Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2015-07-25 03:40 pm
[ SECRET POST #3125 ]
⌈ Secret Post #3125 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
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Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 03 pages, 066 secrets from Secret Submission Post #447.
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Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
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no subject
(Anonymous) 2015-07-26 12:15 am (UTC)(link)But do you have the right to choose that for others? Such as your own child?
No, I don't, nor does my child. That's what I'm trying to say. If my child chooses, as an adult, to have purple eyes, then they have the free will to make that choice. Or to be hearing versus deaf.
It's absolutely DEVASTATING to lose your hearing. Even if he lost it at a young age, before he had memory of it.
Your first sentence makes sense, your second sentence doesn't. Technically, I "lost" my hearing during cell division in my mother's womb. That's long before I had memory of it, and I'm here to tell you, that's not devastating.
Hearing people losing their hearing is devastating, because they haven't had a lifetime of living with it. They're so unprepared, that it is devastating. But that's a completely different situation from someone (like me) who is born deaf.
But I also think the phrase "you don't know what you're missing" is very applicable as well.
...and this would be a prime example of the societal devaluing of a person with a disability (in my case, my being deaf).
Or, to spout an old cliche, "My life is different, NOT deficient!"
no subject
Add to that I have other physical disabilities (the aforementioned brain condition, chronic pain, arthritis of the cspine just to name a couple), and mental illnesses including PTSD and MDD and GAD with 4 other anxiety related conditions) I have had longer to get used to the rest. This needing a hearing aid or I cant hear conversations in the room with me is new, and I am having a really really hard time adjusting to it. Much harder than all the other conditions I have. And I dont even know why. But anyway sorry for rambling, youre right is my point, it is devastating and also hard to handle when it happens to someone who had normal hearing until recently. I love my aid because it makes everything so much easier to hear but amazingly, I love turning it off when things get too loud just as much and I wonder if thats normal...