MichaelJester
New Member
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2014
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Hi everyone. I'm Michael. I'm 33 years old, hearing, and am completely new to the Deaf/HH community. I am currently in Louisville, KY but lived in NYC and Chicago for many years studying theatre and experiencing life (sounds more glamorous than it actually was . For many years I have wanted to go back to school but have never been able to settle on anything I would be interested in studying and investing my time and future into. A few months back I was listening to an episode of the Radiolab podcast called WORDS and the first segment was about a woman who lost her ability to read or understand the written word after a car accident (transcript here). One day she happened upon someone signing and she said that something clicked in her brain and that she somehow "understood" what they were doing. She learned the language and became an interpreter, later helping a 27 year old deaf man who couldn't speak or sign - no concept of language whatsoever - to learn to sign and communicate his thoughts to the world. This story had me in tears and I sat up WITH A JOLT. It was like I was struck by lightning. I decided then and there that that is what I would study in school. Luckily, the university in my city offers a bachelor degree program for ASL/IS.
Since then I've been watching many videos online and reading a lot about the deaf community and culture. I was/am really excited to start my program this spring. Now I'm starting to doubt myself. That is why I come to you guys and gals. Am I, as a 33 year old with no Deaf/HH friends or family and no experience with American Sign Language, an idiot to think that I can go to school at this point and come out in four years with a real grasp of the language? Enough to become an interpreter and make a living with it? At first I thought that my background in theatre (memorization, movement study, communication techniques) would help, as would my love for new languages and cultures. Now, I'm wondering if it is more something you should be doing from an early age and maybe I'm too old to learn something so complex?
Also, would I be welcomed into the community as such a newbie? What is the best and most respectful way for me to approach this?
Sorry for the long post (and sorry if it's mis-categorized) and thank you for any advice or thoughts.
Best,
MJ
Since then I've been watching many videos online and reading a lot about the deaf community and culture. I was/am really excited to start my program this spring. Now I'm starting to doubt myself. That is why I come to you guys and gals. Am I, as a 33 year old with no Deaf/HH friends or family and no experience with American Sign Language, an idiot to think that I can go to school at this point and come out in four years with a real grasp of the language? Enough to become an interpreter and make a living with it? At first I thought that my background in theatre (memorization, movement study, communication techniques) would help, as would my love for new languages and cultures. Now, I'm wondering if it is more something you should be doing from an early age and maybe I'm too old to learn something so complex?
Also, would I be welcomed into the community as such a newbie? What is the best and most respectful way for me to approach this?
Sorry for the long post (and sorry if it's mis-categorized) and thank you for any advice or thoughts.
Best,
MJ