When I was in Elementary school, they taught the manual alphabet to my class. I learned about Helen Keller that same year. I became obsessed, there was a passion inside of me for learning how to communicate with someone who couldn't hear me. As a child, I thought it was unfair that anyone would be 'left out' of a conversation and felt I couldn't do that to another person. After that, I didn't know anything more. School systems didn't teach me any more than the manual alphabet. I honestly didn't know that two handed sign language or even ASL existed. I thought the manual alphabet was Sign Language alone. When I became an adult, I was going through a journal I had written about wanting to teach Sign Language. Of course, the same passion was within me when I read my words. I decided to look up Sign Language on the internet. I found a free ASL course, I began throwing myself into learning the language. I realized after the course, ASL was needed in my job as a paramedic. I started researching, writing papers, and showing the need for medical providers to learn to communicate through Sign. I started creating a course to teach basic Sign Language to medical providers and it was approved through my service.
So, in short... I'm not exactly sure why I have this passion in me for Sign Language. It has been there since the first time I saw the manual alphabet, and has never left me. I believe that everyone is equal whether you can hear, see, speak, or none of the above. I also believe it is each individuals responsibility to communicate with the next. I couldn't imagine being in an emergency situation and not being able to communicate my needs or thoughts. It upsets me deeply that anyone would ever have to endure that situation. This may not be the response you were looking for, but this is my personal beginning. The more I learn about Deaf Culture the more passion that overcomes me.