AquaBlue
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- May 1, 2003
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It is difficult for a hearing person to understand the frustration of a deaf individual in a hearing world. That’s why deaf folks are viewed as they are by hearies. The deaf person feels out-of-place by the alienation given them by a cold-hearted hearing society.
Now the tables have been turned (in my case).
You see every Monday and Friday night I attend a gathering of Deaf and hard-of-hearing folks. I treasure those meetings and look forward to them very much. But…I feel like the one left out. Constant frustration and a feeling of worthlessness invade me during such occasions. I am thus the minority and the lesser one (so I feel) in the group.
That dose of reality brings me to attention and I realize that this inner conflict must be what my deaf friends experience daily in my hearing world. It is outrages and totally unnecessary. What a tragedy!
Now the tables have been turned (in my case).
You see every Monday and Friday night I attend a gathering of Deaf and hard-of-hearing folks. I treasure those meetings and look forward to them very much. But…I feel like the one left out. Constant frustration and a feeling of worthlessness invade me during such occasions. I am thus the minority and the lesser one (so I feel) in the group.
That dose of reality brings me to attention and I realize that this inner conflict must be what my deaf friends experience daily in my hearing world. It is outrages and totally unnecessary. What a tragedy!