Janet Shaw

Author, Speaker & Freelance Writer

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Archive for the 'Guide dogs' category


Seeing Dogs: My First Children’s Book Bounding into Print

April 9th, 2008 by janet

At last it’s happened! A writer’s longed for dream: a book publishing contract!

I’ve been sitting on the news for some time, because I didn’t want to jinx it. But it’s time to spill the beans.

Seeing Dogs, a story that means so much to me, is finally going to become a published book. Brinda, Tilly, Pudding and Sam are set to move into the hearts of children who love stories about dogs, and guide dogs in particular.

Tiger Publications is the Publishing House. The book will be available in America and Canada, but will be distributed worldwide.

I’m working with West Australian illustrator Kerry Jordinson on black and white sketches that will appear in the text and a colour cover. And it’s an exciting process to witness my story coming to life.

Tiger is planning some interviews with both Kerry and me, so I’ll keep you posted on this.

What this all means for me as well as other writers out there, is that persistence pays when you believe you have a story to tell.

Seeing Dogs has had a rugged journey. In its most primitive form, it was written off by a manuscript asessor who told me I couldn’t write about animals. In the same breath, I was told that it must be very difficult for me to write because I was blind.

Perhaps that’s what got me fired up. Perhaps that’s why I worked so hard to transform my beloved story from slush to a well-crafted sculpture. (Now I’m geting carried away!)

What I’m trying to say is that I never gave up on Seeing Dogs, despite many rejections from publishers in Australia. I knew one day it would find a home. I just had to keep trying.

So don’t fret about the growing pile of rejection letters. Keep sending your manuscript out. One day, it won’t come back. Instead, you’ll get an offer of a contract.


Transforming the Loopy Labrador into a Placid Guide Dog

July 19th, 2007 by janet

When I observe the way my labrador behaves when she’s off harness, and when I recall the many stories of her “mad” behaviour from her puppy raisers, I wonder how on earth she made it this far as a guide dog.

If you’d like to learn more about the training of a guide dog, and how a loopy lab can become a gentle guide dog, then click here to read my latest article.


Outsmarting The Guide Dog

June 26th, 2007 by janet

Guide dogs love their work. They thrive on guiding their owners safely in all environments. They revel in being allowed to go into shops, cinemas and restaurants - unlike their fellow canines who are tied up outside looking forlorn and bereft. And they absolutely glow with the responsibility of being in charge.

Well, that’s the theory. And it has been true up until now for my guide dog, Lucy.

But in recent times, she’s showing signs of feeling bored with her constant hum drum routine work. I can almost hear her planning her retirement - days spent lying on the couch, feet in the air, or checking out the local parks with a mob of scruffy and rebellious ex-guide dogs. She sees herself eating anything she wants, not worrying about putting on weight, and generally living it up.

How do I know what’s going through her mind?

Lucy’s displaying some interesting signs of her boredom. The most significant one is that she slows down almost to a crawl when on the harness and working one of our routine walks. In fact, she was going so slowly the other day that a neighbour driving past us actually stopped her car to see if we were all right!

It doesn’t matter how much I try to encourage her, I just can’t get her to walk at her normal pace. I say things like, “there’s a huge biscuit waiting for you when we get there”, and “you’ll get dinner when we get home”, but to no avail.

Now, she’s very clever, because at first, I got very worried about whether she was in pain or had something terrible like dogggy leukaemia. I had the vet check her out and had people watch her when she moved around without the harness. Lucy knows I’m a softie and she milks it to the max.

But I’m not that gullible. When I take Lucy somewhere different, somewhere she hasn’t been to before, or hasn’t visited for a while, she works like a dream. Her movement is fluid, confident and fast.

Ergo, she is bored with the regular stuff, the stuff I need her to do.

The solution? Easy, I’ve got to trick her. And I can do this in two ways. The first is to go to my regular haunts, but by different routes each time. Now I’m not sure how long it will take her to work this out, or how many different routes I can take to the same place without actually going backwards, but I’ll give it a shot. The only drama is that it might take me twenty minutes to get to Point A instead of the usual five!

The second solution might be better. I’ve noticed that Lucy works really well after she’s been left at home, say if I go to a restaurant and don’t take her. So if I leave her more often, she might get worried and work really well. I can’t keep going to restaurants and cafes or theatres, so my friend in America gave me an idea. And that is to just leave the house, find somewhere to hide for a while, and then return. I wonder what my neighbours will think of me squatting down behind our front wall for about half an hour every day?

Who will win, Lucy or me? Is the dog smarter than the human, or the human smarter than the dog?


Public Speaking Rule No. 1: Always Be Prepared

May 11th, 2007 by janet

In all the research I’ve done on the art of public speaking, one important factor has always stood out - be prepared for anything to go wrong. Speakers are advised to imagine all the technological things that go awry - like lap tops and projectors failing, lights suddenly going out etc - as well as things like getting a bad introduction, dealing with a heckler, having a blank “senior’s” moment. You end up with a long list of what could go wrong, for which you need to find solutions so that absolutely nothing fazes you on the day.

As a blind public speaker, I think I’ve had to come up with disability-specific things that could challenge me on the day.

I must admit, I haven’t had a lot of these over my time as a speaker. The last one I remember was about three years ago when my guide dog and I almost got mashed in a revolving door as we entered the venue where I was addressing about two hundred senior staff members. The person escorting me to the venue didn’t think to tell me we were going through a revolving door until we were in it. Just in time, I realised that my dog would be crushed between the edge of one of the winged doors and the wall, so I did the only thing I could. I screamed, dropped Lucy’s lead and prayed. Luckily, Lucy backed up quickly and escaped the inevitable. I was so shaken afterwards, that I could have used a stiff drink. Instead, I had to pull myself together, focus and do my talk as though there had been no near death experience fifteen minutes before.

Well, this week the gods decided I needed to be tested again on my ability to rise above the disability challenges of public speaking. I was addressing a group of business professionals when I had my most embarrassing moment. Before the event started, I was being shown to my seat at a table to enjoy a lovely breakfast, when I did the dumbest thing. I felt my jacket hanging on the back of my chair, didn’t check which way the chair was facing, decided it was facing me, so turned and sat down. Needless to say, I found myself on the floor. The room went deadly quiet. No-one knew what to say, do or probably, where to look.

I went straight into damage control. I didn’t want these people to think that all blind people miss their chairs when they go to sit down. So I made a joke of it, saying ‘the problem is that I keep forgetting I can’t see!’, and ‘I’ve never done that before!’. Now, believe it or not, this became a useful lead in to my presentation. I used it to put people at their ease, so that they could see I laugh at myself.

It worked well, and I had a great presentation. In fact, I found this group - Perth Business Swap - such a knowledgeable, professional and ecclectic business network, that I am thinking of joining them.

So falling down on the job isn’t always a bad thing!


The Australian Literary Awards, Melbourne

April 3rd, 2007 by janet

On Friday night, I attended the Fellowship of Australian Writers Awards Ceremony at Deakin University in Melbourne. As we entered the university grounds, signs everywhere announced the event with “Australian Literary Awards”. It was quite an honour to be attending such an event.

My main reason for going was not only to wave the West Australian flag, but to allow myself the pleasure of being presented with my award for my short story, ‘Sophie’s Rose’ taking out first prize in one of the categories. And I’m very glad I made the trip, despite the expense. What came across strongly to me throughout the evening was the emphasis the Fellowship of Australian Writers (Vic) places on promoting and encouraging new writers. Not only were the first prize winners presented and acknowledged, but also the people whose work was ‘commended’ and ‘highly commended’. All up, there were 104 writers presented with certificates out of a total of 1,000 entries.

The judge who scrutinised my category commented that my story stood out in both the first and second readings, which was a huge compliment for me. She even came up to me during the ceremony and gave me a copy of a book she’d written about her daughter who was born with severe disabilities and for whom the category was established, the theme of the short story having to be about disability. I was very touched by her generosity.

This national competition is one of the very few places where writers can enter their unpublished novels, with the hope of being picked up by a publisher.

The other great thing that came out of the evening was that the President of the FAW made a comment about all the FAW groups becoming one body, a move that I think would be very beneficial. In the West, there aren’t many opportunities for writers. In other states, there is a wider range of workshops and online classes to choose from for those of us who want to expand our writing careers. I look forward to this happening in the future.

Lucy, my guide dog, travelled well and had a great time in Melbourne. She met up with her puppy walkers (the people who raised her for the first year of her life) and her reaction was tear-jerking. She has never forgotten them and was so excited to see them again. The comment they made was although they’d found it so hard to give her up, seeing her helping me and knowing that she has changed my life is reward enough. What a great way to end a perfect trip to the East.

I’m trying to forget that I got sick on the way home. I ate something at Melbourne airport that was obviously dodgey. I spent almost all of the four hour flight home telling myself that I’d be fine, that I wasn’t going to be sick on the plane. The guy next to me must have been praying hard when he saw me reach for the air sick bag. I decided to warn the airline staff before we landed how unwell I was feeling because I knew that I’d need maximum assistance to get off the plane. When we got there, all I could do was get myself out of my seat while the airline staff grabbed my hand luggage and put Lucy’s harness on. I was so out of it that I had no idea they’d put it on back to front and inside out! Somehow, Lucy and I made it down the steps to the tarmac without breaking our necks. Luckily, my Mum was meeting us, so I didn’t have to frighten any taxi driver with my green face. But when she saw us coming, she thought something was wrong. Lucy was walking in a very weird fashion, almost crossing her legs because the harness was on incorrectly. We must have made a peculiar sight, what with Lucy’s gait and me hanging onto a security guy’s arm! But Lucy fared well, and we got home before the dreaded bug really took hold. That’s mind over matter for you.


A Long Guide Dog Tale

March 25th, 2007 by janet

A couple of weeks ago, I went to dinner at my neighbor’s place. There was another couple there who I’d met once before. The woman knew I was a cyclist, so started asking me about how I, as a blind person, could ride a bike. It was time to have some fun!

‘So does Lucy pull you along on the bike?’ she asked.

‘Oh yeah, she’s really good,’ I said, a glass of gin and tonic in my hand that had more gin than tonic, I suspect.

‘Wow, that’s amazing! Is she fast?’

‘Is she ever, especially down hill. She really picks up speed then.’

The rest of the group are silent, intrigued by our conversation, waiting for me to land this poor woman.

‘So how does she tell you when to turn?’

I think I hear a smirk from one of the others.

‘Oh, she just pulls me round the corners. I follow.’

‘Gee whiz, that is so incredible!’

Then I can’t stand it any longer. I’d nearly said that Lucy barks once for left and twice for right, but it’s too much. The others start rolling around when I let this gullible woman know that I ride a tandem, that Lucy has nothing to do with my bike riding.

She probably went red, but I couldn’t see it.

Maybe one day they’ll train guide dogs to pull bikes.


Boyup Brook Book Bonanza in May

March 22nd, 2007 by janet

I received an invitation to be part of the Boyup Brook Book Bonanza which is being held on 19 and 20 May in the Town Hall. It’s a two day festival where you can browse amongst books of all genres, enter competitions, meet the authors and attend talks.

Boyup Brook is a beautiful little country town in the South West of Western Australia. What a perfect place to sample new books and read them in a peaceful environment.

I’m heading down there with copies of ‘Beyond the Red Door’, my autobiography. So if you come along, please say ‘hi’.
It’s a great chance for Lucy, my guide dog, to have a romp in the country. I’m staying on a farm not far from the township. Lucy will be in seventh heaven. Having a run before and after each day’s activities at the hall will satisfy her. Not that she doesn’t like meeting and greeting people - she loves it. But lying around all day is pretty tough on her, so tiring her out beforehand works well.

Hope you can make it to the book bonanza. For more info on ‘Beyond the Red Door’, go to www.beyondthereddoor.com


A funny thing happened in the city today

February 5th, 2007 by janet

I took advantage of the slightly cooler weather today and caught a bus into town to pick up a library book that was waiting for me. I was standing at some traffic lights when the audible signal indicated it was safe to cross. Just as I gave Lucy, my guide dog, the signal to move forward, a lady stopped me with a question.

She sounded Asian and her english wasn’t good. She wanted to know where the shopping centre was, and a particular bank.

It’s not unusual for me to be stopped by tourists asking directions, but it always amuses me. I’m not sure why they think a blind person would know where to find shops, streets etc. I had to tell this lady that there were many shops in the city, and that I didn’t know where that bank was. Luckily, another man overheard and helped out, pointing out where the big shops and the bank she was looking for, which he could see across the road.

In saying that it surprises me that I get asked directional questions, in another way, it makes sense. I am pretty aware of where I am, the streets around me, and where particular shops are located. I have to know. I keep a mental map in my head all the time. On buses, I often answer passengers questions of the driver about where a certain street is. I even tell them I’ll let them know when they’re there, which astounds them!

So even though I had a bit of a giggle, it’s quite a sensible thing to ask a blind person for directions. 


Is facing your fear always a good thing?

January 2nd, 2007 by janet

How many times have you heard the phrase “face your fear”? As a social worker, I’ve handed that phrase out many times, and I still hand it out to my friends.

But recently, I was the recipient of this seemingly harmless little phrase, and I didn’t find it at all useful or uplifting.

I was staying on a farm in the south west of Western Australia over Christmas with my mother. As it was warm and there was plenty of bush on the property, I made a firm statement right from the start that we’d only walk in the open paddocks where it was possible to see snakes, if they were around. I have a huge fear of snakes, which was magnified on this trip because I had Lucy, my guide dog with me. Labradors are pretty clueless when it comes to wriggly things on the ground. I could just see her running up to a snake to check it out.

Well, everything was going well until the supposed marked bush walk we took started to deteriorate. The track actually disappeared, the bush closed in, and we were soon stomping through really dense scrub, over logs - which I imagined were the homes of at least one big snake - and climbing through dense grass trees. Lucy was out front on a long lead. I kept telling myself, as my pulse rose and rose, that if she sensed a snake, she’d stop dead. But at the same time, I felt so responsible for her and worried that she’d get bitten. I high stepped through the grass, stomped my feet hard to make lots of noise and tried walking on air.

One hour and twenty terrifying minutes later, we arrived back at our chalet. Even though we heard no rustlings around us, and saw absolutely nothing in the form of wriggly and bitey things, my fear of snakes has not changed. I have no idea why we escaped without at least a sighting. Maybe someone was looking after us?

That little soiree hasn’t given me any more confidence to walk in the bush in summer. I’ll be keeping away from long grass and dense bush from now on.     


A positive rejection letter from a publisher

December 22nd, 2006 by janet

Writers and authors who have been working on their craft for long enough know that rejection letters from publishers are normal and expected. In fact, if you don’t get them, then you’re not a real writer, because you’re not submitting, submitting, submitting. But getting rejection after rejection doesn’t make it any easier to take.

Except when the rejection letters start turning into positive rejections.

What do I mean? Well, they’re not the standard “thank you for your submission but we won’t be offering publication of your manuscript at this stage”. Instead, they become more personal, with comments about your work in the letter. And editors only do this when they recognise good writing.

I got one of those today and boy, am I bouncing off the walls. It was from a major publishing company in Australia, which makes it even better. They said that although they could not offer publication, their editors feel that my manuscript has “real promise”, and they hope I won’t be discouraged and will continue to try and get it published.

Whooppee! That was for my junior fiction novel, “Seeing Dogs”. Just yesterday, I was thinking maybe I should abandon any idea of getting it published, maybe it was just not good enough. Now I have renewed energy and enthusiasm to find the right publisher.

The message to all writers is never give up. We hear it all the time, but sometimes we just need reminding. So here’s to a better future for “Seeing Dogs”. May it find a publisher in 2007.


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