The man that found purpose after losing his sight
1K views
Mar 29, 2025
Through woodworking, John Furniss, known as The Blind Woodsman, discovered a new purpose and a way to share his vision with the world.
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0:00
When I woke up in the hospital, they didn't tell me I was going to be blind for a while
0:07
It took me a long time to really come around to it and face it fully. I know it sounds odd that I was able to avoid facing something so all-encompassing as total blindness
0:19
but we'll tell ourselves a lot of things to make ourselves think what we do or don't want
0:25
I think the funny thing is it didn't really fully sink in for about, I want to say 10 or 12 years
0:40
I think the two things that hit me the hardest were that I couldn't drive anymore and I couldn't target shoot
0:47
I loved driving and I very much prided myself on target shooting
0:52
and those were two of the things that were going to be taken from me permanently
1:08
I had kind of a hard time growing up because I felt like I didn't really fit in
1:12
I felt kind of different than my peers, I guess. I'd been experiencing a lot of anxiety
1:19
I just constantly feared things. I feared being looked down upon by my peers
1:26
I feared getting in trouble by my parents because I was smoking cigarettes and I was drinking and I did whatever I could to hide it But the more I hid it the more it just eroded my soul
1:42
Finally, I got to the point where I just didn't want to do it anymore
1:46
I was just done. And then I went and sat in my car and did what I did
1:54
It didn't knock me out. Just went black. everything went instantly black
2:04
I definitely contemplated suicide after that again because no teenager wants to be different
2:12
I wanted to try to fit in as well as I could. After I shot myself and was blind
2:19
I got out of the hospital. I couldn't be the rebel that I wanted to be
2:23
So I moved back to Craig. It's where I grew up. I knew every square inch of that town
2:30
I got heavily involved in meth. I got in trouble, got put on probation for dealing drugs
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Since most of my money was going to my habit, I was living in these really seedy boarding houses
2:43
I really was just kind of existing. I wanted to just be high all the time
2:48
Drugs kept me alive. It was my one reason for still living
2:53
And then it came to the point where I was going to either clean up my act or go to prison
2:59
Because that was a very real possibility Basically in my mind at the time it was okay I stop using long enough to get off probation and then I back on the horse But luckily once I finally did get totally out from under the spell I did want to be clean
3:16
I did want to be totally done with meth. And at that point, I didn't even know what my path was
3:23
I just knew that it had the potential to go to a much better place
3:28
And then, of course, I wanted to find a job. I wanted to get out on my own
3:33
I started working with vocational rehab. It's not a substance rehab. They are an organization
3:40
that helps you find employment, specifically with disabled people, but they also had the elective
3:47
of woodshop. Come to find out there is a very large community of woodworkers that are blind
3:54
and I've always really been into crafts, so I decided to give it a try, and it's one of those
3:59
things that came second nature to me. I have such a vivid visual imagination. It's really like I have
4:06
a computer design program in my mind. I'm able to literally take the layers and put them together
4:13
the shapes, the colors, and change anything and everything I want to. I pour a part of myself
4:19
into each piece. One of the things that I love the most about woodworking, I can take this design
4:27
that only I can see in my mind, and then I turn it into a real physical thing
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that I can hand to you and say, this is what I see
4:39
There one other really good thing that happened Woodworking is how I met my wonderful wife Annie She my honeybee
4:50
I love her buzz. I felt this, like, belonging peace that told me this is where I'm supposed to be
5:03
I really, truly believe to be who I am and to do what I'm supposed to do, that I'm supposed to be blind
5:12
It's rewarding to feel that. It's also tough because there are definitely days that, yeah, I feel like I'm supposed to be blind, but damn it, I don't want to be
5:24
It's a complicated emotion. It's warm and fuzzy and cold and rough all at the same time
5:31
but it's something that has helped me come to peace with the world
5:35
I really think that. I feel like I had to lose my sight to truly gain my vision
5:44
I've finally decided to be me, to accept me for me. The opportunity to become the blind woodsman
5:54
and find my person to both share my gifts with and to help me share those gifts
6:02
It's helped me use that vision to look below the surface and beyond the horizon