Bakersfield Sports Lions Club

Bakersfield Sports Lions Club Bakersfield Sports Lions Club was chartered on September 9th, 1991. As always, we as Lions strive to give back to our community through service. “We Serve”

05/04/2026

Lunch just got better. Join us Monday through Saturday from 10AM–3PM for our $12.50 lunch special. Featuring some of your favorite dishes, made fresh and served fast. Perfect for a quick break or a relaxed midday meal.

04/29/2026

Make a gift today.

Valley Center for the Blind
04/20/2026

Valley Center for the Blind

What an amazing morning at Give Big Kern! We loved being out at The Park at Riverwalk connecting with our community, sharing our mission, and celebrating the incredible impact Valley Center for the Blind is making every day. Thank you to everyone who stopped by, showed support, and helped spread the word. You made our day! Now let’s keep the momentum going! Every donation makes a real difference in the lives of those we serve. If you believe in empowering individuals who are blind or visually impaired, we invite you to give today.
Donate here: https://www.givebigkern.org/organization/vcb
Together, we can create more opportunities, independence, and brighter futures!

Image Description: Abner, Outreach Specialist, stands behind a table with a VCB tablecloth on it. Informative flyers and Brochures are on the table. He is outside on a grassy area with trees behind him and a canopy over him.

04/18/2026
04/14/2026

What is Retinitis Pigmentosa? Learn about the signs and symptoms of the retinal condition retinitis pigmentosa, as well as how to live with the disease. (juvenile eye disease)

Need help applying eyedrops?
04/06/2026

Need help applying eyedrops?

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11/02/2025

💬 Sight loss + mental health: the feelings, the fog, the way through

Sight loss doesn’t only change how you navigate a room; it can shake your identity, confidence, relationships and routines. The emotions are real: shock, denial, anger, guilt, fear, sadness, even relief that a name finally explains what’s happening. None of that makes you weak. It makes you human.

What the mind goes through

• Grief that loops. You may feel okay one week and back at day one the next. That’s normal.

• Anxiety and hyper-vigilance. New places can feel like exams you didn’t revise for.

• Low mood and isolation. Plans shrink; friends don’t always “get it”; energy runs out quicker.

• Cognitive load. Without visual shortcuts, the brain works harder; fatigue is real.

Coping that actually helps (build a toolkit, not a to-do list)

In the moment

• Name it, then ground it. “This is anxiety.” Five slow breaths. Feel both feet. Find three textures.

• Reset the scene. Sit, sip water, change lighting, lower noise, pause the task.

Daily anchors

• Tiny wins, repeated. One route, one app, one skill—again tomorrow. Consistency beats heroics.

• Energy budgeting. Protect sleep. Add buffers between tasks. “I can, just not all at once.”

• Move your body. Walks, strength bands, yoga, tandem cycling—motion calms the nervous system.

• Make your space predictable. Clear pathways; keep essentials in the same place; label what matters.

Skills & support

• Orientation & Mobility (O&M). Technique grows confidence; confidence lifts mood.

• Tech you’ll actually use. Screen reader, magnifier, shortcuts, haptic alerts, Braille or large print—practical beats perfect.

• Peer support. Talk to people who live it. Borrow their hacks. Lend yours.

• Therapy without the fluff. Grief-informed CBT, ACT or counselling can turn overwhelm into plans.

Mind habits

• Compassionate self-talk. Replace “I should” with “I’m learning”.

• Reframe independence. A cane, display or guide dog is not surrender—it’s agency.

• Joy on purpose. Sound, music, food, touch, laughter, prayer/meditation—schedule the good stuff.

For partners, friends, colleagues (clip-worthy)

Ask before helping. Say your name. Describe changes (“step down”, “chair moved”). Keep routes clear. Celebrate effort, not just outcomes. Listen more than you fix.

When to get extra help

If low mood, anxiety, panic or intrusive thoughts are most days for two weeks, or you’re thinking of harming yourself, speak to a professional (GP/therapist/helpline). Getting help is a skill, not a failure.

The turn

You don’t “bounce back”; you build forward. The map changes, but the traveller is still you—only wiser, braver, more precise. Sight loss may narrow vision; it can widen life.

Prompt for the comments: What’s one coping habit—big or tiny—that moved the needle for you? Share it so someone else can borrow it.

07/26/2025

DON'T MISS OUT! returns to Fresno on September 11th. Join us in increasing community access to services that support adults and children who are blind or have low vision. To sponsor/register, visit this link https://vcb.redpodium.com/dining-in-the-dark-fresno-2025

Image: Dark navy blue graphic with a gold square. Three small white stars. Text: Valley Center for the Blind. Dining in the Dark. Register today to attend in Fresno! Thursday, September 11, 2025. Fort Washington Golf and Country Club. 10272 N Millbrook Ave, Fresno, CA 93730. 6:00 PM.

Address

8450 Granite Falls Drive
Bakersfield, CA
93312

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