Silence, Love and the Kids We Know
By: Yan • Essay • 301 Words • November 12, 2009 • 1,306 Views
Essay title: Silence, Love and the Kids We Know
We as humans get so consumed in ourselves and our everyday lives that we tend to overlook what others may be struggling with inside. Hearing loss can stir up some pretty strong feelings of loneliness and abandonment from the hearing and speaking culture.
“Silence, Love and Kids I Know” by Linwood Smith is a small collection of poetry bringing to life some of the heart-wrenching feelings and emotions many children of the deaf community experience. Linwood Smith (1943-1982) who became deaf by the age of two was a teacher and counselor for children of the deaf community. This book of poetry focused on the feelings and emotions of the children he had known and taught.
Several of the poems were expressing the hardships deaf people experience when trying to express themselves to people of the hearing world. For example, “and cannot understand the foreign language of my hands”. Many of these poems also mentioned emotions of love and friendship by deaf children. These children’s feelings are no different than that of the hearing culture.
People of the deaf culture don’t