Hi everyone,
I had an interesting chat with someone last weekend, and it has stayed on my mind all week. Several posts here have also contributed to what I've been thinking. So, I'm going to throw it out there for your comments and feedback.
Over the past few months, as a part of my reacquisition of ASL, I've been going to one of the Deaf chats that are held at Starbucks on the 2nd Saturday of each month. Sometimes there are only 3 or 4 people there, and sometimes there have been as many as 10. It has REALLY helped both expressive and receptive skills. If you are learning ASL on your own, I strongly (I can not stress that word enough) suggest that you find out where your local Deaf community gets together and take the plunge. Even if you are a novice, your effort in connecting won't go unnoticed. I've made some great new friends, both hearing and Deaf.
OK... so, last weekend, I was chatting with a woman who has been profoundly deaf since childhood. We exchanged backgrounds and I told her all about how I learned to sign as a child...she told me she had a hearing friend as a child who learned to sign. It was great to hear about the other side or my own experience. Anyway, she asked me, "Now that you can sign, what are you going to do with it?" I never really thought about this. I am a hearing person, living in the hearing world. It is not my intention (at least at this point in my life), to work in the Deaf community or become and interpreter, etc. So this is my question for all you hearies out there who are so charged up to learn ASL: What will you do with you ASL skills?
I really enjoy my Saturdays at Starbucks chatting with my Deaf friends, and it enriches my life. Next month, I've been invited to my first Deaf dinner. I'm really looking forward to it. I will be the only hearing person there. But, I feel like I'm not the average hearing person. I'm not religious, and I don't attend a church... so signing at church is NOT for me. I find it kind of ridiculous, too. I've seen interpreters at churches who aren't signing for anyone. They are just up there fumbling along.
The woman I chatted with had several suggestions. One was to become a Big Brother for a Deaf child. That sounds like a rewarding commitment, and serious commitment. I'm not certain I have the time to do that. She also suggested that I could just add my name to a list of hearing volunteers at our local Deaf Community Center. OK... I am going to do that, but I have no idea what types of things I will be asked to help with. My general impression from the Deaf that I have met is that they are fully capable and self-sufficient in their lives. They don't really need help from some hearing stranger.
So, those of you who are hearing and member of AllDeaf... what do you plan to do with your ASL skills? I'm talking about those of you who got past your love of "Switched at Birth" and the amazing Marlee Matlin...those of you who actually are capable of holding a conversation with a Deaf person through ASL...those of you who can fingerspell at a decent speed so that a Deaf person doesn't roll their eyes.
I feel like I'm an outsider to the Deaf community until I actually do something to contribute and join in. Coffee chats are nice, but it isn't much more than a visit to the community. I'm married...so I'm not looking for some creepy hookup with any Deaf person that comes along (eww!). No one in my family is dD/hh. I'm left with my own plan.
Finally, those of you who are dD/hh...do you even want a hearie who signs reasonably well to cross your path in any meaningful way? ASL was a part of my childhood and not something I wanted to lose. But, once my connection to a deaf family was gone, I never used ASL again until recently (ok... there was that one time at an airport). It may be very important for the zillions of hearing people who want to acquire ASL to know whether or not our presence in the dD/hh world is even welcome. How often have we all read that intro post of a teenage girl who wants to learn sign? Is it even welcomed by the dD/hh community? And...what do you plan to do with your ASL skills once you learn? Newsflash: You can't sit in your room and sign to a mirror...that isn't communication.
OK... I leave it now to all of you.
I had an interesting chat with someone last weekend, and it has stayed on my mind all week. Several posts here have also contributed to what I've been thinking. So, I'm going to throw it out there for your comments and feedback.
Over the past few months, as a part of my reacquisition of ASL, I've been going to one of the Deaf chats that are held at Starbucks on the 2nd Saturday of each month. Sometimes there are only 3 or 4 people there, and sometimes there have been as many as 10. It has REALLY helped both expressive and receptive skills. If you are learning ASL on your own, I strongly (I can not stress that word enough) suggest that you find out where your local Deaf community gets together and take the plunge. Even if you are a novice, your effort in connecting won't go unnoticed. I've made some great new friends, both hearing and Deaf.
OK... so, last weekend, I was chatting with a woman who has been profoundly deaf since childhood. We exchanged backgrounds and I told her all about how I learned to sign as a child...she told me she had a hearing friend as a child who learned to sign. It was great to hear about the other side or my own experience. Anyway, she asked me, "Now that you can sign, what are you going to do with it?" I never really thought about this. I am a hearing person, living in the hearing world. It is not my intention (at least at this point in my life), to work in the Deaf community or become and interpreter, etc. So this is my question for all you hearies out there who are so charged up to learn ASL: What will you do with you ASL skills?
I really enjoy my Saturdays at Starbucks chatting with my Deaf friends, and it enriches my life. Next month, I've been invited to my first Deaf dinner. I'm really looking forward to it. I will be the only hearing person there. But, I feel like I'm not the average hearing person. I'm not religious, and I don't attend a church... so signing at church is NOT for me. I find it kind of ridiculous, too. I've seen interpreters at churches who aren't signing for anyone. They are just up there fumbling along.
The woman I chatted with had several suggestions. One was to become a Big Brother for a Deaf child. That sounds like a rewarding commitment, and serious commitment. I'm not certain I have the time to do that. She also suggested that I could just add my name to a list of hearing volunteers at our local Deaf Community Center. OK... I am going to do that, but I have no idea what types of things I will be asked to help with. My general impression from the Deaf that I have met is that they are fully capable and self-sufficient in their lives. They don't really need help from some hearing stranger.
So, those of you who are hearing and member of AllDeaf... what do you plan to do with your ASL skills? I'm talking about those of you who got past your love of "Switched at Birth" and the amazing Marlee Matlin...those of you who actually are capable of holding a conversation with a Deaf person through ASL...those of you who can fingerspell at a decent speed so that a Deaf person doesn't roll their eyes.
I feel like I'm an outsider to the Deaf community until I actually do something to contribute and join in. Coffee chats are nice, but it isn't much more than a visit to the community. I'm married...so I'm not looking for some creepy hookup with any Deaf person that comes along (eww!). No one in my family is dD/hh. I'm left with my own plan.
Finally, those of you who are dD/hh...do you even want a hearie who signs reasonably well to cross your path in any meaningful way? ASL was a part of my childhood and not something I wanted to lose. But, once my connection to a deaf family was gone, I never used ASL again until recently (ok... there was that one time at an airport). It may be very important for the zillions of hearing people who want to acquire ASL to know whether or not our presence in the dD/hh world is even welcome. How often have we all read that intro post of a teenage girl who wants to learn sign? Is it even welcomed by the dD/hh community? And...what do you plan to do with your ASL skills once you learn? Newsflash: You can't sit in your room and sign to a mirror...that isn't communication.
OK... I leave it now to all of you.