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I know it's been done, as many of you point out, you grew up w/out ASL, and I've heard from many parents of children with CIs who don't use ASL that it's either a non-issue or they've found ways to communicate without sound or sign, but I'm wondering what those methods are. The descriptions of pointing to pictures in books that you and your parents set up to tell stories about what you were encountering throughout the day or what you needed is fascinating. Li creates elaborate 3D paper sculptures and walks me through the "story" -- sort of a hybrid of that approach with signing or speaking.
I haven't been on AD for a while so I'm not familiar with the story of Li-Li. But I can tell you what it was like when I was like before I could read. I was born deaf and I had a knack for lipreading so I could understand what people were trying to tell me (but I most likely said it back wrong). For example, if my mom asked me "Do you want juice?" I probably thought it was something like "chute", but the fact that I could associate the exact lip movements with the drink helped me understand. This is probably not the best way but that's how I understood before learning to read. I was quite the chatterbox, but I know I said things wrong but my parents knew what I was trying to say since I was consistent. That was the purpose of speech therapy, to increase my vocabulary and to make what I was trying to say more clear. I started when I was 3. Did that make sense?