulties alone.
The vision of the CoPilots Project is that blind Guatemalans engage with their local communities with dignity and confidence. Free to all participants, the CoPilots Project is self-empowerment and positive reinforcement through activities including: self defense to reduce feelings of vulnerability, orientation and mobility training to safely walk around with a white cane, and yoga and hiking to increase balance and overall well-being.
The CoPilots Project is not about job skills or training. There is no incentive or support for businesses to hire disabled Guatemalans. More immediately, we address the life skills that one needs before even contemplating employment.
This is a work in progress. Because there are no networks of blind people in the greater Antigua area and blind people are rarely seen in the street.
We recently launched a campaign to raise money to achieve these goals. 100% of the funds collected will go directly to support CoPilots. We will bring a small team of blind volunteers from the US to Guatemlaa to work directly with a small blind local team. Together, they will strenthen skills, share culture, and encourage each other to lead the full, rich livves that we all deserve. Check out the fundraiser with this link (embed link), donate if you can, and share it with your networks. The more eyes on the campaign, the better chance we have of reaching our goal.
Initial training is only the first step. Once our blind Guatemalan team has developed their skills, they can then become the instructors for other blind people in their communities. Because there are no resources or support structures in the Antigua area, the CoPilots instructors become an essential lifeline for others struggling with their vision loss. The instructors also earn a salary from their work, a clear benefit in a country where blind people are summarily discounted as able-bodied employees. CoPilots pays it forward and you can take the steps with us with your generous support.
Work is underway to build a reliable database of the local blind community. Conversations are ongoing to ensure that activities are relevant, intentional, and valuable. The CoPilots Project wants to remain responsive to the feedback of those it is designed to serve. We look forward to providing updates of our progress and the impact in our blind Guatemalan community.
Please Help If You Can
Click the button below to donate to the CoPilots project.
CoPilots Project Is Moving Forward
Recently, I literally walked into Roberto, another blind guy in Antigua. We talked for a while and have become friends. Yesterday, my family and I went to his home for lunch. We met his wife, Elisa, who, at 36, almost had her leg amputated last year due to a cancerous tumor, and their three kids. They generously prepared a special meal for us and we got to spend the afternoon with them in their humble home. Their family is one of the most inspiring and supportive that we have met in a very long time.
Being blind in Guatemala, Roberto does not have a job, Elisa is not able to work due to her health, but they still see their kids off to school everyday. I have a goal to start a resource center in Antigua where blind Guatemalans can learn skills that many take for granted. Roberto can be a lead trainer in this center, motivate other blind people in the community and have a steady income. This is a dream that can come true. This fundraiser is the first step. Please donate if you can and help us and a team of blind American volunteers lay the foundation of a more inclusive Antigua. Thank you!
