About Me

A collage of 10 photos of Glen, consisting of a tall photo on the left, and a grid of 9 smaller photos on the right. The left image shows Glen in a pub, wearing a dark navy t-shirt with the crest of the band Queen on it. He is smiling broadly as he holds up a pint of cider. In the 3 by 3 grid on the right, the central square is a selfie of Glen smiling and wearing his green-tinted sunglasses with the big London Eye observation wheel in the background on the other side of the River Thames. The 8 pictures around it show Glen with various people. The 3 images in the top row show him with Claire, James and Emily. The left and right images on the middle row show him with Fern and Jessica. And the 3 images on the bottom row show him with members of the East London Vision group, the RNIB Connect social group, and a couple of female students who filmed a documentary about him.

Hello there, thank you so much for stopping by! My name is Glen Turner, I’m in my 40s, and I am a partially sighted support worker, unpaid carer, accessibility advocate, culture vulture and blogger living in London.

This page contains information about my work and this blog, along with the necessary disclaimers & privacy policy.

If you wish to contact me in relation to my work or my blog, you can do so via my profiles on Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky or Threads, or by email.

My Career

As of early 2026, I am currently going through a period of transition job-wise. For the last 3 years, I’ve been self-employed as a support worker for my friend Emily Davison (known as blogger Fashioneyesta), who is a trainee journalist with Newsquest. I enable her to do her job by assisting with information gathering, data analysis, transcriptions, image editing, proofreading, story uploads, social media monitoring, note taking, etc.

However, the salary I’ve been receiving to do this job from the government’s Access To Work scheme has been cut severely from 37 hours to just 8 hours. And on top of that, I’m having to focus much more on caring for my blind, elderly mother these days. So I will be leaving my support worker role by the end of the tax year in early April to focus more on being a carer.

I will still be doing some ad hoc work on the side though, and am currently going through a training and review process to become an accessibility tester, which I will write more about later. I’m also in the process of claiming Carers Allowance, have a good amount of savings and have the financial support of a relative. So for the time being I will be stable without a full-time job.

Prior to the above, I studied Accounting & Finance at the University of Exeter between 2002 and 2004, graduating with a 2:1 degree. Then for the next 18 years I worked as an IT developer in the printing department of Torbay Council, specialising in personalised, variable data, mail merge documents (e.g. bills, invoices, election documents, surveys, etc). I left in September 2022 after being made redundant due to outsourcing, hence my switch to self-employment in 2023.


About This Blog

I started this blog in 2016, so I’ve been writing it for over 10 years now. My posts cover a wide variety of topics, in particular:

  • My life with sight loss, including the importance of accessibility & assistive technology. I have often been told that my posts give welcome reassurance to disabled people and parents of disabled children, by showing that it is possible to live a full life with a visual impairment, and it helps to educate and raise awareness amongst non-disabled people.
  • My role as an unpaid carer for my mother, who is elderly, frail and blind.
  • The things I enjoy doing in London and beyond, including socialising, theatre shows & concerts, museums, stand-up comedy, travel, walks, games & quizzes, etc.
  • My favourite TV programmes, radio shows, films, music, books, etc, including reviews of DVDs, Blu-rays, albums, etc.
  • Related content and updates on Youtube, Bluesky. Instagram, Facebook & Threads. Subscribers to this blog can also get notifications via email.

To get you started, here are my top 10 favourite topics and posts:

So please enjoy looking around, there should be something for everyone. I hope you find my disability content educational, interesting and supportive, and you find things that appeal to you in my adventures and entertainment reviews.

You’re also welcome to leave respectful comments, questions and suggestions on my content, or to contact me directly via the methods provided at the top of this post. I look forward to hearing from you! 🙂


Disclaimers

  1. I, Glen Turner, am the creator and owner of the Well Eye Never name, branding, sole trader registration and this blog site, along with my profiles on Youtube, Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky, Threads & LinkedIn, and my lesser-used or inactive profiles on X (Twitter), Bloglovin’ & Mastodon (any other profiles named Well Eye Never online are not me). That includes all of the content I have personally created on all of those sites (text, images, audio, video, etc). Please do not use any of my information and content without my permission and without crediting me as the source.
  2. All opinions expressed in my personal posts and videos are my own and are honest. I always have full editorial control over my content, and will only ever give positive or negative reviews at my personal discretion. I have never accepted payments or gifts to express a specific opinion, and will never do so.
  3. Advertisements are filed under the Adverts category, and are clearly marked with “AD” at the beginning of the relevant post title or section heading. They also include an explanation for transparency at the start of the body text, to indicate whether I have been paid or gifted to feature the content. I am extremely selective about featuring adverts here, only allowing them if I feel they are relevant to the themes of my blog and are suitable for my audience.
  4. Content featured here that has been created by others (e.g. third party text, images, audio, videos, links, etc) remains the property of the original authors. Their views and opinions represent their own perspectives, and do not necessarily align with my own views.
  5. All information, advice, links and other content are published on my sites in good faith, and I cannot guarantee that they are accurate or up-to-date, though I will endeavour to correct errors if I become aware of them. I therefore strongly urge you to do your own research and take relevant precautions as necessary for your safety. Any action you do take based on the information provided on this site, and on external sites I link to, is at your own risk.
  6. You must always consult qualified personnel for advice on medical, legal, financial and other important matters. Failure to do so, or ignoring any advice they give you, is at your own risk. I do not have sufficient knowledge or experience to advise on such matters myself, and you should never fully rely on blogs, forums, social media, etc for that kind of information either.

Privacy Policy

  1. Personal Information Collection – This site may collect personal information from its visitors in a number of ways, including when they subscribe or fill out a form on the site. The information that is collected may include names and email addresses, but only if visitors voluntarily submit this information. Please note that personal information is not used for anything other than the intended purpose. Users have the option to refuse to provide this information and visit this site anonymously, but this may stop them from engaging in some site activities such as subscribing or posting comments.
  2. Personal Information Protection – Please be assured that any personal information that visitors submit is not shared with others. This does not include any data that is obliged to be kept for administrative, legal or security purposes. This website also adopts appropriate data collection, storage and processing procedures and security measures to prevent unauthorised access.
  3. Comments – When visitors leave comments on this site, the data shown in the comments form is collected, along with the visitor’s IP address and browser user agent string. Visitor comments may also be checked through an automated spam detection service. An anonymised string created from your email address (also called a hash) may be provided to the Gravatar service to see if you are using it (see the Gravatar service privacy policy). After approval of your comment, your profile picture will be visible to the public in the context of your comment.
  4. Cookies – If you leave a comment on this site you may opt-in to saving your name, email address and website in cookies. These are for your convenience so that you do not have to fill in your details again when you leave another comment. These cookies will last for one year.
  5. Embedded content from other websites – Some articles and pages on this site include embedded text, images, video & audio content from other sites. Such content behaves in the exact same way as if the visitor had visited the other website. These websites may collect data about you, use cookies, embed additional third-party tracking, and monitor your interaction with that embedded content, including tracing your interaction with the embedded content if you have an account and are logged in to that website.

6 thoughts on “About Me”

  1. Hi Glen —

    I found your blog through Aniridia Network UK. Our daughter, Ruby (6 months old) was born with Aniridia, Nystagmus, Glaucoma, Foveal Hypoplasia, and Cataracts in both eyes. It’s so encouraging to read about your story. So often the first response it to focus on the disability — what Ruby won’t see or do — but doing so is one dimensional. There are so many other things about her that will have much more influence on who she becomes and what she chooses to do in life, as is apparent in your story too. Thank you for sharing your abilities and talents with the world.

    I just spent some time going through and subscribing to many of your recommended blogs — thanks for those too!

    We’ve started our own blog – https://rarestruby.wordpress.com/ (obviously the parent’s perspective — Ruby’s not quite proficient at typing yet ;)).

    Happy to “meet” you!

    – Sarah (from Canada)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you Sarah, lovely to meet you too! 🙂 You’re very correct in what you say – people do tend to focus on the negatives when they hear words like ‘disability’ and ‘impairment’, and it’s easy to forget that there’s still plenty the person CAN do. Just because a condition makes it trickier to do certain things, it doesn’t mean you can’t adapt, especially with technology as advanced as it is these days. And if certain things do prove to be impossible for Ruby, there are still plenty of other things that she can do. Having a sight problem need not stop you from being a human being and living a successful life.

      I’m not saying Ruby’s journey will be trouble-free – of course there will be bumps in the road for her and for you, which will make it hard sometimes. It’s inevitable when your child needs additional help and support like that. But if you all have a good support network around you, and a generally positive and persistent attitude, you’ll be fine. I’m following your blog now, it’ll be interesting to read about Ruby’s journey. I hope it goes well for all of you. 🙂

      Like

Leave a reply to Sarah Gencarelli Cancel reply