“I’m thinking in words, but I’m not hearing the words.’”
Well, sugar, you’re not supposed to hear the words unless you’re actually talking out loud.”
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You’re not supposed to hear words? Hm. Yeah, I guess it’s not out loud, but it is vocal. How else would the narrator in my head talk to/for me? (I am a more auditory than visual person. Maybe speech is just how I roll?)
Just wondering how this works. Do deaf ASL people think in sign?
Of course you think in words, but your ears aren’t going to hear them unless you vocalize the words.
“Do deaf ASL people think in sign?”
My sister was born profoundly deaf. She can read lips and she can read books. She was taught ASL when she was in a private preschool for the deaf. Her current ASL skills are probably rusty because she lives her life as a ‘non-disabled’ woman, wife and mother working as a professional health insurance enrollment specialist. She uses a CI and is an excellent driver. She and her husband of 34 years have raised three wonderful children and put them all through college. She turns 60 next year, and by that time she will have become a grandmother. As a child, she summarily rejected any notion or prescribed societal “reality” set aside for the deaf and substituted her own. She has a superior IQ and intellect. That being said, I have come to the conclude that “deaf ASL people” do not “think in” any form of sign language.