The first thing we were taught in ice skating class was how to fall...and get back up.
Or in skiing, as someone said in this thread.
There will be people that think differently from you on some subjects like disablity, religion, to name a few. Accept them for who they are and move on.
I did pretty well growing up---only deaf in all hearing school, decent grades, good jobs, life skills and experiences but.......no one's perfect.
It HELPS to surround yourself with more open-minded people than not. If you encounter job situations where you are told you "can't" by closed-minded people, move on. You cannot change these people. You can try but it's a battle you can choose to fight. You can teach people, You can advocate for yourself but you cannot change people unless they want to rethink their beliefs. That can occur on a trip to a foreign country where they could not understand the language, or being in a relationship with an individual that changes your life, yadda yadda....
There were jobs I could not get despite being qualifed, skilled enough or had the experience just because some people chose to hire hearing over deaf applicants. Move on. I've been told I'm overqualified. People are just smart enough not to say, "um, I'd rather hire someone who can hear. I'm afraid you may not work out". Move on.
I'm deaf, and I applied to all the government agencies for jobs but didn't even get an interview. Maybe I did it all wrong but I did everything to get hired. Even the special channels for the disabled. Nothing worked out. It's not in the stars. So I moved on. Oh wait, on a second stab few years later, I took the Immigration exam only to flunk it. Ok, I didn't have all answers right. I took the US Customs Inspector exam and passed it. only 13,000 people passed it out of many more thousands of people who tried to pass it. WOW. I did good then. Still.... Guess what, the gov't scrapped the list with all of us, due to shifted priorities after we took the exam. Nothing personal against me. I'm pretty sure I'm the only deaf one on that list. I can go on and on but I'm more of a believer in the theory/fact "It's WHO you know that gets you the job, not WHAT you know". I was the top candidate for a police job until I got pushed aside by someone "upstairs" who wanted a certain person to take the job. Of course I was real upset about it......but can't change the person behind the decisions made in the police department. Their loss.
My parents raised me to believe I can do anything I set my mind to do, like Shel90. I'm sure my speech is not as great as Shel90's but it's as good as it can be. Most of the time, I do allright..... There are jobs I can't do because of my deafness--as much as some hearing people who can't do jobs due to medical conditions. Move on. Still, at least try to do what you want to do. Make adjustments where you are not able to get what you want but try to get close enough.
I had zero security experience when I was offered a job as a security officer. I was promoted to security supervisor after a year on the job with eight employees under me mainly because I've shown I can do the job. Oh yes, you need radios but the boss who hired me took care of that himself and I used alpha pagers and a lot of visiblity (everywhere physically). I couldn't answer the phone at the gate house when I was there BUT I did everything else that made the boss happy so he didn't care if I didn't pick up the phone. He made sure someone else handled the phones. I was also put in charge in Security and HR when the boss left. Until the VP of Finance in the company demoted me to "give the job to the new daughter-in-law in the family". She forgot to demote my pay! So I earned good money reading the newspaper at the gate house. Less stress. The company folded soon after... So I went back in food service to pay the bills.
Same in food service. To sum it up, I tried to become a sous chef but they kept picking people who THEY felt could do the job better. Their loss. I didn't have to worry about the stress they have had to deal with. Several got fired. I didn't. Better not to get fired in a company where you can get a job anywhere in the country. If you're fired, you can't work within the company ever again. Better be able to get work anywhere than be a big shot in one pond..... Everything happens for a reason. I've been told that I couldn't work on the line (front end service due to "communciation issues". Again, it's the PERSON who blocked me, not my deafness. I can do line as another resturant job showed me. I could not work on the line at a restaurant but when I needed a second job, I found it at THAT restuarant across the street. I worked on the LINE there. I had zero line experience but I sure can deliver food zippin' fast. Never mind the fact I broke a lot of plates when I handled the pizza dishes BUT the mgr who gave me a chance loved me so much. HE was reaping the rewards for being open enough to give me a shot.
Eventually years later, never did I know I would end up as the boss myself. I own a catering service now. Of course, I wanted to do this, that, this and that but they did not all fully pan out but all prepared me for what I'm doing now and I love the freedom I have working from home. I also have the freedom to wait on a commericial location in today's hard times not to overextend myself as a business owner.
So to supplement some posters' advice........no need to scare young people with the real world stuff. They will learn and figure out things as they go along just like hearing people.