‘Go by feel’: Vision-impaired skateboarder is on a roll

‘Go by feel’: Vision-impaired skateboarder is on a roll

21-year-old Ryusei Ouchi hopes to get blind-skateboarding registered as a Paralympic sport.

Ryusei Ouchi skateboards by feel with the help of his trusty cane. (AFP pic)
TOKYO:
Ryusei Ouchi has all the trappings of a skateboarder – the baggy T-shirt, the low-slung trousers, the flat-peak baseball hat. But he also skates with something else – a cane.

The 21-year-old, who goes by Jido, has lost 95% of his sight due to a condition called “retinitis pigmentosa”. But this has not stopped him from skateboarding or following the sport that debuted at the Tokyo Olympics this week.

Ouchi is a regular at a skate park in Tokorozawa, north of Tokyo, where he confidently performs tricks. He lays down the board and pushes off with his cane out in front, swiping from side to side to feel out the obstacles.

“Most people can see what it will be like just by looking at it,” he said. “In my case, I have to first try it out. I try touching, I try riding.”

He started skateboarding as a teenager when a friend let him try his board. “I tried it for the first time and got hooked,” he said.

It was not easy to get into the sport, which involves regular tumbles and injuries even for those without a visual impairment.

“People who can see get injured, too, but the fact that I can’t see has led to more injuries,” said Ouchi, who is training as an acupuncturist.

“I don’t know there’s an object there because I don’t see it, and I’ll run into it, collide and be injured.”

‘An amazing feeling’

To keep himself safe, especially at new venues, Ouchi does a careful survey of the site before he starts.

“First I check the skatepark’s environment by walking. If necessary, I touch it using my hands and feet. I then try to memorise the layout of the park and imagine it,” he said.

Ouchi is undeterred despite having suffered injuries ranging from bruises to fractures. (AFP pic)

A lot of Ouchi’s practice involves visualising his skating and his tricks. “I just think about what I want to do,” he said. “My skateboarding, whether it is a trick, the method or style, is just my imagination put into shape.”

Despite his preparations, he’s suffered injuries from bruises to fractures, but says it “doesn’t matter how painful or how tough it is”.

“When I achieve the move I was aiming for, it’s an amazing feeling.”

The skateboarder is following the sport’s Olympic debut and said he was thrilled when Japan’s Yuto Horigome scooped the first-ever gold medal. “I found it really heroic,” he said.

And Ouchi has his own sporting ambitions – he wants blind-skateboarding to be registered as a Paralympic sport.

“I think it is something like an order from God, to do my best to get it registered as a sport,” he said.

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