Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Two worlds, two perspectives

           It's confusing, being me. I'm stuck between two worlds, well, four really, but for here we'll deal with two of them. One is a world which hears and loves sound, and heaven help anyone who gets between a hearing person and their music. The other is the Deaf world, which has varying levels of access to sound, and enjoys the quiet of their Deaf or limited sound world. I am stuck between the two.
I was born half deaf (small "d" for physical deafness), only one ear hearing. My family is hearing and cannot imagine a life of silence. I grew up speaking and, for the most part, appearing to hear as well as everyone else. But understanding what is said has always been hard. However, there has always been the unspoken expectation that I behave like I hear, and keep my deafness secret.
Then I met Ms. J. (name concealed for privacy), an ASL interpreter. She encouraged me to learn ASL, and to interact with the Deaf community. So I took up ASL at my local community college and the Deaf world was burst upon me. I was accepted, my deafness wasn't a dirty little secret that I had to hide, it wasn't something that made me inferior. I wasn't broken, just different. My deafness was shown to be an undeniable part of me that I could treasure, instead of hiding.
And therein lies the tension. I'm not broken, but everyone thinks I am. I'm not to be pitied, but everyone does. I could just as easily pity you for living in a world more saturated with sound than a wet sponge, as you can pity me for not hearing what you hear.
The truth is, the more I accept my deafness, the more I like it. I like my cozy quiet. I like not being bombarded with sound. It's me, unaltered, unashamed.
But the fact remains, most people I know hear and don't sign. I love them and I want to connect with them, so I wear hearing aids to connect with them more easily. But I don't need hearing aids. The hearing aids don't make me more equal. They simply bridge the gap between me and you.
Yesterday, I went to the audiologist, and they told me I need to wear my hearing aids more to get used to all the background noise. But I don't want the background noise. I don't need to hear all that. She thinks I'm broken, and she needs to fix me so I can be that elusive thing they call "normal." But I'm not broken; I'm different. I'm not looking for a fix; I'm looking for a bridge between me and others, like a man from Japan coming to America with a Japanese-English dictionary in hand. He is not broken, nor is he deficient. He is simply different. My hearing aids are my dictionary for your speech, and sometimes, even then, they don't have the words you say because they do not change me to be like you; they simply bridge the gap.
But because my loved ones struggle to bridge that gap themselves, often not knowing how to do it, I wear my hearing aids to become that bridge. But it costs me.
How does it cost me? Well, monetarily, hearing aids can cost as much as a used car. They are very expensive. But more than that, I have to forego my own desire not to speak and my own wish to live in quiet, to speak with my loved ones. It takes effort, especially in crowds, to understand what is said. It is, quite literally, exhausting. And in the process, I feel like I have to deny myself, my deafness, which is an intrinsic and precious part of me, to communicate in the culture and norms of my hearing family and friends.
And this causes a great tension within me, as I walk the line between two radically different, and often directly opposing cultures. To be honest, there are days where I loathe the sounds that are all around me, longing for total silence, and yet, there are other days where I long to wrap myself in the cloak of normalcy, to be like my loved ones. Yet neither is something I can fully be, and I walk each day with that inner tension, pulling me towards two different worlds.


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