The deaf community is incredibly proud. I have a lot of respect for that. But at the same time, I don't understand it. I'm extremely visually impaired, and I've never seen the same "It's not a disability!" sentiment mirrored in the blind community. Does anyone have any insight why this might be?
The Deaf (capital D) community has its own special language. There's a lot of culture that comes out of that. On the other hand, the blind community has the same languages as the rest of us.
Plus in a motor vehicle driver's world, blindness presents a much more serious problem for mobility, which makes 'the blind community' more diffuse. Blind people are, unfortunately, often relatively socially isolated.
I do suppose that makes a lot of sense. I imagine it's twofold, too: having your own language probably instills a sense of community, which is heightened by the isolation one feels from being so disconnected from so many other communities (including society at large)
Probably because in humans sight is the primary sense and hearing secondary. Deaf people face a lot of challenges, but not nearly as many as blind people (amd I say this as someone with -10 prescriptions, which is close to legal blindness without my glasses)
I think some of this is just a matter of adapting to the bodies we have (we've never had great vision), but my sister and I, who are slowly losing our sight, both agree that we'd rather go blind than go deaf.
For us, it's about the ease with which oral communication connects to others, and a deep love of music. Both of us have an easier time recognizing voices than faces, and this was true even when we were younger and our vision was mostly normal.
This isn't to say one bodily sense or one way of engaging with the world is objectively 'better' than another. I don't think that's true. I'm sure there are many people for whom their vision (or some other sense or mode of engaging with the world) is much more dear to them for their hearing, and that's not wrong, either.
> I say this as someone with -10 prescriptions, which is close to legal blindness without my glasses
Given that much of the point of the designation 'legally blind' is that the impairment is uncorrectable, this is a pretty unfortunate phrase imo, common as it is. (I have about the same level of myopia, fwiw.)
> Given that much of the point of the designation 'legally blind' is that the impairment is uncorrectable, this is a pretty unfortunate phrase imo, common as it is
Why is this unfortunate? The designation also very much refers to the severity of the impairment, not just whether it's correctable. Perhaps this depends on the country?
Because the experience of someone whose impaired vision is fully corrected gives little to no special insight into what it is like to be blind.
(If you spend years where the best vision you get is worse than, 20/200 or whatever, because you don't actually have access to adequate correction, that is actually relevant to discussions of blindness even if your vision is in principle correctable, sure.)
Blind people have to adapt their lives in ways that are just not reflected in taking off one's glasses for a moment or wearing a blindfold for a bit. And when you're as myopic as a -10, the times when you go without correction are typically momentary because not having correction is not optional for you.
At the same time, the anxiety (terror, even) of suddenly trying to navigate the world sightlessly, whether because you're a visually impaired person whose glasses have been lost or crushed or because you're a signted person wearing a blindfold for a day as an exercise, isn't really representative of everyday blind life, either.
'Legally blind without my glasses' is a phrase that at best invites inapt comparisons, and in other cases falsely suggests the authority of highly relevant firsthand experience.
It's not the biggest deal in the world. I wouldn't say it's offensive. But it's just not a very clueful thing to say when talking about blindness or talking to blind people.
Deaf ASL users have much less need to hear since their language doesn't require it. For that reason I suspect deaf folks generally find hearing less important than blind folks find seeing.
There are blind people like Daniel Kish who use echolocation to replace sight; I get the sense they're more on the difference side of the fence.