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your lucky, im talking about profound deafness.
Got a severe bilateral profound deafness of 110 to 120 db in both ears.
your lucky, im talking about profound deafness.
Got a severe bilateral profound deafness of 110 to 120 db in both ears.
your lucky, im talking about profound deafness.
I was in the "Hearing Society" for most of my life and so for I haven't n
met any one that thinks they are better than me ( at lest not because of hearing)
however I have seen lots of deaf people who think they are better because of less hearing.... "your only HOH" , " your not deaf enough" , "you are a trader if you talk to hearies",
edit: it sucks, when every one wants what ever group they are in to be its own little world.
why do they think they better than us?
Because they are socialized to believe they are.
I'm just def.
Def...what did that mean to you?I disagree, from the comments you have made on this topic, you are also, fair minded, compassionate, intelligent and have an incredable sense of self. I
think there are lessons to be learned from your simple but thoughtful comments. smile...too bad I'm already in Love. I think you're exceptional.
Peace to you my friend..Midnight♥♥♥
Def...what did that mean to you?
I took my meaning from how rappers use it. It's supposed to mean cool. It's even defined that way several times in the Urban Dictionary.
It is meant in a positive manner.
I don't think hearing people think they are "better" than deaf people. I think that word is not the right word to use. Being a coda, I have met many hearing people who are VERY enthusiastic about meeting my mother and other deaf folks and treat them with the utmost respect. Certainly there are going to be people who are ignorant but does that mean they think they are "better?" I don't think so.
I have met MANY deaf people through my mother who seem extremely bitter towards hearing people and tend to shut them out. How are hearing people supposed to respond to that attitude? I have met ASL students with such a passion for learning about deaf culture and ASL but get rejected when they try to interact with deaf people. What about that?
Maybe instead of playing the victim card and saying that hearing people think they are better than deaf, people need to realize that some people are just ignorant (hearing AND deaf alike) and just move on. There really doesn't seem much point in dwelling over it when it has no impact on your life. Just be a good person, treat people well and reject those who make you feel bad.
If the ignorance takes the shape of "The ability to hear is superior to the lack of ability to hear", then that ignorance is the same thing as a hearing person thinking they're better than a deaf person. Obviously, nobody is saying all hearing people are like that, though. But many? Sure. It primarily manifests itself in a form of unrecognized and unacknowledged privilege.