Author: Karen Putz

  • Marlee Matlin– Still Going Strong

    It was 1986 when Marlee Matlin trotted up to the stage to accept an Oscar for her performance in Children of a Lesser God. She was the youngest performer to receive an Academy Award. It was just two years after I had become profoundly deaf and was first introduced to American Sign Language. I understood almost nothing of Marlee’s signing in the film and relied on the captioning.

    Today, after twenty years of signing, I understand a heck of a lot more and I don’t have to ask for repetition on a frequent basis anymore. Looking back, I remember the comments that surrounded Marlee, the praise/disdain of her communication style. Whether she used her voice, sign or both, she couldn’t escape being criticized when in the spotlight. I always thought it was crazy when people would comment on communication mode and forget the accomplishment or the person behind it.

    Today, the supposed “one-shot wonder” has had an acting career that spans twenty years with numerous movies, sit-coms, and guest appearances. She has produced books, been involved with several charities and tonight, she will host the “Extreme Home Makeover” in her second appearance.

    And she managed to find time to have four kids!

    Today’s Chicago Tribune posted an article: Matlin Gets The Last Laugh.

    Update:
    I found myself enjoying the Extreme Makeover Show. Marlee hosted the show with a lot of enthusiam and it was great to see such a deserving family reap so much from a new home. The best part– knowing that the son and father finally had a way to communicate on a daily basis.

  • Bernard Bragg Honored as “Father of Deaf Theatre”

    On Saturday, September 9, 2006, Bernard Bragg, one of the founders of the National Theatre of the Deaf, was honored as “The Father of Deaf Theatre” at Oakton Community College in Illinois. The event was sponsored by the International Center on Deafness and the Arts.

    CBS News Anchor, John Davis, was the emcee of this event. The Traveling Hands Troupe, a group of deaf, hard of hearing and hearing dancers began the event with a dance routine.

    In honor of Bragg’s mime career as “The Quiet Man”, Jonalee Folerynski performed a mime story of Goldilocks and the Three Bears that certainly didn’t need any voice interpretation for those not familiar with American Sign Language. Other performers included Michael Schwartz, Kyle Littlepage, Liz Tannebaum, Mike Stark, Gina Matzkin, and Melanie Kaplan.

    One of the most memorable skits of the night was CJ Jones’ comedy routine. Deafinitly a routine that’ll make you laugh your butt off. Heck, just one look at his publicity picture will make you chuckle:

    One by one, Bragg’s protege’s took the stage to demonstrate the skills that Bragg instilled in them through workshops and camps. One by one, they thanked him for his guidance and expertise over the years. Bragg was actually speechless for a very short time, but he quickly bounced back with an eloquent speech and a “thank you from the bottom of my heart.”

  • No, I Just Haf A Cowd, Dank You

    Yesterday, I stopped in at the bank that I always patronize and got in line behind a new teller. As I was waiting, I tallied up the checks that I wanted to deposit and didn’t realize that it was suddenly my turn. The teller must have said something, as I noticed her gazing at me with a puzzled expression.

    Most of the time, I will offer an explanation to people with a simple, “I didn’t hear what you said. I’m deaf.”

    But yesterday wasn’t a nicey-nice day. I was in a hurry to head out of the bank and cranky as heck. I was craving some chocolate Sno Caps to stave off the major PMS symptoms that were gnawing at me. Or perhaps some Fannie May… Or Godiva chocolate…

    New Teller Gal asked me a question and I thought she asked me how I wanted my money. “Twenties would be fine.” I responded. She actually laughed and repeated her original question, which turned out to be, “Do you have any ID?”

    Any other day, I would have explained, “I’m deaf,” but yesterday, the PMS beast inside of me growled. “I’ve been a customer for almost ten years and I’ve submitted a check deposit slip with my name and address on it. My purse is in the car and the hubby is waiting outside. Can you process this without ID?”

    Apparently my speech isn’t crystal clear. She gazed at me and suddenly asked, “Are you sick?”

    There were several other customers behind me. Ahem, is this the kind of question you ask customers? I quickly debated whether I was going to give her an explanation.

    No dearie. What you hear is a result of several years of speech therapy and diminished hearing. Very diminished hearing, my dear. As in deaf.

    Hmmm, I could add a little more nasality on the end and finish the sentence with a florish…

    ….deeaaaafffff.

    I could sit back and watch her take a few IQ points off if I miss any more questions that she fires off…

    Instead, I smile sweetly and say, “Oh yeah, I have a nasty cold.”

    And I remember to wipe my nose just before I hand her the pen back.

  • It’s No B.S. Mom, I Love You Too!

    I grew up in a family with five generations of hearing loss. My Great-Grandmother, Grandmother, my mom and all of her siblings were deaf or hard of hearing and none of them knew sign language. All of my siblings have hearing loss as well as my children and one niece.

    My mother’s hearing began to decline in her twenties. All of my brothers and sisters were born hearing and one by one, we each lost our hearing. My oldest sister was three years old when she fell, hit her head and instantly became profoundly deaf. My parents sent her off to live with my aunt and she attended Central Institute for the Deaf, an oral school. My brother Dennis was 36 years old when a wooden beam fell on him at work and he woke up in the hospital two days later with a severe hearing loss. My sister Jeanie began to lose hearing in her 20’s and just last summer, she slipped on a rug and became profoundly deaf. My brother Kenny has just recently began to wear hearing aids for a mild loss that was caused from a fall while barefooting.

    I came along 10 years after the last sibling was born. When I was five, I was diagnosed with a moderate to severe hearing loss. I muddled along in school, receiving a hearing aid in 4th grade and speech therapy. Because I “functioned” so well and was able to keep up my grades, I was pretty much lost in the system. Teachers lavished praise on the “girl with the hearing loss.” My loneliness was often overlooked.

    My life stayed this way all through my school years. I made friends with a select few who could look beyond my hearing loss. In high school, I met another girl, Shawn, who also wore hearing aids and we became fast friends. We each shared the horror of dealing with group situations and the anxiety that came with it. We learned to adapt so well that some of our friends had no clue that we wore hearing aids.  (I never wore my hearing outside of school or during the summer.) Of course, we missed out on the punch lines of many jokes while laughing along with the others.

    When I began attending classes at the local community college, I started to fear that I had no future ahead of me. I had interviewed for several jobs, but no one had the courage to hire me or deal with my inability to use the phone. I took one job as a dishwasher at a local restaurant and earned money mostly by babysitting. The future began to look pretty bleak. The few guys that I dated weren’t good marriage prospects. I began to wonder just where I was headed.

    On a whim, I decided to transfer to a college that had a program for deaf and hard of hearing persons. My mother reluctantly supported my decision. She was afraid to see her last baby go off to the great unknown. How in the world would I cope at a university when I could barely get by at the community college?

    Just before going off to college, I was water skiing on my bare feet and I turned to cross the wake. I fell hard, and for the next few days, I kept feeling like I had water in my ear. I had become profoundly deaf.

    Going off to college turned out to be a blessing. At first, it was quite a culture shock. I was living on a co-ed floor with people who signed so fast that it was intimidating. Little by little, I was transformed. Slowly, I was introduced to a Deaf life to the point it felt like “coming home.” I was in a world where hearing didn’t matter. It was a world where, if I missed the punch line of a joke, someone would kindly sign it over again until I could join in the laughter. Of course, occasionally I encountered: “Sorry, train gone!”

    My mother and siblings began to see a new person blossom in front of them. I introduced them to a TTY, and a new, accessible world began to open for them. My mom admitted that she wished she had known more about sign language while we were growing up so that we could have had access to interpreters.

    When my oldest son became deaf, my mom began to ask how to sign certain things. It made me smile to see my 70-year old mom signing to my kids. One of her favorite signs was the sign for “I love you,” which is made with the thumb, forefinger and pinky finger extended and the two middle fingers bent downward.

    Every time we got into the van to leave to go home, Mom would flash her “I love you” sign. There was only one problem though…

    Mom would occasionally forget and leave the thumb bent inward, which turned the sign into “B.S.”

    It is quite a picture to see Mom flashing her “B.S.” sign when we are pulling out of the driveway. It always puts a smile on my face.

    It’s no B.S., Mom. I love you too!

  • Meet Henry Kisor–Pilot and Author

    For the last two years, I’ve been contributing articles to the Hands & Voices Communicator. I’m always looking for deaf and hard of hearing people with interesting jobs.

    About a year ago, I came across Henry Kisor, a literary reviewer for the Chicago Sun Times. I contacted him and asked if we could meet so I could do an article. Henry was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for Criticism in 1981 and the author of several books, including “What’s That Pig Outdoors, A Memoir of Deafness.”

    We met for lunch and Henry shared tales about his life’s adventures. Henry took a train trip across America, interviewing passengers by lipreading, and the result was the book:
    Zephyr: Tracking a Dream Across America.

    A midlife crisis had Henry pursuing his dream of flying (a dream that he thought he couldn’t accomplish because he was deaf) and he began to take flying lessons. He obtained his pilot’s license and began to do some research about flying. A pilot by the name of Cal Rodgers, came up during his research and he discoverd that Rodgers was hard of hearing. Henry purchased a small plane and decided to take a trip across America, similar to the trip that Cal Rodgers took in the early 1900’s. He penned the tales of his adventure in this book: Flight of the Gin Fizz. I enjoyed this book so much that I wrote a review: Epinions: Flight of the Gin Fizz.

    Henry joined the International Deaf Pilots Association and participated in several fly-ins around the U.S. He also wrote three mystery novels and a children’s book. Henry recently retired from 38 years of newspaper writing and is working on another book.

    You can read the full Hands & Voices article here: “Mystery Author Unveiled: Meet Henry Kisor.”

  • Labor Day Bash

    We had a Labor Day Bash yesterday, with a handful of deaf and hard of hearing friends, food and lots of conversation.

    That morning, the hubby and I were preparing the food. We had hot dogs, brats and a new kind of polish sausage that we’ve never tried before. I picked up the food from Bobaks, a store that has a reputation for good sausage. The hubby was being very helpful and he cut open the polish sausage from the package, put it in a pan and tossed it in the oven. We both commented on the interesting stripes that were on the outside of the sausage, but we didn’t give it another thought.

    One of the guys, John Maloney bit into the first sausage and instantly discovered that the sausage was wrapped in plastic.

    Apparently the stripes were supposed to alert us to the fact that the plastic casing was supposed to come off before cooking.

    Oops.

    Oh well. Sometimes you just gotta laugh.

  • Epinions– Why I Still Hang Out There

    I’ve been writing for Epinions.com for six years now and I want to take a moment to share this site here. Epinions covers thousands of reviews of every imaginable product and you will find un-biased reviews by a variety of consumers. You will find information about which vacuums actually suck (ahem, pun intended), movies to avoid, and which strollers are good for two kiddos.

    I started writing there as a way to make money. Back in the early days of Epinions, one could easily make a grand per year. Today, free-flowing money has dwindled to a trickle, but I still enjoy the community there. My articles have received an average of 300 hits per review, and my review of a trampoline has racked up thousands of hits.

    So the next time you’re looking for a new gizmo, check out the product reviews at Epinions before you fork over the money.

  • Attitude!

    I received this little ditty in my email box yesterday and I just had to share it:

    ATTITUDE
    by Charles Swindoll

    “The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on my life.
    Attitude, to me, is more important than facts.
    It is more important than the past, than education, than money, than circumstances, than failures, than successes, than what other people think or say or do.
    It is more important than appearance, giftedness or skill.
    It will make or break a company … a church … a home.
    The remarkable thing is we have a choice every day regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day.
    We cannot change our past … we cannot change the fact that people will act in a certain way.
    We cannot change the inevitable.
    The only thing we can do is play on the string we have, and that is our attitude …
    I am convinced that life is ten percent what happens to me and ninety percent how I react to it.
    And so it is with you … we are in charge of our attitudes.”

  • Teaching Babies to Sign

    In my email box today, I received a link to the story, “Baby Sign Language–Gimmick or Early Voice?” and of course, I wanted to share a thought. I work with families with children who are deaf and hard of hearing, but I taught two courses in Sign With Your Baby at a local hospital with babies who had normal hearing.

    The whole point of teaching sign to babies is not about raising IQ levels or smarter babies, it’s about communicating. It’s about giving little ones the tools to be able to tell Mom or Dad that they’re hungry, that they want to play, that they want some juice, and so on. Infants have control of their hands before the natural development of speech, so they are able to develop signs at an early age. This early communication can be visually measured and seen, which gets everyone so excited about the budding genius before them.

    So if you’ve decided to teach sign to your little one, kick back and enjoy the learning process together. American Sign Language is the fourth most common language in the world. Have fun with it.

  • Woke up a year older…

    I turned 41 today. What a strange age. I wasn’t happy turning 40 last year– I was bummed at leaving my thirties behind. 40 sounds so mature, so…responsible. 41 is just nine years away from 50. And 50 is just a drop away from 60, which is totally mature and you sure better be responsible by that point!

    I swore that I was going to stay in bed all day and watch tv, which is a rare treat. So I took in all my landscaping and cooking shows and by noon, I was itching to do something else.

    For some reason, I headed out to the compost pile and started working on a new section in the flower garden. I pulled weeds, mixed up compost with peat and spread it around. Everything looked pretty good after a few hours. The hubby and I worked on another section near the side of the house, which was overgrown with clover and thistle. Our neighbor’s house is smack next to this area and I’m sure they appreciated seeing the hostas instead of the the thistle. I even experienced a Zen moment while taking a break and sitting in the swing and taking in the flowers. I told the hubby, “We need more moments like this…”

    We ordered pizza tonight and I went for a bike ride with the kids– the first time that I actually used the bike this summer.

    Definitely a productive day– maybe 41 isn’t so bad after all.