Q5 What is Sacred in Being dDeaf?
What is Sacred in Being dDeaf? Several. The first might be communication. To sign, to speak, or both? Our eyes in/and our hands, the new wires in our brains, or both? We, dDeaf people of all different stripes, might answer yes, no, and in the between. Our answers are intertwined in fantastically complex ways which, in fact, IS the dDeafhood process for every deaf and hearing impaired person on earth. We need to ask ourselves deceptively simply yet, hard questions. On a collective unconscious (metaphor) level, if there is one, the Deaf Community needs to put on New Glasses, two multi-hued prisms, to look into our deafhood/ness. We need to deeply look into our minds, hearts, and souls on what it means to be dDeaf. Ask ourselves new hard questions, now more psychological and spiritual in nature.
Other than communication, what else is sacred in being dDeaf? Our dDeaf children. The work of raising and educating of our deaf children, incarnated as The Deaf Child Within Us, needs to be deemed sacred. We need to “worship” the “diety” of the Deaf Child because it represent the best and the brightest of what we can toil FOR today and FOR in the future. The Deaf Child represents our Deaf future. Look at what our comrades fought for on the green hills of Virginia . . . for the Deaf Child, of course, however mildly scratched. The Deaf Child has grown up and is restless in tight pants. Do we feel restless, yes?
You might begin to notice that I use metaphors and archetypes, the language of mythology and religion. New Colored Glasses Named Deafhood? The Deaf Child Within Us? Yes. I revere Jung, Eliade, and Campbell because their works are what the dDeaf people really need. Their books on mythology, religion, archetypes, and the collective unconscious struck me deeply, validating my work and to persevere over many years in sanctifying the dDeaf Experience through the use of creative mythology. We need to sanctify our Deaf Experience and make it holy.
The Deaf Community is “young” as compared with other current communities and those in the past. Most, if not all, of those cultures have stories justifying their existences. Those stories sprung out of their lives and their histories. Those stories are, in fact, the religions the people on earth developed for the sake of their souls, or sanity. Those stories are held sacred, close to our hearts and minds. Where are those for the dDeaf? The DC (deaf children, deaf culture, deaf community) HAS COME OF AGE. Rumbles have been felt in the deaf communities right now, interpreting deaf history, now readily available with scores of books, and producing much more artistic metaphors. The Sacred Metaphor is what dDeaf people need.
What else is sacred in being dDeaf? Our History written in a Book in our Language to slap Audism right into its’ face. We need to preserve and use our tragic and beautiful histories of being dDeaf to cry out for justice on the ongoing treatment humanity has had toward us and our deaf children. We will eventually realize everything being (with the) dDeaf is sacred. Everything on our circular planet under our circular sun is sacred. Look around yourself and find many things sacred in your spiritual journeys. Go into your diverse lives happy to be alive, being dDeaf. Explore your Deafhood. The road in front of you, my Deaf Child, is fraught with some potholes but with many glorious stretches out to the rising sun, the dawn of a new era for us all.