Dannyg said:
I once went to a big 40th birthday party where most of the people were deaf or, if not, were able to sign. It was a very interesting and challenging experience being one of the small minority who couldn't sign.
Yes, it's a sobering experience to suddenly find yourself in the minority, and excluded from understanding what's going on. Until I learned sign (mostly forgotton now, but I expect I coud pick it up again fairly quickly), I had no idea that it was more than just a translation, and that being a language in it's own right, it brought with it issues of community and culture like any other language. I understadn that many deaf people consider themselves to have a separate culture in a way that, for example, blind people don't - because they still use English, just translated into Braille for them to read.