A Small But Telling Gesture
Dec 1 2025
He holds the elbow of the blind man,
gently steering him
between the shoppers and their carts,
coolers stacked with produce,
multicoloured fruit.
Occasionally leans in,
speaking into an ear
in a soft clear voice.
A close relative?
Paid attendant?
Or good samaritan,
who jumped at the chance
to be of use?
The white cane taps.
His years of practice show,
swinging it side-to-side
in a tight radius
that matches his pace.
His grip is light, but firm,
and what seems approximate
is as precise as a radar beam
circling through its arc.
This is how a blind man
navigates the world,
not with brain implants
and computerized vision,
but the time-honoured technology
of a long straight stick,
the helping hand
of human touch.
I close my eyes, and continue to walk,
taking small tentative steps
with arms out front
feeling my way.
I hear people talking,
canned music
wafting overhead;
am vaguely aware
something may or may not
be blocking my way.
A cloying scent fills the air,
ripe fruit
smelling of the tropics,
and the rotting stuff
in the bottom of the bins.
While fresh parsley
cloves of garlic
and human bodies
who’ve been at work all day
add their funk
to the potent potpourri.
So the steady tap of the cane
is the one constant
that centres me.
They say the blind
have super-human hearing
a discerning nose.
As if our senses are zero-sum;
a deficit in one
made up for by another.
So perhaps he can cut through
the muddle of sound
and competing smells.
Of course, I soon stumble
as the sharp edge of a bin catches my leg.
I am not superhuman
just sightless.
Actually, less;
a mere pretender
who can never know
how blindness truly feels.
Perhaps envious as well?
Because there’s an intimacy
to the blind man and his helper,
humanity at its best
in this small but telling gesture —
an offered elbow
compliantly bent,
and a guiding hand
firmly cradling it.
Do I, too, crave touch like that?
Not sexual
or incidental
or with malicious intent,
but the reassuring touch
of a warm and steady hand
reaching out from the darkness
to walk with me.
Touch,
the neglected sense
we take too much for granted.
But perhaps the most essential;
even when we imagine
we’re perfectly good on our own.

