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If Barbados is Little England, then there’s no doubt in my mind that Trinidad is Little America. iPhones, Starbucks and KFC dominate while the youth frequent malls in their downtime just to sit around and chill. Now, whether or not this is a positive state of affairs isn’t the topic du jour. Rather, I want to talk about one aspect of American culture which we imported and its impact on the blind and visually impaired (BVI) community. I refer, of course, to the Trini dream, which is our take on the American one.
It’s instructive to define what, exactly, the Trini dream is before we proceed. The Trini dream is the promise that every working-class Trinidadian parent inculcates in their children to ensure they have a better life than they did. In essence, it posits that one should pass for a prestige school, go to university, and then get a good paying job, thus enabling them to get married, buy a palatial house in suburbia with fortlike concrete walls adorned by fancy landscaping like regal dresses, while five dogs of mixed breeding, none of which are fit for Trinidad’s climate, run around their Ford Ranger. And, don’t forget the classic Sunday lunch and regular trips to New York and Miami.
Naturally, as an ambitious young man, I yearn to be one who winds up with a husky or two, but the simple reality is even if I keep up my current trajectory, go to university and get a big wuck, that dream may not be available to me as a blind person.
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