But then she said that she noticed that a lot of Deaf people were having a hard time finding jobs and being turned down a lot. She was concerned about why hearing people reject them when they need work or job, even career. Most of the Deaf people were frustrated and not happy finding jobs.
Bebonang,
You mentioned language being a barrier in finding jobs through lack of interpreters or inability of hearing people to communicate with them. I'm an example of someone with full speech capability and very good reception skills (oral deaf), and yet, I couldn't find a job that I would want to do to save my life.
I struggled my whole life to find something I wanted to do. I have too much baggage from my childhood that is blocking me currently (which I am attempting to resolve through my Hindu spiritual adviser). I did office jobs and retail jobs for over 25 years, and I got severely burned out on it just from the boredom and the extensive public contact with customers in my last "mundane" job (mundane meaning outside of the renaissance faire world). I could not move into areas I wanted to try, even when I was more suited for the duties than the other person was, and she was far more suited for working the sales floor, i.e., because she could nail co-op membership sales and could work with customers a lot better than I could, and yet, they left me hanging in a difficult position. Finally, I had enough and quit two years ago.
Now, after coming to the renaissance faire circuit, I'm finding that the job market is even WORSE, because these people are just like the "modern" counterparts who won't let me become a trade apprentice, AND you can usually find a job only through worker attrition through getting fired, quitting to go back into the modern world, or getting arrested for something (high numbers of individuals with personal issues that lead to criminal activities). You can't just expand a faire just because someone wants a booth, because land is limited (they don't have the ability to take away land like states and local government does), and space is limited within the faire grounds by density limitations. Here you REALLY, REALLY have to know the people.
After two years, the best I could do was being a bar back in a pub for several events, a ticket hawker for one of the animal rides, and (ugh) a dishwasher in a meat-cooking kitchen at another faire, which was my last job at faire this year.
I have decided that if I am not successful in landing an apprenticeship by the start of Texas Renaissance Festival this fall so that I can work to make stock (products for booths to sell to faire goers) instead of working onsite, I will have to let it go and find something else to do through my Hindu community or leave behind the householder stage of my life (retire fully) and instead devote my life to service within the Hindu world, as I feel that the western world does not deserve my mind, my hands, nor my body as a minion for their aims of world conquest, and they have a lack of spiritual education and proper respect for everything. I feel that Dharmic civilization (people from India, Nepal, etc.) is far more deserving of using my skills and abilities to help further a way of life that provides answers to today's problems.
I have learned that my unemployment situation is not something that I can change in the western world, given my experience as a deaf person and my age, BUT I will change what I can in other ways, and know the difference so that I can maximize the time I have left on this world. Also, moving into the retirement stage of my life will allow me to prepare myself for renunciation of the world and devoting myself to spiritual advancement to reach the final goal in my life at the final stage of my life (the stage of spiritual advancement).