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  • Family Viewing Mountain Vista
    DUKAS_190957164_NUR
    Family Viewing Mountain Vista
    A family consisting of an adult couple and a child stands and sits near a wooden bench on a rocky mountain summit in Mittenwald, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Bavaria, Germany, on November 8, 2025. The father points with his finger to show the child something in the distance. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Couple Embraces By Lake Under Autumn Foliage
    DUKAS_190372497_NUR
    Couple Embraces By Lake Under Autumn Foliage
    A couple sits embraced on the grassy shore of Lake Staffelsee under a branch of vibrant yellow and orange autumn leaves in Murnau am Staffelsee, Upper Bavaria, Bavaria, Germany, on October 24, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Couple Walking Hand In Hand
    DUKAS_190050607_NUR
    Couple Walking Hand In Hand
    A couple walks hand in hand through a cobblestone street in the old town of Fulda, Hesse, Germany, on October 12, 2025. The scene captures a quiet moment in the historic city center with timber-framed houses and pedestrians in the background. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Senior Couple Standing Hand In Hand In Autumn City
    DUKAS_189949032_NUR
    Senior Couple Standing Hand In Hand In Autumn City
    An elderly couple stands hand in hand at a street corner in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 14, 2025. The pair looks across the intersection surrounded by autumn-colored trees. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Senior Couple Walking Hand In Hand
    DUKAS_189922370_NUR
    Senior Couple Walking Hand In Hand
    A senior couple walks hand in hand through the city center of Fulda, Hesse, Germany, on October 12, 2025. The image shows retirees taking a leisurely walk in the historic old town area. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Cristina Fernández De Kirchner Greeted A Crowd Of Supporters From Her Balcony. October 8, 2025.
    DUKAS_189770462_NUR
    Cristina Fernández De Kirchner Greeted A Crowd Of Supporters From Her Balcony. October 8, 2025.
    Followers watch and make gestures of love and support for former President Cristina Kirchner, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on October 8, 2025 (Photo by Catriel Gallucci Bordoni/NurPhoto)

     

  • Cristina Fernández De Kirchner Greeted A Crowd Of Supporters From Her Balcony. October 8, 2025.
    DUKAS_189770460_NUR
    Cristina Fernández De Kirchner Greeted A Crowd Of Supporters From Her Balcony. October 8, 2025.
    Followers watch and make gestures of love and support for former President Cristina Kirchner, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on October 8, 2025 (Photo by Catriel Gallucci Bordoni/NurPhoto)

     

  • Senior Couple Sitting By The Lake In Autumn
    DUKAS_189752143_NUR
    Senior Couple Sitting By The Lake In Autumn
    A senior couple sits on a bench facing the lake in a park in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 8, 2025. The retirees sit quietly on an autumn day surrounded by trees with changing leaves. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Senior Couple Sitting By The Lake In Autumn
    DUKAS_189752142_NUR
    Senior Couple Sitting By The Lake In Autumn
    A senior couple sits on a bench facing the lake in a park in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 8, 2025. The retirees sit quietly on an autumn day surrounded by trees with changing leaves. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Young Couple In Autumn Park
    DUKAS_189752029_NUR
    Young Couple In Autumn Park
    A young couple stands surrounded by colorful autumn foliage in a park in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 8, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Young Couple In Autumn Park
    DUKAS_189752027_NUR
    Young Couple In Autumn Park
    A young couple sits by a pond surrounded by colorful autumn foliage in a park in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 8, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Young Couple Walking Indoor
    DUKAS_189710845_NUR
    Young Couple Walking Indoor
    A young couple walks together inside a public building in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 5, 2025. The pair is seen from above, dressed in casual autumn clothing. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Walking On Grey Ground
    DUKAS_189645997_NUR
    Walking On Grey Ground
    A couple walks across a large grey floor surface in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 5, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Couple Walking Hand In Hand
    DUKAS_189645786_NUR
    Couple Walking Hand In Hand
    A couple dressed in traditional Bavarian clothing walks hand in hand near a railway platform on a rainy day in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 5, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Woman With Child And Balloons By The Lake
    DUKAS_189436845_NUR
    Woman With Child And Balloons By The Lake
    A woman holds a child while standing with two blue balloons by the lakeside in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on September 28, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Young Man With Child By Fountain
    DUKAS_189278342_NUR
    Young Man With Child By Fountain
    A young man holds hands with a small child while walking near a fountain in Verviers, Belgium, on September 6, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Advocating For Autism Patients.
    DUKAS_189271695_NUR
    Advocating For Autism Patients.
    In Tbilisi, Georgia, on August 16, 2024, a mother smiles while embracing her son, who lives with autism, during a day outdoors in a park. (Photo by Mohammad Daher/NurPhoto)

     

  • People Sitting On Bench In Autumn By River
    DUKAS_189216828_NUR
    People Sitting On Bench In Autumn By River
    Three people sit on a bench facing the IJ River with Amsterdam Central Station visible in the background in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on September 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Couple Walking Past Gingerbread Heart Stall
    DUKAS_189153284_NUR
    Couple Walking Past Gingerbread Heart Stall
    A couple in traditional dress walks hand in hand past a decorated stall selling heart-shaped gingerbread cookies with love messages at the Oktoberfest in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on September 21, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Woman Looking At Her Reflection
    DUKAS_189149175_NUR
    Woman Looking At Her Reflection
    A woman in a red jacket with a black-and-white backpack looks at her reflection in the mirrored surface of a building in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 9, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Couple Walking Hand In Hand In City
    DUKAS_189147918_NUR
    Couple Walking Hand In Hand In City
    A couple walks hand in hand through pedestrian streets in Utrecht, Netherlands, on September 8, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Couple Walking Hand In Hand In City
    DUKAS_189147914_NUR
    Couple Walking Hand In Hand In City
    A couple walks hand in hand through pedestrian streets in Utrecht, Netherlands, on September 8, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Woman And Man Relaxing At Lake
    DUKAS_189061640_NUR
    Woman And Man Relaxing At Lake
    A woman walks by flowers while a man relaxes on a wooden pier at Lake Starnberg in Starnberg, Bavaria, Germany, on September 19, 2025. Sailboats are visible on the lake in the background. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Romantic Moment On Canal Boats
    DUKAS_189019954_NUR
    Romantic Moment On Canal Boats
    A couple shares a romantic moment while sitting together on moored pedal boats along the canal in Utrecht, Netherlands, on September 8, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Romantic Moment On Canal Boats
    DUKAS_189019950_NUR
    Romantic Moment On Canal Boats
    A couple shares a romantic moment while sitting together on moored pedal boats along the canal in Utrecht, Netherlands, on September 8, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Romantic Moment On Canal Boats
    DUKAS_189019948_NUR
    Romantic Moment On Canal Boats
    Two couples share a romantic moment, with one couple sitting together on moored pedal boats and the other behind the boats, along the canal in Utrecht, Netherlands, on September 8, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Couple Walking Hand In Hand
    DUKAS_188840144_NUR
    Couple Walking Hand In Hand
    A couple walks hand in hand along a cobblestone path in Monschau, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on September 5, 2025. Other people are visible in the background near a wooden bridge. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Family At The Viewpoint Overlooking The Old German Town Of Monschau
    DUKAS_188839784_NUR
    Family At The Viewpoint Overlooking The Old German Town Of Monschau
    A man, an older man, and a child stand together at a viewpoint overlooking the town of Monschau with its half-timbered houses in Monschau, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on September 5, 2025. Another man sits on a bench nearby. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Family At The Viewpoint Overlooking The Old German Town Of Monschau
    DUKAS_188839777_NUR
    Family At The Viewpoint Overlooking The Old German Town Of Monschau
    A man, an older man, and a child stand together at a viewpoint overlooking the town of Monschau with its half-timbered houses in Monschau, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on September 5, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Friends Walking At Lake
    DUKAS_188087704_NUR
    Friends Walking At Lake
    Two friends walk along the shore of Lake Starnberg in Starnberg, Bavaria, Germany, on August 26, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_002
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_013
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_003
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_001
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_010
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_008
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_007
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_006
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    DUK10163096_012
    Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
    SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
    WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
    She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
    When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
    However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
    Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
    “Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
    “I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
    “To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
    “At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
    “In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
    “When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
    “The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
    “After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
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    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    13th February 2025

    Selling hundreds of Red Roses for Valentine’s Day.

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  • Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
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    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    13th February 2025

    Selling hundreds of Red Roses for Valentine’s Day.

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  • Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
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    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    13th February 2025

    Selling hundreds of Red Roses for Valentine’s Day.

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  • Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    DUKAS_181106859_EYE
    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    13th February 2025

    Selling hundreds of Red Roses for Valentine’s Day.

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  • Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
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    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    Angela a florist from Isle of Flowers at Waterloo Station, London, UK.
    13th February 2025

    Selling hundreds of Red Roses for Valentine’s Day.

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  • Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
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    Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    In honour of Valentine's Day, the Mayor gives the exclusive scoop on dates at McDonald's and his advice for singles.

    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan pictured at Evening Standard, London, UK.
    08/02/2024

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  • Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
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    Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    In honour of Valentine's Day, the Mayor gives the exclusive scoop on dates at McDonald's and his advice for singles.

    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan pictured at Evening Standard, London, UK.
    08/02/2024

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  • Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    DUKAS_165974264_EYE
    Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    In honour of Valentine's Day, the Mayor gives the exclusive scoop on dates at McDonald's and his advice for singles.

    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan pictured at Evening Standard, London, UK.
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  • Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
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    Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    In honour of Valentine's Day, the Mayor gives the exclusive scoop on dates at McDonald's and his advice for singles.

    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan pictured at Evening Standard, London, UK.
    08/02/2024

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  • Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    DUKAS_165974255_EYE
    Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    In honour of Valentine's Day, the Mayor gives the exclusive scoop on dates at McDonald's and his advice for singles.

    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan pictured at Evening Standard, London, UK.
    08/02/2024

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  • Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    DUKAS_165974262_EYE
    Sadiq and the city: For me, romance is surprising my wife.
    In honour of Valentine's Day, the Mayor gives the exclusive scoop on dates at McDonald's and his advice for singles.

    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan pictured at Evening Standard, London, UK.
    08/02/2024

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