If any of you had met me 15 or so years ago, I would have told you how happy I am being oral and not needing deaf friends nor ASL. The truth was I was a very unhappy person but didnt understand it. I kept finding ways to fill in the void I had grew up with with materials, by making myself ultra thin, by buying brand name clothes, having a luxury car, and drinking a lot at parties. The truth was I was denying and lying to myself about who I really was...a deaf person not a hearing person. I kept identifying
See, we actually agree more than it seems at first. The positives I see of my daughter's oral education is that she can get along in the real world and has few limits regarding communication--she can communicate orally with the hearing world without barriers. The negatives I see are what you talked about--the part of oral education that kind of denies the hearing loss, doesn't really encourage "deaf identity" and in some ways creates barriers in social situations (by seeing life in the mainstream as the "holy grail" and not really encouraging as much social interaction with others who are deaf). What I am saying is this: the side that says something like "oral only--deny deafness--live only in the hearing world--you don't need to be with other deaf people because you function as a hearing person"--THAT PART IS WRONG! I also think that the side that says "ALL deaf people should use ASL because it is the natural language of ALL deaf people--Deaf should be with Deaf and rarely socialize with the hearing world--and once a deaf person learns ASL and becomes part of the Deaf world they will always feel most comfortable there and won't feel as comfortable in the hearing world"--THAT IS ALSO WRONG!! To assume all or nothing--that is the WRONG from BOTH sides!!
I disagree with the "oralists" who did not think my daughter would EVER want to learn ASL or be with other deaf people. I also disagree with people who assume that because THEY are happy using ASL ONLY and THEY are happy not speaking and THEY are happy being mostly in the Deaf community, that ALL deaf people should feel that way. So I still stand by what I have said--on the ONE hand, my daughter IS happy to be oral--in that she LOVES to talk and is glad that we did not deny her that opportunity. But on the other hand, she is NOT happy about the seclusion of being an oral deaf person solely in the hearing world--she DOES want to ALSO be a part of the Deaf community--she just does not want to leave the hearing world behind.
So, she learned some signs when she was young, then built her English spoken and receptive vocabulary, and now would like to build her ASL vocabulary. She doesn't want to deny her deafness--she wants to claim her deaf identity--she doesn't want to be completely in the hearing world without contact with other deaf people her age--the talking part of "oralism" is the positive, the seclusion and loneliness is the negative. She wants to learn ASL and be a part of the Deaf community, but she doesn't want to choose ONLY that option--she wants to make friends like herself--she wants to keep talking to others who are deaf, too--the positive part of this is the social benefits of being with others like herself, the negative would be if people in the Deaf community shunned her because she prefers to talk more than sign. See, there are good things and bad things about both!
The complete denial of deafness and the lack of social interaction with deaf people in the mainstream are some very strong negatives about oralism that we are trying to repair for our daughter--but there are no regrets about going the route where she learned to listen and speak--that part was a wonderful decision and she is happy about that part. And now, we are hoping that our daughter can learn ASL and be a part of the Deaf community--we are hoping that she can find her deaf identity and have a wonderful social life--but to assume that once she does that she will want to completely jump into a silent world(which she cannot ever really do because she is not profoundly deaf) and never really look back--to think that once they discover the wonderful acceptance within the Deaf world that ALL deaf people will want to stop talking and never look back--that is assuming an awful lot about other people.
Can't people be happy about speaking and also be happy about finding ASL and the Deaf community? Can't they be glad that they can go anywhere and do anything because they can hear and speak, yet still be very glad to have a lot of friends in the Deaf community? Can't we all see that black or white/all or nothing/pick one side or the other but not both--that is very unfair to those who DO enjoy speaking AND DO enjoy being part of the Deaf community?
So I am admitting that the lack of socialization with other deaf people is a regret, but the fact that my daughter enjoys speaking is not a regret. The Deaf community can be a WONDERFUL resource, but not the ONLY resource. Once again, there is good and bad about BOTH sides--and I think it is most fair to let deaf people who want to be on both sides to do so without being made to feel as if they have to give up one to be a part of the other. Keep in mind that there are MANY degrees of deafness--and also, a lot of people are hearing at first and then late deafened--not everyone is born Deaf to Deaf parents and raised solely in the Deaf community. We should ALL keep an open mind about other's experiences and ideas.
I am a hearing woman who has heard from BOTH sides and I have made decisions that would be classified BOTH ways. The oral side would be "proud" because my daughter is a wonderful listener and speaker, but they wouldn't understand why she wants to go to a deaf school for high school--that shows lack of tolerance. The Deaf side will be "proud" of my daughter when she is fluent in ASL and a part of the Deaf community, but it seems that many won't understand if she chooses to use her voice that God gave her because she WANTS to do so--that also shows a lack of tolerance. We should all be more tolerant. I want to look into an organization that I have heard of called "Hands and Voices"--from what I can see, it is BOTH sides coming together in tolerance and acceptance--THAT is the ideal situation!