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# 2025-03-14 - Deaf Utopia by Nyle DiMarco | |
This is the first contemporary book i have read by a Deaf author. He | |
dictated this book in ASL and it was translated to English. For the | |
record, i also read Hellen Keller's books. | |
I thoroughly enjoyed the author's warm candor throughout Deaf Utopia. | |
It was easy for me to recognize his beauty without and within. I | |
got the sense that the author held *himself* in high regard and | |
eagerly pursued his own personal growth and self-exploration. | |
> I believe that it happens anytime an individual embraces who they | |
> are. They become confident, self-assured, and /passionate/ about | |
> their identity and everything that sets them apart from other | |
> people. ... When differences are embraced, stories become magical. | |
I favor bringing more of this magical energy into the world. | |
What follows are spoilers and excerpts that i found interesting. | |
# Author's Note | |
First, there is the capital D in the word "Deaf." Why? | |
The word "deaf," spelled all lowercase, is a reference to our | |
medical condition--the fact that our ears don't function the way | |
they're supposed to. The word "Deaf" starting with a capital D, | |
signifies so much more than the functional status of the pair of | |
flesh-funnels on the sides of our heads. | |
As a proud Deaf person, I am a member of a community. Together, we | |
share a common experience, a culture made up of customs unique to our | |
community, and a language--American Sign Language, for the Deaf | |
community in the United States. | |
The capital D is a choice. It's how I see myself, and how I want to | |
be seen. It's my preferred way of naming my identity. Not all | |
people whose ears don't work as intended will choose the same label, | |
and that's fine. | |
Our writing process began with my hands. I first told Bobby my | |
stories in American Sign Language--or ASL--in video-recorded | |
interviews, which Bobby then translated into English on the written | |
page. | |
I started the writing process in ASL because it is my natural | |
language, the one I most feel comfortable expressing myself in. | |
As always happens during the process of linguistic translation, many | |
elements of the source language got lost in the output language. The | |
beauty, power, /magic/, of ASL is reduced on these written pages. | |
We also write ASL dialogue using an all-caps method called ASL gloss. | |
The first thing you will probably notice is that the grammatical | |
structure of sentences in ASL gloss is different from that of | |
English. This is not because ASL is broken English, but rather | |
because ASL has its own rules, separate from those of English. | |
In our ASL gloss, you'll also see hyphenated words. Often, a hyphen | |
is used in ASL gloss to link together multiple English words covered | |
by a single sign. One example is "DON'T-KNOW." While the phrase | |
"don't know" consists of two words in English, in ASL it is expressed | |
using a single sign. Another way a hyphen is used in our ASL gloss | |
is with a repeated term, such as "TRY-TRY." This signifies that the | |
sign is rapidly expressed twice in a row. There are different | |
reasons why a sign is repeated. One is to modify a verb and place | |
emphasis. | |
But the ASL gloss phrases you'll see in this book aren't intended to | |
teach you the language of ASL. If you want to learn ASL, take a | |
class taught by a Deaf teacher. | |
The ASL gloss method has a different purpose: to keep your attention | |
on the fact that the majority of the people in this book are Deaf and | |
communicate using a language that is very different from the spoken | |
ones a hearing person is exposed to in everyday life and in | |
mainstream media. You see, a fascinating thing sometimes happens | |
when all explicit references to Deaf people are taken out of a | |
story. Readers sometimes forget that the people are Deaf. | |
Stories are the glue that holds communities together. | |
# Chapter 1 | |
[The author describes the birth of himself and his twin brother. | |
His parents are both Deaf.] | |
With a lifetime of practice, Mom and Dad had become decent | |
lip-readers. They had to be; back then, they didn't have legally | |
mandated access to ASL interpreters, so lip-reading was an | |
indispensable tool in any Deaf person's communication survival kit. | |
By some estimates the average lip-reader captures only around 30 | |
percent of the speaker's words--and the odds are even worse with | |
additional distractions. [Such as facial hair.] | |
* * * | |
"Are they Deaf?" | |
The doctor took a deep breath and fumbled with his worlds, trying to | |
find the right thing to say to Mom and Dad. | |
The D word seemed to make him uncomfortable. | |
"Well..." he started, then stopped and nodded. "Yes...." | |
Mom cut him off with her voice, "Are they both Deaf?" | |
The doctor sputtered and finally gave them an answer: "Yes." | |
Then he wound himself up to recite the speech he had prepared for | |
these situations. The news of a failed hearing test often came as an | |
emotional shock to parents. His first objective was to soften the | |
blow. ... | |
Bottom line, the doctor wanted to give parents hope. | |
The doctor began: "Please don't worry--" | |
He stopped, because Mom had jabbed a pair of thumbs up in his face. | |
"Good!" she declared. The doctor then noticed Dad thrusting his | |
fists into the air. He laughed and hugged and kissed Mom as if they | |
had just pulled the winning ticket to the lottery. The /genetic/ | |
lottery. | |
The doctor frowned as he surveyed my mom and dad and brother cheering | |
and signing to each other. His confusion at my family's reaction was | |
and is typical of the medical view on deafness. Doctors often think | |
of deafness as a problem that needs to be corrected instead of a | |
natural difference, one beautiful dot among many on the brilliant | |
spectrum of human diversity, one that was also the crux of a culture, | |
language, and community--a way of life. | |
My family saw the test result differently. Dad was elated, because | |
it meant that Nico and I would be able to experience firsthand the | |
culture and language that shaped him as a Deaf person. | |
# Chapter 2 | |
I wasn't taught American Sign Language; I was submerged in it. | |
That's how people acquire their native language: they don't learn it | |
consciously; they naturally absorb it from the available language | |
input in their surroundings. The key is a vibrant and accessible | |
language-rich environment. That's the vinegar that turns cucumbers | |
into pickles. If you drop a baby into an accessible language-rich | |
jar and give it time, that baby's going to turn into a native | |
communicator in that language. | |
The ASL and English alphabets may be closely related, but ASL has its | |
own rules, grammar, and syntax, separate from English. For example, | |
in English you might say "I'm going to the store." In ASL you'd sign | |
STORE ME GO. | |
From birth, I feasted on an all-you-can-eat buffet of ASL. | |
* * * | |
Princess Diana's advocacy touched the Deaf community, too. In the | |
1980s, she became a patron of the British Deaf Association, a U.K. | |
organization that advocated for access and equality for Deaf Brits | |
and was led by Deaf Brits, and she learned British Sign Language, or | |
BSL. When my mom saw footage of Princess Diana signing BSL with Deaf | |
people on Deaf Mosaic, the Emmy Award-winning television magazine | |
show on Deaf news, her heart swelled. Princess Diana was an | |
exemplary role model, and her actions delivered important lessons on | |
compassion, empathy, and caring that Mom wanted to pass along to us | |
boys. | |
# Chapter 3 | |
In the year 1880, a bunch of older white men with prim side-parted | |
coiffures and handlebar mustaches descended upon Milan, Italy. They | |
had come from all over Europe and the United States for the | |
International Congress on Education of the Deaf. | |
It is now known simply as the Milan Conference--one of the greatest | |
tragedies in the history of the Deaf community. | |
James Denison, from the United States, was the sole Deaf delegate in | |
attendance. The purpose of the conference was to decide the best, | |
most effective approaches to educate the Deaf, and only 1 of the 184 | |
delegates in the room making those decisions was Deaf. | |
One was Alexander Graham Bell. Bell was a treacherous man who | |
espoused many ideas that deeply harmed my community. He did not even | |
do the thing he was best known for: inventing the telephone. The | |
idea and design for the telephone was first created by a poor Italian | |
American named Antonio Meucci, with whom Bell shared a lab. Meucci | |
could not afford the patent; Bell could. | |
Anytime I see Bell's name, I feel pain and anger. Bell would have | |
been opposed to the very idea of my existence as a multi-generational | |
ASL-fluent Deaf man. He devoted his life to the study of speech and | |
teaching Deaf children how to speak. He propagated the eugenicist | |
view that Deaf people should not marry each other (so they didn't | |
make more cute Deaf babies like me) and advocated for oral education | |
of the Deaf--or teaching the Deaf through auditory languages. He was | |
opposed to teaching Deaf children sign language... | |
... the delegates voted overwhelmingly in favor of oral education as | |
the preferred method of instruction for the Deaf. The delegates also | |
voted to declare sign language harmful to learning how to speak, | |
lip-read, and understand ideas, establishing so-called pure oral | |
education as the preferred method and effectively banning sign | |
language from the education of the Deaf. | |
For decades, the oral education method proliferated in Deaf schools | |
in western Europe and the United States. At those schools and | |
elsewhere, hearing administrators decided that Deaf people who | |
communicated in ASL were incapable and stripped them of their jobs. | |
Shockwaves from the Milan Conference were still rippling through Deaf | |
education more than a century later, when I enrolled in the Lexington | |
School for the Deaf in Queens. | |
* * * | |
At school, Miss Dawes signed, too. But she also used her voice to | |
speak English while signing at the same time, a form of communication | |
called simultaneous communication, or sim-com. For sim-com to be | |
effective, both voiced and signed modes of communication need to be | |
delivered equally--both in substance and clarity. That's how it | |
works, in theory. But in practice, the speaker will usually lean | |
toward one of the two, typically the speaker's dominant mode of | |
communication. For Miss Dawes, a hearing person, that was spoken | |
English. She leaned heavily on it, and often only signed every | |
second or third word she spoke. | |
Miss Dawes wasn't very good at signing, and her hands kept skipping | |
words. But even then, I could still understand her a lot better when | |
I focused on her signing instead of trying to listen to her spoken | |
English. | |
All the Deaf schools in New York City taught their students this way, | |
mandating hearing aids and using sim-com in classrooms. | |
The Lexington School for the Deaf has been around since the Civil War. | |
My brothers and I were the third generation of our family to go | |
there; my grandma was the first, starting way back in the 1940s. The | |
Milan Conference had taken place more than sixty years before, but | |
its long shadow still darkened the halls of Deaf schools; the pure | |
oral education approach the conference had endorsed was ironclad law | |
at Lexington. | |
It was a misguided hope. The goal should never be for Deaf people to | |
pass as hearing, but to achieve their full potential using methods | |
and languages that work for them. Speech didn't work for my grandma; | |
she never learned how to speak well. | |
The school, as is typical of the oral education school of thought, | |
confused speaking ability with intelligence and potential to learn. | |
Grandma's parents thought signing was beneath humans--that it was for | |
monkeys. | |
But when her parents were out of the house and she found herself | |
alone with her grandpa, he did something that floored her. He | |
approached her, put up his hand, and started fingerspelling. | |
Surprised, she asked her grandpa how he had learned. Continuing to | |
fingerspell he told her that his brother, my grandma's great-uncle, | |
was Deaf like her. As he ended the conversation, he put a finger to | |
his lips and mouthed to my grandma, "Don't tell your mom and Dad." | |
He knew her parents wouldn't be pleased if they knew he'd | |
communicated with her in sign language. | |
Oral education was /still/ the norm at Lexington when my brothers and | |
I were students there. Understand that this wasn't in the distant | |
past; this was the mid-1990s. Just two and a half decades have | |
passed between then and the day I'm writing this sentence. | |
Fortunately, Mom was armed with knowledge of the educational system | |
and strong advocacy skills. She knew that laws like the Individuals | |
with Disabilities Education Act armed parents like her with powerful | |
rights pertaining to the education of her disabled children received. | |
She requested that Lexington provide my brothers and me with sign | |
language support services. The school resisted Mom's request, but | |
she persevered, and won. | |
That was how my teacher, Miss Dawes, came to start signing with me | |
and Nico in class. But friction remained between Miss Dawes and Mom, | |
with language fluency at the heart of the issue. Having never been | |
required to sign in class before Mom's request, Miss Dawes simply | |
was not fluent enough to converse with Mom, or any of her Deaf | |
students, in ASL. She not only sim-commed, she used Signed Exact | |
English (SEE) instead of ASL. ... Oralists prefer SEE over ASL under | |
the unproven assumption that SEE's closer resemblance to the English | |
language will be more effective in helping Deaf children to learn how | |
to speak English. | |
In the early 1990s, the New York City Department of Education had | |
formally recognized American Sign Language as a foreign language that | |
could be taught at schools throughout the state. ASL lessons boomed | |
among hearing kids, who thought it was cool to learn a new language | |
using an entirely different modality that involved their hands, | |
faces, and bodies. Mom pointed this out to the principal. | |
"Hearing students learn ASL throughout the state and the city. Why | |
can't we do the same here?" | |
No can do, the principal said. Bureaucracy would make such a | |
significant change too difficult. | |
"The Department of Education is inviting hearing kids to learn ASL," | |
Mom said. "But Deaf people, the very people that language was | |
created to empower, can't even use it in their school?" | |
The principal didn't respond. | |
The deep and painful irony of the idea that hearing kids learned ASL | |
freely while their Deaf counterparts scraped along in Deaf schools | |
that disdained the language angered my Mom. But she didn't give up. | |
# Chapter 4 | |
Suddenly my friend would elbow my ribs and whisper to me. In ASL, | |
whispering is quite different from whispering when using your voice. | |
Instead of worrying about being heard, you worry about being seen. | |
My friend kept his hands out of sight under the table as he | |
whispered... | |
* * * | |
In the 1960s, a brand-new invention would change the game for my | |
grandparents and their Deaf generation. It was called the | |
tele-typewriter, or the TTY. | |
TTYs were big, clunky machines with keys that connected with other | |
TTYs through a phone line. On a small horizontal screen you typed | |
out and received messages. TTYs had their own lingo--abbreviations | |
to take turns and finish the call. GA meant "go ahead," which | |
indicated to the other person that you were finished and they could | |
begin; SK was "stop keying," which you used to let the other person | |
know that you were ending the call. | |
TTYs made it a heck of a lot easier for Deaf people to communicate | |
with each other. They allowed us the easy freedom to make plans and | |
also enabled us with the power, as gracefully as I can put it, to | |
flake out--as in, to shamelessly cancel plans at the last minute. | |
Basically, TTYs were the original text messaging system. Deaf people | |
were texting long before everyone else caught up. | |
For a long time, Deaf people were left out from accessing | |
up-to-the-minute breaking news that radio offered hearing people. | |
Then pagers came along, which gave way to smartphones, which | |
eventually added social media... With my smartphone, I have access | |
to so much. | |
# Chapter 6 | |
When Nico and I were around seven or eight, Mom and Dad signed us up | |
for Little League baseball. We were the only Deaf kids on the team. | |
Mom, especially, wanted it to be this way. Nico and I spent the | |
majority of our time surrounded by Deaf people in our family and at | |
school. An all-hearing Little League baseball team was a chance for | |
us to step out of the Deaf world we lived in. | |
We didn't have an ASL interpreter. Instead, Dad assumed the role of | |
de facto assistant coach. He helped out during practices and sat | |
with the team on the dugout during games. Whenever the coach talked, | |
Nico and I would first try to lip-read what he said, snatching a word | |
here and there. After the coach finished, Dad would turn to us and | |
sign a summary of what he was able to catch from the coach's lips. | |
# Chapter 7 | |
[The author describes his father's childhood.] | |
Language deprivation had not only slowed the growth of his mental | |
capacities, it stunted his social and emotional development, too. | |
Since he wasn't highly fluent in either ASL or English, he didn't | |
have the words to share the frustration and anger he felt. So he | |
kept these emotions bottled up inside him, and they brewed and brewed | |
through the years. Over time, his pent-up feelings became a | |
permanent raging storm of anger and hate and violence lodged deep | |
inside him. | |
When he graduated high school, he bolted from Athens to the place he | |
knew he would have access to sign language: Rochester, where his Deaf | |
cousins lived. He enrolled at the National Technical Institute for | |
the Deaf... He was thrilled to be surrounded by Deaf people and | |
empowered with the easy of communicating directly with peers in sign | |
language. But he also saw how far behind his classmates he was. He | |
worked to make up ground, but he would never quite get there. It was | |
a monumental challenge to undo the damage of an entire childhood of | |
language deprivation, ineffective education, and deep social and | |
emotional trauma. | |
Every once in a while, though, the anger and frustration Dad had | |
internalized throughout his childhood needed an outlet. He resorted | |
to drinking alcohol and doing drugs to ease the pain and feel better. | |
The alcohol and drug habit turned into an addiction that he would | |
battle for a long time. | |
One day Dad came home from work and told Mom that he had quit his job | |
at the post office. Mom was floored. Dad had always complained | |
about his job and had often talked about quitting, but Mom let him | |
talk. She knew he needed to let off some steam and thought that his | |
talk was just that--all talk. She couldn't fathom him actually | |
quitting his job. His income and benefits supported the family. | |
And now all of a sudden, Dad had just up and left his job, without | |
even talking with Mom beforehand. | |
Quitting his job was first. Next came the extended disappearances. | |
Dad started spending a ton of time with his friends. There were some | |
bad eggs in that crowd, and Mom didn't like it when he hung out so | |
much with them. But now that he was unemployed, he had all this free | |
time on his hands, and he decided to give it to his seedy friends. | |
The length of his disappearances gradually got longer. Soon, he | |
started going AWOL for a few days at a time, without warning. | |
Mom and Dad started fighting. | |
Along with the disappearances came sudden bursts of irrational, | |
violent behavior. Minor transgressions committed by me and my | |
brothers were met with savage physical punishments. | |
Then came the hit to the family piggy bank. | |
One day, Mom checked her and Dad's joint investment retirement | |
account--which held their entire life savings--and found it had a | |
balance of exactly zero dollars. | |
Finally, there were episodes of catatonia. | |
[The physical abuse worsened, and the parents divorced.] | |
As a Deaf person, I don't have time to be upset at my own people. We | |
can't stop and point at each other. We have to be vigilant; we have | |
to continue to look outward and battle the storm, created and imposed | |
on us by larger society, that continues to rage all around us. | |
# Chapter 8 | |
The culture at Maryland School for the Deaf was unlike anything my | |
brothers and I had ever experienced. High expectations were the norm | |
in and out of class... Teachers moved classes through lessons | |
rapidly and doled out a constant stream of challenging assignments. | |
Our classmates were whip-smart and carried themselves with an ease, | |
almost arrogant, confidence. | |
Pushed by our intelligent and creative Deaf peers and the competitive | |
and challenging environment, my brothers and I grew and flourished in | |
different ways. | |
* * * | |
The fall of my senior year, the school had a new transfer, a | |
good-looking guy from the West Coast who oozed surfer dude vibes. | |
All the girls made googly eyes for him. I looked him over and | |
thought to myself: "Mm-hmmm, this guy is hot." | |
Having such thoughts about a guy wasn't new to me; I had always just | |
pushed them aside while growing up. But now, entering young | |
adulthood and unattached to a girlfriend, I became more acutely aware | |
of them. Once I allowed myself to consciously acknowledge these | |
thoughts, they took a vise-like grip on me. No matter how much I | |
resisted, I couldn't shake them off. ... After a while I got used to | |
these thoughts and started wondering what would happen if I acted on | |
them. | |
Once in my senior year, I came close to finding out. ... | |
Then we locked eyes and I felt something rise up in my throat, | |
something more than idle curiosity--a feeling of intensity, a | |
longing. I searched his eyes and thought I saw that my feelings were | |
reciprocated. | |
But then nothing happened. | |
# Chapter 9 | |
In 1990, President George W. Bush signed the Americans with | |
Disabilities Act (ADA) into law. | |
It was a key milestone in a long, winding path... that had been laid | |
brick by brick, decade after decade, by disability community | |
advocates like Helen Keller, Judith Heumann, U.S. Senator Tom Harkin, | |
and thousands of others who courageously fought for the civil rights | |
of those with disabilities. | |
Deaf people played a critical role in making the ADA a reality too. | |
The Deaf President Now (DPN) protest at Gallaudet University helped | |
lay down a good number of bricks in the final stretch of the path | |
toward the ADA. The DPN protest happened in March 1988; fifteen | |
months later the ADA was signed into law. | |
What did the ADA do? Simple: It made discrimination based on | |
disability illegal in many key areas, among them employment, | |
transportation, public accommodations, communications, and access to | |
state and local government programs, services, and resources. | |
Once, mall builders could laugh off requests for wheelchair ramps and | |
employers could rip up a Deaf candidate's job application if they | |
asked for an interpreter for an interview, without fear of consequence. | |
The ADA gave people with disabilities the ability to bring down the | |
hammer of the law on discriminators. The ADA turned access for the | |
disabled from charity into a right endowed upon us as citizens of the | |
United States of America. In a way it helped society change its | |
perception of people with disabilities from subhumans to, well, | |
regular humans. | |
But the ADA hasn't been perfect. Even with the law in place, people | |
with disabilities still have to fight tooth and nail for | |
accessibility. Businesses have sought legal loopholes and rejected | |
requests for accommodations--and have gotten away with it if their | |
action goes unchallenged. This was especially true in the early | |
years of the law, and it's still true today. | |
The state of disability rights and equality in the United States | |
continues to be unsatisfactory. The disability community keeps | |
fighting for better access, treatment, and respect. Inch by inch, we | |
continue our struggle. | |
* * * | |
Grandpa was having a heart attack. | |
At the hospital, Grandpa was rushed off for testing. A thoracic | |
surgeon called on my mom and grandma to explain the results. | |
... this was 1995, and the ADA was five years old. She had every | |
right to ask that hospital to provide an ASL interpreter to | |
facilitate communication, and she did. | |
The doctor responded, point-blank, "No." He wouldn't even use a pen | |
and paper. Instead, he started speaking, expecting Mom and Grandma | |
to lip-read. Left with no choice in the middle of a medical | |
emergency, they labored to understand him. | |
[They did not comprehend the explanation very well at all.] ... the | |
next word Mom caught on his lips was "surgery." And then he waved, | |
cutting off his explanation, and walked away. | |
All Mom and Grandma knew was that Grandpa had a deflated lung and | |
that he was having surgery. They didn't know how serious the problem | |
was, whether my grandpa's life was in danger, or the details of the | |
surgical procedure the doctor was about to perform on him. | |
Frustrated, Mom went to the front desk and requested an interpreter | |
from several nurses. Each person she asked denied her, until someone | |
finally led her to the hospital's patient representative service. | |
There she was asked to file a claim, which they promised to look | |
into. It would be a slow process, Mom knew, and she had no time to | |
waste; an interpreter was needed immediately. | |
When it was time, Mom and Grandma returned to the hospital and went | |
straight to the recovery area, thinking that's where they'd find | |
Grandpa. But he wasn't there. Confused, they asked at the front | |
desk, but no one there knew where he was. They stopped a nurse that | |
passed by, but he didn't know, either. They checked different floors | |
at the hospital but didn't see Grandpa anywhere. Confusion turned | |
into fear. Where /was/ Grandpa? | |
At last, they saw the thoracic surgeon. Gesturing and enunciating, | |
he told them that Grandpa was in the ICU, which sounded like very bad | |
news. Mom and Grandma sprinted to the ICU wing. | |
When they arrived, they saw tubes sticking into Grandpa's body | |
everywhere--his forearm, chest, nostrils. The sight of Grandpa like | |
this made Mom think he was dying. | |
From his bed, Grandpa was so relieved to see family. He'd been alone | |
in the ICU all this time, without an interpreter. He hadn't been | |
able to understand anything the doctor and nurses told him; the | |
doctor in particular refused to use a pen and paper. He had no clue | |
what was going on; he was scared. | |
Grandpa, too, thought he was going to die. | |
At last they found out why Grandpa was in the ICU. After the | |
surgery, his heart rate was too low and his blood pressure too high; | |
he was in the ICU so they could keep a closer eye on him. | |
Mom and Grandma were fuming. The doctor had given them very little | |
information before the surgery. ... The lack of accessible | |
communication heaped unnecessary confusion and stress upon the | |
situation. Grandpa's serious health condition was stressful enough; | |
the additional problems caused by the doctor and hospital refusing to | |
allow access to communication were not only discriminatory and robbed | |
him and our family of dignity; they literally hurt Grandpa's chances | |
of survival. | |
The doctor entered Grandpa's ICU room and gave a brief explanation of | |
the surgery. [Which the Deaf women could not make out very well.] | |
Finally, after a week in the hospital, Grandpa was allowed to go home. | |
Never once in his week long stay had he been given access to an | |
interpreter. the patient representative service was still reviewing | |
the case, and the doctor and everyone else kept telling Mom no. | |
[At home the grandfather developed a fever.] | |
They went to the thoracic surgeon's office. Again, he refused to | |
provide an interpreter. Grandpa was taken in for testing. | |
Afterward, the doctor explained the results to Mom, Grandma, and | |
Grandpa. But without an interpreter, the communication was | |
superficial. The doctor said "infection" and showed them the X-ray. | |
... The doctor ordered them to take Grandpa back to the hospital | |
immediately. | |
Grandpa, Grandma, and Mom were upset. Again, lack of communication | |
access had contributed to the worsening of Grandpa's health | |
condition. The doctor hadn't given them clear instructions for | |
post-surgical care: things they should monitor, activities Grandpa | |
should avoid, food he shouldn't eat. If they had received the | |
instructions clear via an interpreter, they might have been able to | |
prevent this infection, or caught it before it had spread throughout | |
his lung. And if they'd had an interpreter the first time, Grandpa | |
wouldn't have hidden his illness for fear of returning to the | |
oppressive, confusing environment at the hospital. | |
Grandpa had another surgery, this time to suction out the infection | |
and clean u- the inside of his lung. His second visit to the | |
hospital lasted two weeks, and Mom, Grandma, and my two uncles took | |
turns staying with him at the hospital. They wanted to have someone | |
by his bedside at all times, to support him and help him communicate | |
with nurses and doctors. | |
Again and again, Mom followed up with the hospital patient | |
representative service. When she was at the hospital she visited | |
their office, and at home she made calls using the TTY. ... During | |
one call, she encountered a representative with a condescending | |
attitude who brushed off her interpreter request, telling her to pay | |
for her own interpreter or stick with lip-reading. When she tried to | |
explain the ADA law and how it required hospitals to pay for | |
accommodations for disabled people, the patient representative said | |
under her breath, "Bullshit." The relay operator caught it and told | |
Mom. By then the rep had hung up and Mom couldn't respond. | |
Mom never gave up. She kept calling and reaching out to the patient | |
representative service. At last, Mom finally heard back from the | |
service; they had relented and scheduled an interpreter. But the | |
interpreter didn't show up. They booked another one, who showed up | |
but signed so poorly that the family couldn't understand her. | |
Mom did her best to find other solutions to communicate. A teacher | |
at Lexington who had taught Neal had a sister who signed fluently and | |
worked at the hospital. She wasn't an interpreter, but she | |
graciously helped out a few times. She wasn't always available | |
though, and anyway these band-aid solutions didn't fix the real | |
problem: the doctor and the hospital's stubborn refusal to provide | |
Deaf people equal communication access, a right protected by the ADA. | |
To address the hospital's and doctor's illegal refusal to provide an | |
interpreter, my grandparents filed a lawsuit. Legal action is one | |
powerful tool that people with disabilities can use to combat | |
discrimination. | |
Unfortunately, the lawsuit failed. The hospital was able to prove | |
that they made attempts at providing us with interpreters (only two | |
times in three weeks, both taking place during Grandpa's second stay | |
at the hospital, was apparently enough effort). The ADA was young | |
back then, and the courts were still trying to figure out how it | |
would apply. | |
# Chapter 10 | |
During winter break of my sophomore year at Gallaudet University, I | |
escaped the biting chill of the D.C. winter for the sunny beaches of | |
Costa Rica. It was my first international backpacking trip... | |
We dreaded the end of our dreamy vacation and having to start school | |
again so soon. Determined to squeeze as much fun out of the little | |
time we had left and finish out trip with a bang, we set out to the | |
duty-free shop and bagged a large bottle of dirt-cheap flavored | |
vodka. | |
We stumbled pas the sample tray lady into the duty-free store and | |
emerged with a six-pack of bottled beer. | |
The flight attendant did a double take as she walked by us. She | |
wheeled around, a stern look on her face, her mouth motoring away, a | |
finger pointed toward us, and her head shaking. | |
Obviously there was an issue, but we weren't sure exactly what it | |
was. The alcohol swimming in our heads wasn't helpful. It appeared | |
the problem had to do with the bottle of beer we had in our hands, | |
but why? We'd just bought them in the airport and brought them | |
onboard to drink, just like we'd done with bottles of water or sports | |
drinks all the time. Were the rules different with alcoholic drinks? | |
Or maybe they didn't think we were of legal drinking age? | |
As our foggy brains muddled through the possibilities, one of us had | |
the sense to point to their ear and shake their head--the universal | |
gesture for "I'm Deaf." | |
The flight attendant looked at us suspiciously. "I don't believe | |
you," we read on her lips. | |
We stared back at the lady, at loss for words, gestures, or signs. | |
What can you do or say to prove to someone that you're Deaf? We | |
don't have special ID cards signifying that we're Deaf, nor is it | |
clearly stated on our driver's licenses. | |
Our next step was to communicate in an accessible and adult manner. | |
At the start of our trip, we'd brought along a travel journal to use | |
for communication. All throughout the trip we filled up the pages of | |
the journal with conversations with hearing people we met along the | |
way--directions to the beach, flirtations with strangers we met at | |
bars, exchanges of travel tips with fellow backpackers... | |
Left with no choice, we gestured, as politely as we could, a request | |
to the flight attendant to bring out a pen and paper so we could | |
continue our conversation. | |
The flight attendant shook her head and spoke: "I know you can read | |
my lips." | |
Now this lady was straight up discriminating against us. First she | |
refused to acknowledge our disclosure of our being Deaf, and now she | |
was dictating to us how we were to communicate with her. | |
One funny thing about lip-reading: it leads you right into a | |
quagmire. Most folks are able to lip-read the basics--for example, | |
I've seen the words "Can you read my lips?" on a thousand different | |
lips, and I have problem reading those specific words. But if I | |
answer yes to that question, the person speaking will then advance | |
into a conversation that I can understand roughly only 10 to 20 | |
percent of, if I'm lucky. Then I'm screwed. ... It was her next | |
words that we were so worried about being able to understand, and why | |
we were so adamant that she bring out a pen and paper. | |
By this time our annoyance with the flight attendant had escalated | |
into full-blown indignation. She kept talking; we frowned at her | |
lips and shrugged. | |
The flight attendant grew more animated, and probably raised her | |
volume. [Another passenger tried to get involved, then gave up.] | |
The flight attendant was still in the aisle, shouting and angry. | |
It couldn't get any worse than this, we figured. So we dug in. | |
[She left and then returned.] | |
But then I saw the two men behind her. They were dressed head to toe | |
in camouflage military uniforms and wore black bulletproof vests. | |
When my eyes saw what they were holding, I felt the hair on the back | |
of my neck stand on end. | |
Around the men's shoulders were thick black straps, which were | |
attached to AK-47s. | |
Sneering, the flight attendant put up her hand, commanding us to wait | |
in our seats. She stood there, flanked by her two armed henchmen, | |
her eyes never leaving us until every other passenger on the plane | |
had gotten off. And then, with a proud cock of an eyebrow, she | |
stepped aside. The first of the armed soldiers pointed at us and | |
gestured at us to come with him. | |
Confused and terrified, we obeyed. ...as we walked off the plane, we | |
saw that out trouble had just started. | |
As we entered the airport, we saw that it was eerily quiet. Two rows | |
of armed soldiers, about two dozen in all, every single one of them | |
holding an AK-47, stood waiting for us inside. Our escorts led us | |
between the rows of soldiers, who regarded us with mild indifference | |
on their stoic faces. | |
We approached the corridor and suddenly I realized why the airport | |
appeared to be so quiet. Through the windows, we saw hundreds and | |
hundreds of people standing /outside/ of the terminal. The entire | |
airport was empty save for me, my friends, and our military escort. | |
The people outside stood near the windows, their noses pressed | |
against the glass, trying to get a glimpse of what had caused the | |
evacuation of an entire airport. | |
The train of logic in my head was leading me down a terrifying path. | |
Airports are evacuated when a terrorist threat is detected. Is that | |
what was happening here? | |
My mind was spiraling out of control. What if they were accusing us | |
of committing a serious crime and were planning to lock us up? How | |
would we get help? My phone didn't work; international roaming | |
wasn't a thing then. If I was lucky, they might let me connect to | |
the Wi-Fi, but even then I'd only be able to communicate via email. | |
With likely a poor internet connection, I wouldn't be able to call my | |
mom on video and talk to her in ASL. I'd be forced to explain this | |
terrible predicament using my second language. | |
The military escort led us to a private part of the terminal and into | |
a white room with a single light bulb hanging from the ceiling over a | |
steel table. It looked like an interrogation room from the movies, | |
one where cops brought criminal suspects for an ass-kicking. Our | |
military escort gestured us to sit at the table. | |
Finally, the door opened and two officers came into the room. They | |
seated themselves across from us with serious looks of disapproval. | |
One of them started speaking. | |
Not this again, we thought. How many times did we have to repeat | |
that stupid gesture? We tried it one more time: /point-at-ear, shake | |
head./ | |
The officer paused for a moment, then pointed at his lips, with a | |
quizzical look on his face. | |
We shook our heads furiously, hoping we could finally hammer our | |
point home. We gestured for a pen and paper. The officer considered | |
our request, and then spoke to a soldier behind him. The soldier | |
left the room and soon returned with what we'd been requesting for | |
the past couple hours: a stack of notepad paper and a pen. | |
At last, we had the tools with which we could communicate. We | |
explained: We'd been on the plane drinking bottles of beef before the | |
flight attendant descended on us. We were never really sure what she | |
was trying to tell us, because she kept talking, and though we kept | |
trying to inform her that we were Deaf and needed to communicate with | |
pen and paper, she never seemed to understand--or believe us. | |
The officers sighed. I don't know what story they had gotten from | |
the flight attendant, but it must've been pretty dramatic for them to | |
decide to evacuate the entire airport and send along a military escort. | |
The officer was ready to let us go, but unfortunately we'd been | |
detained for so long that we missed the one flight back to D.C. that | |
day. | |
# Chapter 11 | |
[The author met a lesbian couple in his travels.] They told me, | |
proudly, that they had just got married. They were from Argentina, | |
and one of them was a lawyer. She wrote that she advocated for | |
same-sex marriage in their home country and had finally succeeded | |
only a year and a half earlier, in 2010. Argentina became the first | |
country in South America to legalize same-sex marriage, the second in | |
the Southern Hemisphere [of the entire planet Earth], and the tenth | |
worldwide. | |
The topic of gay marriage struck a nerve I didn't know existed, | |
shining a bright light on the fact that I knew absolutely nothing | |
about gay people. I didn't realize so few countries allowed gay | |
marriage; in fact, i was barely aware that my own country disallowed | |
it at the time. The two women before me were inspiring figures in a | |
worldwide movement for the human rights of a long-oppressed | |
community. It was jarring to look at this happy newlywed couple in | |
that moment and think that only eighteen months ago they were banned | |
from marrying each other in their homeland. | |
Deep down I was aware it wasn't an accident I knew little about the | |
LGBTQ community. Growing up, if I found a guy good looking, my brain | |
would register it, but I would brush these thoughts aside, thinking | |
it was impossible that I could be into men. I was taught the false | |
and harmful stereotype that all gay men were feminine. ... As soon as | |
the thought "Am I gay?" arose in my head, I suppressed it | |
immediately. I had gay friends, but I kept them at arm's length and | |
avoided conversations about their gay experiences. Anytime I saw an | |
article or news clip about gay people, I'd ignore it. If I didn't | |
learn more about the LGBTQ community, I thought, I'd stay straight. | |
If I opened up my mind, I'd slide down a path of no return. So I | |
fought to keep all LGBTQ-related thoughts safely hidden away behind | |
this wall of my mind. | |
But there were moments when thoughts and emotions--about my | |
attraction to men--breached the wall. | |
* * * | |
The discovery of a gay, masculine man seemed to awaken something that | |
had long slumbered inside me. Soon after I found out about the gay | |
basketball player, I started having dreams. Sexual fantasies ran | |
through my subconscious, scenes of me and other men going to bed. It | |
felt so good, so right. | |
* * * | |
[The author had a pen and paper conversation with the lesbian couple.] | |
When they asked me what my sexuality was, I saw a safe outlet. An | |
opportunity to be honest, be truly myself without fear of judgment. | |
"I'm not sure," I wrote back. "I know I'm not 100 percent straight. | |
But I don't know what that makes me." | |
I looked up at them. They nodded and smiled. | |
"That's cool," they wrote. "Take your time." | |
Their nonchalant response was like a cool breeze on a sun-scorched, | |
110-degree day. I felt confidence blooming in me. Emboldened, I | |
opened up a bit further. They didn't ask--they knew to let me share | |
at my own pace. Talking with them was comfortable; I'd learned a lot | |
about myself already and I wanted to seize the chance to learn more. | |
I wrote: "I've felt that I wasn't straight for a long time, but I | |
never explored that question. I'm masculine and I love playing | |
sports. I don't look, talk, or act like a gay person, based on the | |
stereotypes I saw growing up." | |
They nodded and told me that I wasn't the only one that ever felt | |
that way. There were many others who were like me, uncertain and | |
confused. | |
It didn't help that I came from a small community, the Deaf | |
community. There were gay men in our community, of course, but in my | |
experience they tended to present as feminine. Before the Gallaudet | |
point guard came along, I had never met a Deaf person like | |
myself--masculine--who was also gay. So I had always thought it was | |
impossible I could be gay, despite the attraction I had to men. | |
The women wrote back that they didn't know what it was like in the | |
Deaf community, but they promised me that there were many masculine | |
gay people out in the word. They didn't push me, but they said if I | |
wanted to step forward in that direction, I would meet LGBTQ people | |
of so many different personalities, backgrounds, and identities whom | |
I could relate to. | |
The thought stuck with me for a while. The idea that there were many | |
LGBTQ people out there, an entire community, reminded me of my Deaf | |
identity. | |
My conversations with the lesbian couple fractures the wall I'd built | |
in my head. For the first time in my life, I began to think, with an | |
open mind and heart, about the possibility that I was into men. | |
I made a conscious decision to explore that possibility and see where | |
it took me. | |
* * * | |
[At the Clin d'Oeil, a gathering where Deaf people used International | |
Sign, the author felt attracted to a French man, and they hung out.] | |
I felt the urge to kiss him, but I wasn't sure how to take the first | |
step. Should I ask him if I could? Or give him a hint? Maybe touch | |
him on the shoulder, arms, hands? Playfully, but with enough | |
physical contact I could maybe lead into a kiss? But we weren't even | |
holding hands yet. | |
We stopped at an intersection and waited for the light to change. | |
ALMOST ARRIVE BAKERY, NEXT BLOCK, Alphonse said. | |
The moment was now. I had a choice: kiss him, or do nothing and | |
always wonder what could have been. I grabbed him by the shoulders, | |
turned him around, and went in for the kiss. Our lips met, and I | |
felt him give in to the kiss. It lasted a few seconds before we | |
broke apart. Anxiously I looked at his face, his eyes, studying him | |
to see what he'd felt. I saw confusion, but no anger. | |
I THOUGHT YOU STRAIGHT? he said. | |
I had never once given him a hint I was into men, much less him. The | |
kiss came flat out of nowhere for Alphonse. But I saw a slight smile | |
on the corner of his lips. | |
I pulled him in and we kissed again, longer this time. ... the | |
experience was totally new and made me euphoric, my mind spinning and | |
my heart fluttering. | |
Eventually Alphonse and I resumed our walk to the bakery, as my heart | |
pounded. We grabbed our pastries and sat down at a table to talk | |
more. We didn't have much time. I looked at my wristwatch; I had to | |
catch my train in a few minutes. We stood up from our table. | |
HEY, VISIT-ME MY HOME OVER-THERE NICE, YOU CAN, he said. | |
We hugged and kissed one last time, and then I left. | |
I ran through the kiss in my head over and over again--my first | |
romantic kiss with a man. It felt nice. I enjoyed it, and I wanted | |
more. I wondered what would have happened if I hadn't had a train to | |
catch. ... I thought about what the kiss had meant. I'd known I was | |
attracted to men, but I'd only ever looked at them, never touched. I | |
didn't know whether I'd take pleasure in actual physical interaction | |
with one--until that day. I'd felt enough to know I wanted more. | |
* * * | |
I wanted to continue to explore my sexual curiosity, so I downloaded | |
Grindr and set up an account... I didn't use Grindr for very long. | |
For one, it's an app primarily used for hooking up rather than for | |
meeting and dating new people. And two, I didn't feel great about | |
using the app while actively hiding my sexuality. So I deactivated | |
my account and deleted the app from my phone. | |
# Chapter 13 | |
I found a statistic from a U.S. census program that estimated there | |
were around ten million Deaf or hard of hearing people in our | |
country, a number roughly equal to the population of the entire state | |
of Michigan. | |
How many Deaf and hard of hearing people existed on earth? The World | |
Health Organization gave my my answer: nearly 360 million people. ... | |
Put one way, there were more Deaf people on Earth than there were | |
Americans [or rather, USians]. | |
I thought about the biggest challenges that Deaf people face. An | |
obvious example, one that my mom taught me and my brothers to prepare | |
for, was discrimination. | |
I came across another important statistic, one that very few people | |
are aware of: about 90 percent of Deaf children are born to hearing | |
parents, and sometimes that Deaf child is the first Deaf person these | |
hearing parents will ever have met. Many Deaf children grow up in | |
households where they struggle to gain access to language; their | |
parents may not sign, and the speech and listening methods they try | |
with their child may not work. Due to lack of access to language, | |
these Deaf children become language deprived--which happened to my | |
father. By the time these kids hit middle or high school, their | |
language acquisition is severely delayed: they're unable to express | |
and comprehend either English or ASL as well as they should at their | |
age. This impacts them in many other ways: they struggle to | |
understand key concepts of math, science, and history; they are | |
unable to develop important basic social skills; and often their | |
emotional development is stunted. | |
# Chapter 14 | |
In the 1970s, a Deaf scholar named Dr. Tom Humphries invented a new | |
word: "audism." It meant "the notion that one is superior based o | |
one's ability to hear or behave in the manner of one who hears." | |
Audism isn't just discrimination against those who are Deaf and hard | |
of hearing. It's a belief that pervades our systems and people. It's | |
the feeling, deep in the bones and seared into the consciousness of | |
hearing people, that people who are Deaf are beneath those who can | |
hear. That we're not worthy of people's time and attention. Of | |
gaining access to language, education, information, entertainment, | |
the world. Of the right to exist. | |
One of the most common assumptions people make about Deaf people is | |
that we aren't as smart and capable as hearing people. | |
In a warped way, my being Deaf has occasionally tilted playing fields | |
in my favor. | |
# Chapter 15 | |
In our interviews, Anita would say things like: "What do you think of | |
Lacey? Is she modeling well? There seems to be an attraction | |
between you and her." | |
In actuality, sparks never flew between us; we never had a thing. | |
But by the latter half of filming the show, I had a good | |
understanding that manufactured storylines were part of how reality | |
TV shows like ANTM worked, and I played along with the Lacey | |
storyline, to an extent. | |
But when the questions turned to my romantic life in general, I | |
became more guarded in my responses. For one, all of their romantic | |
questions focused on the female gender. They asked what type of | |
woman I was attracted to, what I was looking for in my ideal woman. | |
I grew weary of ANTM portraying me as a straight person who was | |
attracted to women only. By then, I had made important progress in | |
understanding my sexual identity and knew with certainty that I was | |
not straight. Allowing ANTM to portray me that way would be a | |
harmful, damaging step backward for me, and it scared me to think | |
about that happening. I'd earned each step I'd taken thus far; I | |
didn't want to give up a single inch. | |
When I responded to these questions, I chose my words carefully. | |
Intentionally, I used neutral "they" and "them" pronouns. ASL is | |
ahead of the curve when it comes to pronoun usage--our pronouns are | |
genderless. ... When I signed these gender-neutral pronouns, I also | |
mouthed "they" and "them." | |
Ramon caught on to this and pulled me aside. | |
"Which pronouns do you prefer me to use when I interpret: they/them | |
or she/her?" he asked. | |
I told him. On the same page as me, he interpreted my responses into | |
spoken English using the gender-neutral pronouns whenever I was asked | |
about my romantic interests during interviews. | |
Eventually, one of my gender-neutral responses landed on Anita's | |
final nerve. She had a storyline to build, and I was doing her no | |
favors in her efforts. She stopped her line of questioning abruptly | |
and asked me, point blank, to repeat my answer, with female pronouns. | |
The moment felt like a test. | |
"I don't want to do that. I would prefer to use 'they' and 'them' | |
pronouns." | |
Anita looked into my eyes for a moment, searching for something more. | |
Then her eyes dropped, and with pursed lips, she accepted my refusal | |
and moved on. | |
From that point on, we spent less and less interview time on my | |
romantic life. | |
# Chapter 16 | |
[A jealous and widely followed Deaf vlogger posted faked photos of | |
the author on a gay dating app.] | |
I really didn't like the idea of coming out. Straight people never | |
declare their sexuality. So why do LGBTQ people have to? The | |
practice implies that the default sexual orientation is heterosexual, | |
and anybody that isn't has to announce their sexual identity to the | |
world. That is bullshit. | |
Unfortunately, the Deaf vlogger who'd outed me put me in a situation | |
where I felt trapped, pressed by all my friends asking about my | |
sexual identity, making me feel like I needed to say something | |
quickly. But if I was going to come out, I was determined to do it | |
on my own terms. | |
Another reason I didn't want to make a big announcement was that I | |
wasn't sure how to define my current sexual identity. That was my | |
second question: "What do I come out as?" I knew from my brief | |
encounters with men in the past that I liked men romantically. But I | |
also thought I was still into women. I'd met a Deaf woman recently, | |
and we were texting every day. In that direction, the sparks still | |
flew. ... The only thing I knew was what I /was not/, and that was | |
straight. | |
... my sexual orientation could change at any time, depending on the | |
situation and the people involved. My sexual orientation was fluid. | |
... My sexual attraction was flexible, evolving as I went on. | |
I replied to that tweet with a link to the article that explained | |
sexually fluidity. That was it. Literally no other words were in | |
the tweet. With that brief reply tweet, I officially outed myself to | |
the entire world. | |
I closed [the app] and put my phone away for a moment t pause and | |
breath. Different emotions coursed through me. One of them was | |
relief, the kind that made me literally breathe in deep and then out. | |
Ahhhhh. There was no turning back, and that felt powerfully | |
relieving. | |
# Chapter 17 | |
Today Nico is a professional DJ. He literally gets paid to play | |
music at events. He has plenty of natural rhythm and dancing | |
ability, which he uses to lead group dances at the events he deejays. | |
Despite everything--his being Deaf, society's perception of Deaf | |
people's ability to appreciate and understand music, the doubt fueled | |
by internalized ableism he has to endure from me, his own brother--he | |
achieved his dream. His example proved to me that the unlikeliest | |
feats were indeed within reach if you put your mind to it and ignored | |
all naysayers. In a way, Nico and his relentless pursuit of his | |
passion for music gave me the audacity to believe I could learn to | |
perform complicated dance routines set to music on national | |
television. | |
# Chapter 19 | |
When I came out as sexually fluid, media outlets picked up my story | |
and amplified the heck out of it. ... I was astonished and flattered | |
and, quite frankly, terrified that such a public spotlight was being | |
shined on my coming out. | |
... after those walls came down and I allowed myself to freely have | |
feelings toward guys, I realized that the emotional and physical | |
connection I could have with men was just as strong as what I'd | |
shared with women. The more I dated men, the stronger these feelings | |
became. Inversely, my feelings for women grew weaker and weaker. | |
As I continued to date more and more men, from time to time, I would | |
meet a whip-smart, wisecracking, confident Deaf woman who tugged at | |
my heart. | |
Still, even with the exception of an occasional Deaf woman that | |
attracted me, I could feel the compass needle of my romantic | |
attraction orient itself primarily toward men. | |
But there came a point when I started to ask myself: Who do I want to | |
wake up to in the morning? With whom can I experience soul-mate | |
levels of connection? As far as my sexual identity, with whom do I | |
feel most truly myself? The further I delved into my sexuality, the | |
more my answer to all those questions leaned toward "men." | |
And so my perception of my sexual identity shifted--from sexually | |
fluid to queer. | |
# Chapter 20 | |
I love question and answers during meetings when I'm pitching a | |
Deaf-centered story. The questions, often about the Deaf experience, | |
were easy to answer. I drew from my life and stories shared by my | |
Deaf peers and spoke from my heart. And every time, the listeners | |
are hooked. | |
I have no doubt that my steadfast pride in my Deaf identity is the | |
reason. I love being Deaf so much; I love everything about the | |
uniqueness of my and other Deaf people's existences. I'm fascinated | |
by it, and I want to share everything about it with other people. | |
I've found that this enthusiasm can be contagious. When I talk about | |
the deaf experience with passion, others are infected by my | |
enthusiasm. They want to know more. | |
This phenomenon isn't unique to me or to the Deaf community. I | |
believe that it happens anytime an individual embraces who they are. | |
They become confident, self-assured, and /passionate/ about their | |
identity and everything that sets them apart from other people. Just | |
then, the different qualities the person and community have--a | |
missing sense, a distinct language, a proud culture, a steadfast | |
resilience in the face of oppression stretching back for | |
millennia--become glowing marvels. From them, you can spin stories: | |
Stories that teach and inspire. | |
When differences are embraced, stories become magical. | |
author: DiMarco, Nyle, 1989- | |
detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/Nyle_DiMarco | |
LOC: HV2534.D56 D43 | |
tags: biography,book,deaf,non-fiction,queer | |
title: Deaf Utopia | |
# Tags | |
biography | |
book | |
deaf | |
non-fiction | |
queer |