In episode 1538 of Blind Magic in Alice Springs, host Murray Stewart explores the simple but profound practice of being verbally descriptive to make everyday life more accessible for vision‑impaired people and better for everyone. Murray opens with a personal story from his identical twin — "what's good for blind people is good for the world" — and uses that idea as the throughline for the episode.
Murray offers practical examples (holding out a toothpaste tube or a glass of water, bank tellers or shop assistants handing items) and demonstrates how a few clear words — e.g., "Murray, I'm holding the toothpaste tube for you" — remove confusion and build independence. He discusses how verbal description benefits both the person receiving help and the speaker, improving vocabulary, communication skills, and empathy.
The episode also includes warm personal anecdotes about using verbal description with his children—creating vivid bedtime stories like "the world painted blue"—and about his current work at the Athletics Oval training his support team to be intentionally descriptive. Listeners will hear concrete tips, real‑life examples, and a clear call to action: adopt verbal description in daily interactions to create a kinder, more inclusive world.
Produced by Blind Magic Communications and hosted by Murray Stewart, this solo episode is a concise, heartfelt invitation to change small habits with big impact.