A split second was all it took for Raquel Rodriguez’s life to be plunged into darkness and forever changed. Almost two years ago, a stray bullet to the head had the 42-year-old fighting for her life and losing her sight in the process.
Despite losing her ability to see, Rodriguez never lost her vision for life.
“It was totally a hit, a shock. Something that I think I might not even get over it because being someone who was totally sighted, and now I am totally blind, I see only darkness, whether it’s day or night. It’s only because I probably have faith in the Almighty, that gives me that strength.”
The mother of three said the incident was jolting and inevitably changed the course of her life.
Recollecting the tragic incident with a pained expression Rodriguez said, “I could distinctly remember it, it was September 10, 2022. So that’s about a year and eight months ago, I was just preparing my classroom at home to teach adult repeaters for CXC.”
She revealed what began as a normal day, quickly turned sour within her close-knit community in Sixth Avenue, Malik, Barataria. She recalled playing with a neighbour’s six-month-old baby when suddenly everything went downhill.
“I heard loud explosions. I just froze like this, with my left hand to my head.”
Rodriguez explained that when she was shot in the head, the bullet ruptured the tender tissues behind and in her eyes, inevitably rendering her blind.
“The bullet went through the left temple here, the stray bullet, it went diagonal across my face and exited, if you can see the scar there, it came out the right cheekbone. So this eye, you can notice it’s kind of smaller than the other.”
Despite never receiving closure over the incident, the former teacher made peace with what happened and tried to move on. However, she admitted there are difficulties one encounters when they are visually impaired.
“I’m telling you, every day is a struggle because being transformed, I usually say, into that new blind and visually impaired community, I realised there is not much to spread your wings in terms of doing something like a job or anything like that. So, it’s kind of hard.”
What keeps Rodriguez going strong despite this upheaval in her life, was what she heard in the moments following being shot.
With a bit of hesitation, she revealed, “What I’m about to say next, you might not believe it. But at that very point in time, when I realised I was at death’s door, I always used to pray and say, Father, Lord, when I reach that stage, I want to call on you. And it actually happened and I called on him and I said, Well, Father, Lord, well, I had a conversation. So it’s like, time just froze on me, you know? And I had a conversation with him in my head, and I actually heard a voice saying, ‘No, you’re not going to die.’ And he gave me two instructions. He said, ‘I want you to be humble.’ One. And he said, ‘I want you to focus on me.’”
‘Just keep going’
Those words kept her faith strong and made her persist, but not without a few bumps in the road.
“When it first happened, maybe about nine months later, I was very agitated. I didn’t know where to turn, I couldn’t even answer a phone call on my cell phone. I just thought you know, life was there, that’s it for me.
“I used to drive before a lot ... But I learned to navigate with a cane and learn to explore my environment, that’s the whole thing about it, you have to explore once you’re totally blind. So, it’s like a total adventure.”
But with the assistance of the Blind Welfare Association of Trinidad and Tobago, Rodriguez was able to get a new lease on life, and the new dreams that came with it.
“I met a lot of people who would say, look, you know, you can still do things just as a normal person would do, but it would only be a little different. So, with technology now I say I got the confidence back to keep learning because I love to learn. And I started to do digital literacy, learn Braille. I learned the alphabet by myself with the help of my husband.”
All of this led to her pursuing a short course that would become a passion, a broadcasting course in television and media.
With this taste in broadcasting, Rodriguez now aspires to be an anchor. And while it may be difficult for a person who is blind to read the news, she said she is certain that it is not impossible.
Through an app called JAWS, a screen reading software program, she can listen and repeat what she hears, making her dream of anchoring one day, a possibility.
“When I went blind, I realised the strength now, it left the eyes, because I’m not seeing anything, and it went into the mouth. So, I said, what can I do, and because I got the knowledge of learning the computer again and digital literacy, I can now read from the computer with the help of an app called JAWS. So, it’s downloaded on the computer, and when I use the keyboard, the arrows and I press down, it will read an entire sentence. I will then have a headphone on my head listening to it reading and just repeating every sentence.”
For those who may be differently-abled like Rodriguez, she had one piece of advice to share —pursue your dreams.
“It’s the same advice I would give to myself, which is, you’re still alive. And once you’re breathing, and you’re healthy, just keep going. Keep doing your best. There are many things you can get into. Don’t just feel because you’re disabled, you can’t do anything. There’s always things to be done, there is being your own boss, and then being an entrepreneur all these things. Don’t think that it’s too hard, that mountain is too hard to climb, just keep going, just keep going. And that’s what I am doing, to be that example for others.”