 Saber is a whole heap of fun, he's an energetic kid and so determined and so positive and caring about other people around him as well. We were getting him school ready and we thought we'll just go get his eyes checked and all we got told was that he's going to need help at school. His eyesight drops in and out, he'll go either five minutes or five hours where he can't see anything and then some of it will come back, not all of it but some of it will. He has moments where he knows he's losing his sight and he does get really upset. That's really difficult as a parent to know that I can't fix it. For me it was probably more scary seeing him with a cane, in fact I probably had more of a reaction than he did. Really selfishly I thought how's he going to drive a car and then started to get the realisation there's no how's he going to cross the road. Within a week Guide Dogs came out and showed him how to use his cane and I don't think we would have been there if Guide Dogs hadn't been involved. The difference it would make for Saber to have a Guide Dog would mean that he could comfortably move around a city when he wants to move away from home, when he goes to university. His Guide Dog would help him cross busy streets or get on to public transport. It would be invaluable to keep him safe and to make him feel like there's nothing he can't do.