FadedRose
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2007
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The title says it all. I am Deaf, raised oral only. Took speech therapy from the time I was 3 years old up until I was 19 and as a result my lip reading skills and speaking skills are quite good for the degree of hearing loss I have which is Severe to Profound. I do wear hearing aids but they only amplify what little hearing I have left which isn't enough to classify me as a HOH person. I even asked my audiologist if I was Deaf considering my hearing test and she said yep. Said I was functionally Deaf as well...whatever that means.
Here's the issue...I literally have to convince people that I am Deaf. Because I speak so well it's as if my hearing to them is better than what it actually is. This irritates me on many levels. Not only do I have to explain how I can talk, I get asked most often " how can you talk if you're Deaf?, How can you wear hearing aids if you're Deaf?"
I am a prime canidiate for the C.I but have refused the surgery for personal reasons. The funny thing is that people tend to take the C.I more serious, or as a " gee, she must be Deaf " vs. she wears hearing aids and speaks well so she's not Deaf.
I'm even asked how can I understand speech from behind me-it depends on who you are. If I know you I know your pattern of speech, how you typically approach me, what you almost always say first. If you're a stranger forget it.
But once I know a person either at work or in my personal life I already know your habits and your speech habits-this I had to learn and was taught. As a result of this I'm not seen as Deaf by those who don't know me well and as a result my needs as far as communication are often times forgotten and when that happens I'm literally left out in the cold when it comes to vital information I need to know be it at work or from family.
Do any of you regret your oralism training? To some extent I do because of these issues. I sometimes feel that if I just quit speaking and just sign that it'd be better. There would be no confusion then, no need to explain how I can talk or why-because to most people, ignorant ones this is what a Deaf person "looks" like to them.
When someone like me comes along that challenges the stereotype it's-you're not that Deaf attitude that I encounter. I've even been asked-you write so well, your vocabulary is very advanced for a Deaf person, are you really Deaf?
YES.
what to do? Its either you must be really bright or really stupid depending on the hearing person I'm speaking to. I had to see a Doctor for some stupid medical issue and he had graduated from Harvard medical school and even wrote a book, and did teach some college classes, professor level. He looked at me right in the eye as if he couldn't believe what he was seeing this Deaf person in front if him appearing to be hearing but wasn't...and said to me " You are very intelligent, I can tell how you pay attention to everything and lip read too, wow, how do you do it?, you're speech is wonderful for the degree of loss you have". Not only was this akward for me I was kind of insulted by that as well. This isn't the first M.D that has made that comment to me. Although I appreciate that it appears that the intelligent hearies "get" me. I do not appreciate them verbalizing it...its...annoying. I remember in middle school I had to write a paper on what I forget. When I turned it in I was accused of cheating, copying because " someone like you is unable to write a paper like this, this is too advanced for someone like you" those were the words said to me as a kid by a teacher...I'll never forget them. My parents were even called to address the " cheating " and they stood by me and I remember my father saying that he saw me write the paper himself and that I was a good writer and always have been and have always had a large vocabulary but because I was in her opinion Deaf I wasn't bright enough to do so?
Going back inbetween these extremes really...it's a complex feeling to describe. It's either you're not Deaf, Deaf enough, too Deaf to be "bright" or people just flat out refuse to believe that I am as Deaf as I really am until I take out my hearing aids to prove to them just how little I can hear which is nil without the aids.
for those wondering-the teacher was fired I was placed in advanced classes upon entering high school but was below average in the math department. Not that it's served me any good, employment has been difficult not that I don't have a job but being promoted, trained is out of the question and I know many of you here have this same issue because of being Deaf. Life in general....LOL-could be a little better but I hoping with age will come acceptance among the hearing group. I'm 29...so not all hope is lost just yet.
sound familar to anyone? do you regret being Oral Deaf for similar reasons? If not, why, if so why and what did you do about it, go voice off? learn ASL, refuse to wear any hearing device at all ( I've taken out my HA's for day's on end even at work just to get away from all the noise).
thanks to everyone who plans to reply!
Here's the issue...I literally have to convince people that I am Deaf. Because I speak so well it's as if my hearing to them is better than what it actually is. This irritates me on many levels. Not only do I have to explain how I can talk, I get asked most often " how can you talk if you're Deaf?, How can you wear hearing aids if you're Deaf?"
I am a prime canidiate for the C.I but have refused the surgery for personal reasons. The funny thing is that people tend to take the C.I more serious, or as a " gee, she must be Deaf " vs. she wears hearing aids and speaks well so she's not Deaf.
I'm even asked how can I understand speech from behind me-it depends on who you are. If I know you I know your pattern of speech, how you typically approach me, what you almost always say first. If you're a stranger forget it.
But once I know a person either at work or in my personal life I already know your habits and your speech habits-this I had to learn and was taught. As a result of this I'm not seen as Deaf by those who don't know me well and as a result my needs as far as communication are often times forgotten and when that happens I'm literally left out in the cold when it comes to vital information I need to know be it at work or from family.
Do any of you regret your oralism training? To some extent I do because of these issues. I sometimes feel that if I just quit speaking and just sign that it'd be better. There would be no confusion then, no need to explain how I can talk or why-because to most people, ignorant ones this is what a Deaf person "looks" like to them.
When someone like me comes along that challenges the stereotype it's-you're not that Deaf attitude that I encounter. I've even been asked-you write so well, your vocabulary is very advanced for a Deaf person, are you really Deaf?
YES.
what to do? Its either you must be really bright or really stupid depending on the hearing person I'm speaking to. I had to see a Doctor for some stupid medical issue and he had graduated from Harvard medical school and even wrote a book, and did teach some college classes, professor level. He looked at me right in the eye as if he couldn't believe what he was seeing this Deaf person in front if him appearing to be hearing but wasn't...and said to me " You are very intelligent, I can tell how you pay attention to everything and lip read too, wow, how do you do it?, you're speech is wonderful for the degree of loss you have". Not only was this akward for me I was kind of insulted by that as well. This isn't the first M.D that has made that comment to me. Although I appreciate that it appears that the intelligent hearies "get" me. I do not appreciate them verbalizing it...its...annoying. I remember in middle school I had to write a paper on what I forget. When I turned it in I was accused of cheating, copying because " someone like you is unable to write a paper like this, this is too advanced for someone like you" those were the words said to me as a kid by a teacher...I'll never forget them. My parents were even called to address the " cheating " and they stood by me and I remember my father saying that he saw me write the paper himself and that I was a good writer and always have been and have always had a large vocabulary but because I was in her opinion Deaf I wasn't bright enough to do so?
Going back inbetween these extremes really...it's a complex feeling to describe. It's either you're not Deaf, Deaf enough, too Deaf to be "bright" or people just flat out refuse to believe that I am as Deaf as I really am until I take out my hearing aids to prove to them just how little I can hear which is nil without the aids.
for those wondering-the teacher was fired I was placed in advanced classes upon entering high school but was below average in the math department. Not that it's served me any good, employment has been difficult not that I don't have a job but being promoted, trained is out of the question and I know many of you here have this same issue because of being Deaf. Life in general....LOL-could be a little better but I hoping with age will come acceptance among the hearing group. I'm 29...so not all hope is lost just yet.
sound familar to anyone? do you regret being Oral Deaf for similar reasons? If not, why, if so why and what did you do about it, go voice off? learn ASL, refuse to wear any hearing device at all ( I've taken out my HA's for day's on end even at work just to get away from all the noise).
thanks to everyone who plans to reply!
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