Story cover for SOME INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT BRITISH SIGN LANGUAGE by Learnsignlanguage
SOME INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT BRITISH SIGN LANGUAGE
  • WpView
    Reads 7
  • WpVote
    Votes 0
  • WpPart
    Parts 1
  • WpHistory
    Time <5 mins
  • WpView
    Reads 7
  • WpVote
    Votes 0
  • WpPart
    Parts 1
  • WpHistory
    Time <5 mins
Ongoing, First published Jul 12, 2019
World Federation for the deaf stated that there are around 70 million people all around the world who use sign language in some form or another. The best thing about British sign language for beginners is that it is very expressive. It is almost as communicative as the spoken language if not more.
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add SOME INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT BRITISH SIGN LANGUAGE to your library and receive updates
or
Content Guidelines
You may also like
You may also like
Slide 1 of 10
Silence is too loud (FINISHED) cover
Body language cover
Voice (Jacksepticeye x Deaf!Reader) cover
love is loud cover
Little strangers cover
Every Single Glance Is A Different Word cover
My Family My Life ✔️ cover
Drown (JacksepticeyeXreader) cover
Mute cover
Manan ss-At farmhouse. (Completed) cover

Silence is too loud (FINISHED)

30 parts Complete

I remember the first time I couldn't hear. I was seven and sitting in a hospital room with my panicked mother. The doctors lips were moving but no sound as far as I could tell. I turned to my mother and she was in tears as her lips moved. No words, no sound, nothing. The doctor was trying to calm me down but how do you calm down a seven year old who is deaf for the first time in his life? You can't. So of course it took a lot sugary candy and writing on white boards to communicate as best as a first grader can. It was hard on my mum, especially because my dad walked out on us four years before that. I remember as a kid, coming home and locking myself in the basement and screaming at the top of my lungs. Trying to hear something, trying to wake myself from this nightmare and then one day, I realized that this fever dream was my reality and I couldn't change it. My mum tried her hardest for me, making an effort to learn sign language with me, sending me to a deaf school and making sure I was happy. I picked up Sign language easily because I was so young but I struggled trying to communicate with others. I couldn't communicate with the rest of my family, my mum had to communicate for me until I could lip read and try to teach my family how I communicate. Nine years later and things are still tough but not as hard as they were.