Thursday, December 25, 2008

O Night Divine

It’s Christmas, a time when almost all bloggers feel compelled to share a Christmas story. I usually try to avoid orthodox behaviors, but I’ve got Santa looking over my shoulder here, so today I’ll go mainstream.

This story took place three years ago, a few days after Thanksgiving. My brother Bob was getting married at his house on the near north side of Chicago. My family lives in Cary, about 40 miles northwest of the city. To avoid the drive and eradicate global warming, Karina and I decided to take a commuter train downtown, walk five blocks through the Loop, and take the subway to my brother’s neighborhood. We thought it’d be nice for the kids to see the city’s towering Christmas tree on Daley Plaza and take in the window displays at what was then still Marshall Field’s (now it’s Macy’s, a fact few Chicagoans acknowledge).

So we did this, and it was in fact delightful. The tree was as tall and beautiful as we remembered it from our childhood, and the kids squirmed their way through the crowds huddled at Field’s windows, getting their noses up close to the glass. Then we went over to the subway entrance and walked down the long flight of stairs.

As we slowly descended, Karina and I chatted with each other in sign language. Like many late-deafened people, I have to pay close attention to understand signs and I become oblivious to everything else in the surroundings. About halfway down, Karina motioned me to look in the direction we were heading.

There at the bottom of the steps stood a black man, like an apparition, looking directly at us. He wore a frayed brown fedora and a rumpled tweed sports coat several sizes too big, a person obviously down on his luck. He continued to look at us intently as we descended. Then with hesitance he finger spelled the words “Bill…Bill Graham.”

Startled, I cautiously signed “Yes.” Only gradually did I realize that I knew this person. I knew this person finger spelling my name. He smiled and with big signs and voice said “Good to see you.” “Hi,” I signed weakly, trying to place him and remember his name. He saved me by saying “Morris.” He finger spelled it as well.

Morris, I thought to myself….Morris…How do I know him? Then came the dawn of recognition: “Morris!” I shouted. “Morris Haynes!”

Morris had been in my very first sign language class at the Chicago Hearing Society almost 30 years ago. A hearing person, he took the class because he had a deaf cousin.

We shook hands warmly, and I introduced him to my wife and kids. He smiled broadly.

“This is wonderful,” he said, and with a waggle of his index finger signed: “Where are you going?”

I told him about my brother’s wedding, and he again said: “This is wonderful.”

Then he paused a moment in thought.

“I would like to sing your children a song,” he said finally.

I looked at Karina, who nodded. “Okay,” I said.

Morris led us over to a post where a cigar box lay on the platform. He positioned himself next to it and told the kids to stand right in front of him. Then he began to sing. It happened to be one of my favorite Christmas songs, “O Holy Night.”

Morris looked at my kids while he sang, his eyes never leaving their faces, his voice echoing off the tunnel walls. “….The stars are brightly shining…..A thrill of hope….For yonder breaks…..O hear the angels voices!.....O night divine….Led by the light……He knows our need……Behold your king!....”

 We could hear the train coming from down the track. In a minute or so we would be on our way.

“O HEAR the angels VOIces! Oh night divine….”

The train roared closer, building to a crescendo. Morris sang louder. 

“O NIGHTTT! O HOly NIGHTTT! O NIGHT DIVINNNEEEE!”

As he finished the train rolled into the station, like it was carefully planned.

Morris said to our kids: “Did you like it?” They nodded.

“That was beautiful,” Karina said, signing.

“Thank you,” I signed.

Awkwardly, I took out my wallet. I removed a ten dollar bill and placed it in his box.

“Thank you,” I signed again, and we hugged.

“Have a merry Christmas,” he said to me, and then to my family.

“Merry Christmas,” I said, as I started to walk away. “You take care.”

“Merry Christmas, Bill.”

 “I hope to see you again.”

“Merry Christmas,” he said.

Karina and the kids waved me onto the train. I boarded and stood at the door looking out. Morris had moved to another area of the platform. As he positioned his box, our train began to move and quickly gathered speed. Soon we would be at my brother’s wedding.

I turned to Karina and she signed: “He has a really beautiful baritone voice.”

“That was wonderful,” I signed. “Wonderful.”

Morris will probably never know how special his song was. Or that he’s been in my heart on Christmas ever since, his voice resounding in the tunnel as that train approached the station.

Merry Christmas, Morris. Merry Christmas. I hope you’re well.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Catch Me if You Can

I travel a lot because I live in Chicago and my job is in Seattle. That’s a long story that friends already know and I’m not inclined today to explain it to others-who-really-don’t-care-but-want-to-know-anyway. I’ll leave that stirring drama of heartbreak and triumph for another blog. The blog I’m writing today is far less ambitious, and therefore very much like myself. It’s about having bilateral cochlear implants and going through airport security scanners.

 

As all c. i. users know, when they walk through airport scanners they have a terrific opportunity to educate TSA employees and travelers waiting in line with their shoes off. When the guy with the badge peers at you curiously and says: “What’s that on your head?” you should respond “It’s a cochlear implant” and explain in appropriate detail how the device works and how it benefits you. Then the badge says, “That’s really great. But you can’t take that can of Red Bull through, sir. You’ll have to leave it here.”

 

Well, I’m a lousy implant evangelist. I just want to get through the scanners without a hassle after the mind-numbing cattle drive to get there. With my first c. i. this is no problem. My hair is long enough to cover most of the headpiece and I don't use a T-mic, so the c. i. looks no more than an outsized hearing aid or Bluetooth gadget.  Plus, it has never activated a scanner's alarm. Typically I get through without breaking stride or attracting attention. I then grab my shoes, my keys, my wallet, and other terrorist threats from the portable bin and high-tail it to the terminal. Gate C-26 lounge here I come. Yesss!

 

Now I have a second c. i.; this one has a T-mic that hangs down at a slightly odd angle from my ear. After a year, I still don’t feel comfortable wearing it in tandem with my golden oldie. Part of the reason is that I haven’t gotten notable benefits from C. I. No. 2 yet (another epic blog there…be patient, my friends). So functionally the c. i. is more like jewelry than a life-changing hearing apparatus. And, much to my wife’s distress, I’m not big on jewelry. I’d feel uncomfortable with a flashy lapel pin, cufflinks, or nose ring, too. You can take the boy out of the South Side of Chicago, but you can’t take....etc. etc. It’s true.

 

Another reason I’m uncomfortable going through security two c. i.'s at once is that my bilateral condition seems to capture the fascination of the whole airport community. The first time I did this on a trip the implant set off the scanner and two or three badges converged on me with intent to pat down, looking directly at my head. With forbearance, I explained to them the kind of heat my head was packing. Perhaps they were having simultaneous bad hair days but none of them smiled and said “That’s really great.” Instead, with Buster Keaton miens and barely perceptible nods they sent me on my way. Same to you, guys. Wait’ll you become deaf.

 

Anyway, now when I fly I take off my second c. i. as I approach the scanner. I put it in the bin with my shoes, my keys, my wallet, and my Blackberry, and let it ride on the conveyer belt to the place of safety. Meanwhile I walk through the scanner wearing only one c. i., as I have for more than a decade. The badge looks at me dispassionately, checks my ticket, and motions me through. And that’s it: I’m free to gather up all my stuff and head to Gate C-26, unmolested.

 

As I walk down the terminal reattaching my second c. i., I contemplate wearing both c. i.’s through the scanner next time. And if I get to the other side without setting off a convocation of badges, I’ll very likely say to myself: “That’s really great.”

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Deaf Driving

Tony’s cheerleading team did great the second day of the competition and they finished 0.07 of a point behind the team that was Grand Champion. That point spread looks very Bond-ian, and Tony certainly was surrounded by enough girls to make the connection relevant. Watching cheerleader girls fawn over him every practice and competition makes me wonder what my life might have been like if I’d been a cheerleader instead of a dugout/bench/court rat. Maybe I’d be the highest late-deafened roller in Monte Carlo right now or get to use cool weapons. Or maybe I’d be dead. Hmmm. I guess baseball, basketball, and tennis had upsides, too.

The trip to Indianapolis turned out better than I expected. I car pooled with another Cheer Fusion mom…I mean “a” Cheer Fusion mom…which in hindsight was pretty smart. Although I’m functionally deaf in conversations with multiple hearing people, I can handle most 1:1 conversations pretty well. Plus I drive a hybrid that is pretty quiet unless there are two relentlessly noisy cheer children in the back seat, which there were, but let’s not quibble. It was still a better situation than five cheer moms talking fast in a restaurant.

Indianapolis is four hours from the Chicago suburb where I live. I can’t consistently understand a passenger without some lip-reading, so for much of the drive my head was at a 90 degree angle and I wandered between the lane divider and the shoulder at over 70 mph. And, oh yes, I occasionally checked and sent messages on my Blackberry to make things a tad more challenging. (My equal rights statement to bad-driving cell phone users.) With two kids in the back seat, I should have been arrested, but hey, that’s just how deaf people drive. Even late-deafened people can get the hang of it if they’re foolish enough to work at it.

Stephanie, the cheer mom who bravely accompanied me, is a lawyer, and when we left her driveway I thought the trip would be a conversation disaster. She talks fast and tends to turn away when she finishes her remarks. I had to educate her about my needs—namely, talk s-l-o-w and look at me. I’ve been in this situation a zillion times and half a zillion times the outcome has been a bust despite my best efforts. Fast talkers tend to remain fast talkers even at gunpoint.

By the time we were ten miles into the drive I probably had told Stephanie to please slow down maybe five times, which averages to approximately 35 please-slow-downs per hour or about 140 please-slow-downs to Indianapolis. But Stephanie caught on better than many people I’ve known, and by the Indiana border we were doing fairly well. So were the kids, since she had provided melatonin pills to help them fall asleep. Tony never had one before, and he quickly conked out. Veronica, Stephanie’s daughter, had apparently developed some immunity to the pills as she only briefly went silent.

In any case, Stephanie and I had a really nice discussion for 3-plus hours. I learned more about the Cheer Fusion program than I had in the last ten months combined. I learned about the various conflicts and intrigues among the moms, which was worth the price of gas right there. For example, one mom is a real pain-in-the-ass and wants to start her own gym and bring the coaches with her. That’s good information to have if there’s an IPO. I also learned the names of a lot of the other cheer moms and their daughters. And I learned a lot about Stephanie and her family.

After we arrived in Indianapolis I went out to dinner with Stephanie and another cheer mom and her daughters. They mimicked Stephanie’s way of interacting with me, and so I got to know them, too. The rest of the weekend I periodically hung around with Stephanie and got to know other moms and even one dad who actually showed up on his own volition. All of this made me feel more a part of the dysfunctional Cheer Fusion family and I only read half of my New Yorker magazine while I sat in the stands over the two days and 12 hours of competition. They don’t have dirt about pain-in-the-ass cheer moms in the New Yorker. But the cheer mom grapevine does.

So when’s the next big meet with a long drive? I want to car pool again.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Cheer Mania

I’m here in Indianapolis at a cheerleading competition with my son Tony. Tony, 10, is a cheerleader for Cheer Fusion, a cutting edge program that costs a lot and involves sacrificing your life to driving and meets. There are 52 teams here with over 200 individual squads. Every so often I take off one of my cochlear implants to stop the ringing in my head. Fortunately most of the cheerleaders are girls and I don’t hear high frequency sounds very well. But some of the parent groups, including ours, use thunder bats to assist their lungs when the team comes out and then it’s like a rock concert. 

 

My daughter Eva, 12, is also a Cheer Fusion cheerleader, one level higher than Tony, but she’s back in Chicago this time for a school cheer competition. So it’s just me and the boy at this two-day spectacular in the Indianapolis Convention Center. The convention center is downtown and everything costs a fortune: parking is $50, in-room Internet goes for $10, orange juice costs $4….and no disabled discounts. If the cheer program itself doesn’t break you, the meets will.

 

We may be the only father-and-son tandem on site. I know we are the only father-with-bilateral-implants-and-son tandem here. And I’m rotten with background noise….I mean really rotten, maybe in the lower 10 percentile among c. i. users. With the thunder bats going, verbal communication is pretty much impossible. I have magazines along to ease my pain.

 

I haven’t missed a meet all year. I plan out-of-town business trips around meets so I’ll be there. The meets are full-day events--sometimes two days like this one—and I often sit for six hours to watch my kids perform for two minutes. I’m usually with my wife who I can talk with in sign, but we tend to run out of things to say to each other after the fourth or fifth hour. This weekend I have a heckuva lot more communication down time to burn.

 

But this is one of those father-son bonding opportunities. My boy, truth be told, communicates mostly with my wife. He doesn’t know many signs—an outcome of the very common signing-dad-with-implant-signing-wife-with-hearing conflict—and for the last year he (and the rest of the family) have been increasingly frustrated because I continue to practice with my second c. i. singly and I’m not doing very well with it. So it’s good for me to go out on dates with Tony when there’s no recourse but to talk to me. I know I should do this more often, just so it isn’t a cheerleading meet every time.

 

Ooops, time to end this blog and wake him up. Get him dressed, eat breakfast, check out of the hotel, and then onward to the big second day of competition. After Day 1, his team is in first place among 26 others in his division so they have a shot at Grand Champion. He doesn’t care if he wins or loses (an attitude I wish could be preserved in amber), but I’ll be thrilled if they do. I’m more competitive than he is, and I want my money’s worth after 12 hours of sitting and hundreds of dollars of Indianapolis. And oh yes, those thunder bats. I’ll hear them in my electrodes for a week or more.  

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Once More Unto the Breach

A lobby half full of ALDAns stretched out before me. Stiffen the sinews, Bill, conjure up the blood. Diguise fair nature….No, no, this isn’t war. Relax. Deep breath. ALDA conference. Karaoke. Think fun. 

But 15 years away from ALDA had eroded my composure. Did I really want to plunge into the pool again? What if the water was cold? I glanced quickly around  but didn’t see anyone I knew for certain. There were a few faces I vaguely recognized, like indistinct, lingering images of a dream. But I couldn’t attach names to the faces, and I didn’t want to stop and guess. With Vaughn close behind, I strode briskly towards the reservations desk. 

I felt relief when I got to the counter. I've stayed in a lot of hotels over the years and know the check-in routine by rote: "Graham; GRAham; yes, William; four nights, (give credit card), (sign slip), one key is fine, where do I go?, thank you." Piece of cake, even if the clerk has an impenetrable accent. This clerk seemed a bit uneasy to communicate with me, maybe because with two c.i.'s attached to my head I was obviously one of t-h-e-m. I saw a card with the fingerspelling alphabet on the desk before him and playfully said “Good luck with that!” to which he smiled. I then reflected that his likely slowness in fingerspelling a word would actually be a perfect pace for many ALDAns, not necessarily excluding me. 

Before I got to "where do I go?" I felt a tap on the shoulder. I turned warily to see who was tapping and...Phil Bravin!...Phil!...PHIL!!...I sprung forward and gave him a big hug, Deaf style. “WHAT ARE YOU DOING HERE!?” I said-and-signed in disbelief. Phil fails the litmus test of late-deafness by a country mile. He is what people call strong Deaf, from a multigenerational-ASL-forever Deaf family. Not strong ALDA at all. So why was he at ALDAcon? Then I remembered Phil had become a consultant for CSDVRS, one of the video-relay titans, which had an exhibit booth at the conference. His crafty-fox grin broke into a hearty chuckle.

Phil and I go way back, all the way back to my ALDA heyday, when dinosaurs ruled the Earth. We served many years together on the Gallaudet Board of Trustees--he was board Chair; I, an acolyte--and all the years he was there we had these little bowls of M&Ms around the boardroom table during afternoon sessions. After he left the board, the M&Ms unexpectedly left too. I mourned both losses. 

We hadn't totally lost touch: He returned to Gallaudet occasionally while I was still on the board, and he always sends me his annual Christmas letter, which becomes longer every year as his extended family multiplies. (Each letter includes a Bravin family photo, now possible only with a fisheye lens.) Although we had our differences about what happened at Gallaudet two years ago, my respect and affection for Strong D Phil has never wavered. So when I saw him there at the Doubletree, I broke into a slaphappy smile that utterly demolished my unease about attending ALDAcon.

"Sir, the elevator is behind you." Still smiling, I looked at the desk clerk and said: "Thanks!" Suddenly that lobby of conference-goers looked a helluva lot more inviting. Sweetheart, get me rewrite: little d Bill has landed.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Return to ALDAcon

Three weeks ago I attended my first full ALDAcon in 15 years. Although I had taken part in several committees planning the Con, I felt uneasy about going to it. I had never attended a Con as a normal human being, only as a leader or a keynote speaker. When you lead or keynote, people expect you to have super powers that can save the day or at least a plenary luncheon. You always have to act like you know what you’re doing or saying, even when you don’t. But as a late-deafened adult, I excel at that sort of bluffing, and I like to do things I am good at. Leading or speaking gives me an opportunity to deploy my special skills, not to mention satisfy my lifelong need to be the center of attention.

But as ALDAcon 2008 bore down on me, with growing anxiety I realized that I had no role to slip into other than conference-goer. Oh sure, I was co-presenter in one plenary session, but I still had more than 25 other hours to fill. I’m just not the kind of person who goes to conferences without a predetermined role. Conferences cost a lot of money, for one thing, and--perhaps because I spend so much time on the margins of hearing society--I’m comfortable being a loner. Attend conferences? I’d rather sit through six-hour cheerleading meets, high in the stands far from the crowd, doing a crossword puzzle while waiting for my kids to perform their two-minute routines. Or so I told myself.

My friend Vaughn came in from California for the Con. He stayed at our house on Tuesday, the day before the conference began. Vaughn hadn’t been to a Con in almost as long as I hadn’t, and it took extensive goading to get him to come.

Now if you know anything about Vaughn, you know that this fellow loves to golf. On any given day, he’ll happily golf till the cows come home and are asleep in the barn. Since I live on a golf course it was predictable that I’d suggest we play golf on Wednesday, even though it was 45 degrees outside. That’s just common hospitality, but in truth it was also a conscious effort on my part to get to the Con a little later than planned and chip off a few hours of all that conference downtime that awaited me.

Before I left home for the Con, I confessed to Karina that I really didn’t feel like going. She stifled a sigh and gave a semi-exasperated nod. After 18 years of marriage it’s fair to say she knows me and my cold feet well, so her "Oh c’mon, Guillermo" demeanor was like a reassuring hug and helped propel me out the door. Maybe it wouldn’t be so bad.

Vaughn and I took a commuter train downtown, about a 65-minute trip. He has a cochlear implant and I have two, but I couldn’t understand much he was saying on the noisy train. So by the second station I had my nose in a magazine and he was playing with his sacred iPhone. Soon enough we were downtown and in a cab on our way to the Doubletree Hotel, the site of the Con.

When we got to the hotel, my angst returned as if on cue. I saw people in the lobby signing badly together or straining forward with obvious difficulty towards the person talking to them. These were ALDAns. No doubt about it. What now?

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Curse of the Volunteer

I wake up early and stare at the ceiling a lot more these days. I haven't asked my doctor yet but I know exactly what ails me: I'm an ALDAcon volunteer.

Each morning the ceiling asks me the same questions: "Why are you doing this, Graham?" "Don't you know better by now?" "What nonsense will you attempt today?" "When will this stop?" "Do you know where your family is?"

And I stare some more.

A long time ago, before I grew up (or thought I had), I was an ALDA slave. 100 percent chattle, my mind and body owned by the Big A. My days went like this: wake up, ALDA; walk dog, ALDA; red light, ALDA; commuter train, ALDA; boss not looking, ALDA; wife on phone, ALDA; walk dog, ALDA; can’t sleep, ALDA. And so on, and so forth.

But that was 20 years ago, when my relative youthfulness and unregulated lifestyle could explain away my blind obsession, my unbridled zeal, my feverish delusions about ALDA. Now I’m older and have a family, a working stiff with single-minded focus on a 529 college-savings plan and retirement. Then two months ago, in a moment of astonishing madness, I volunteered for ALDAcon. Why get older if you don’t get wiser?

There's no mistaking it: I'm once more under the spell of the dreaded and always disabling Curse of the Volunteer. The signs are all too familiar: Do a bit of work for one ALDAcon committee (Sponsorship), notice a point of intersection with another (PR), and gradually get pulled in deeper (Scholarship) and deeper (Program) and deeper (Planning) until there you are flat on your back, contemplating the bedroom ceiling. It's deja voodoo all over again.

And I see the curse all about me, vivid, alarming. Kathy does IM jigs around her day job, Carolyn scours through the ALDAcon policy manual for answers to obscure questions, Kathryn fixates on ALDA values in long rambling emails, Miguel stays up well beyond bedtime his Blackberry buzzing uncontrollably...And just as sleep finally descends in the Eastern and Central time zones, Christine checks in from Seattle with a laundry list of talking points that can keep you up all night if you read through them all. So you do.

The curse! The curse! I stifle the urge to scream. Then, I scream. The delirium builds each day: Karina snaps her finger, no response; my kids float in a fog around me; deadlines at work loom and pass unnoticed...I must break this spell, I must!

On a night when the Moon is waning, I take a blood root and throw it onto the doorstep of Mary Clark, the fiend who asked me to volunteer for ALDAcon. And I chant: “This spell on me I return to thee, To thee who hast so ill-asked me. So might it be.” I improvise with a sign of the cross and some yoga asanas, and then leave. Free at last. Again.

After I get home, I wander with relief to my formerly cursed computer and log on. But there--at the top of the queue--is an email from Lois, chair of the Sponsorship Committee, musing on who to approach next: "CTIA, AOL and A T & T - up for grabs!" Hypnotically, I hit the Reply button and type: "CTIA...maybe I can do that one." No, Graham, don't. GET...A...GRIP! Don't! Don't! But my hand moves robotically to the mouse and I slowly move the cursor until it hovers over Send...and...and...and...click! Auggghhhhh!

I'll try candles, garlic, and wolfbane next.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Bilateral Man

I received my first cochlear implant in 1995. I think a lot of people were surprised. Throughout my ALDA "career" I had tried to convey that being deafened is okay, despite the functional difficulties and psychological wham-bam that losing one's hearing as an adult comprise. Getting an implant seemed a change in course.

But there is nothing sinful about hearing sounds or words (oh, sweet Jesus...). Over the years, I'd watched people with old and with new CI technology come to ALDAcon. I noticed that the folks with the newer CI models generally did a lot less bluffing (as determined by my hearing wife) than those with the older devices. This suggested, as was actually widely known to be the case, that CI technology had improved.

So why the heck not get an implant? I'd learned to live and be content as a deafened person (with a big assist from ALDA) but, just like other deafened adults, I still hated being deaf. You think I didn't want to hear the ice cream truck come jingling down the street? I love ice cream. Even on cold days.

The implant was pretty cool. After a while, I could hear my wife laugh, recognize geese honking, and hear a person behind me on the train platform say: "What the hell is THAT?" (That's me, buddy; ain't you ever seen a big long cable with a magnet on the side of a head before?) And I can hear people on the phone if they speak English slowly or are my wife. Other calls can make me crazy and as aggravated as I ever was as a deaf-deaf person; maybe worse since I didn't try to use the phone as a deaf-deaf person. I need a self-help group for CI people who use telephones badly.

But the implant has been a great enabler. I'm not sure I could have managed 10 people at Microsoft so seamlessly without it. I'll never be one of those deafened-people-can-do-anything guys. I can't hear nearly as well as I once did, for example, even with the CI. And in my brain, that limits me. Other late-deafened people have better brains, of course, so I can only speak for myself.

I'm not being negative here, just honest. And I can also honestly say that in my family life, the CI has been indispensable...no, precious. Karina and I started our family after I got the CI. I heard my babies cry, heard their first words, heard them call "Daddy" hundreds of times, and also heard them whine, heard them be stubborn, and heard them get angry and slam doors. But I heard them, and for that I am eternally grateful.

Which is not to say family communication is perfect at the Graham's. Don't make me laugh. I don't hear my kids well in a wide variety of situations, such as at crowded school events or recreational activities or even around the dinner table. And my kids sometimes gravitate toward my wife because it can be less frustrating to communicate with her in a hurry. Frankly, I would too. It's easy to say: "You can fix that, Bill, if you're more assertive about your needs." And I agree that Yes, I can, but I also know that life sometimes gets in the way of Yes, I can. There's a lot going on.

In December I received a second CI. I was ambivalent all along: another operation, another device dangling from my head, another period of uncertainty about its benefits. I decided to go for it because the technology had again improved, because my insurance covered it, and because there was a fair chance that bilateral implants would help me deal better with background noise, my exasperating Achilles' heel. I didn't pretend to think that my medley of deaf-deaf moments would suddenly disappear. But ultimately I told myself I had nothing to lose.

I've had the second implant for five months now. I have not made much progress with it yet, but I'm not particularly upset (EXCEPT THAT I THOUGHT I'D DO BETTER!). I figure that I'll eventually get to wherever I'm going with it and, outside of practicing with it singly, listening to bad audio books, and remapping, I don't have much control over what happens. I'm centered somewhat by the knowledge that the deaf-deaf side of me will cope okay whatever happens. I think ALDA has helped me a lot in that regard. But if my first CI goes down and I can't hear the ice cream truck anymore, I'm heading for a bridge.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Reality Check

So off I went to secure sponsorship No. 2, from NCRF....

I wrote my patented cloying email to BJ Shorak, NCRF Director, making a casual sales pitch while feigning that she might not remember me. Then, smug and expectant, I sat back and waited.

She responded just a few hours later. Good sign.

"SO good to hear from you, Bill!!"

Yep, you da gal, BJ. Even if you like Karina best. Go on.

"Where have the years gone....? And do I remember you? LOL!!! You and Karen will ALWAYS be special to me."

Emphasis on Karen, but I'm implicated too: special. Special is always a good sign. Lois, did you hear that? Special.

"I would LOVE to see you all again sometime."

Love in caps! Can the signs be any better? This isn't ALDA Crappy Sign--this is ALDA Happy Sign.

"It sure WAS great to be a part of ALDA in those early days. I'll never forget my awe at karaoke there! Pure joy!"

BJ, the joy is all mine. Let's sing together. Go on, my friend. Go on.

"A reunion in Chicago would be great fun!"

Speaking of fun, here's the sponsorship and exhibitor form. Make my day, BJ, make my day....

"I would love nothing more than to be able to tell you we can sponsor something, Bill, esp. since it's ALDA's 20th...."

Yep, ALDA's 20th. Best conference ever. Great year to be a sponsor....Hey....wait a minute: "I would love nothing more than to be able to tell you...?" That's not a good sign, that's a bad sign. Bad sign! Code Blue! Code Blue!

"... but I can't."

Oh, nooo.

"NCRF has shifted its focus regarding access-related grants. We have a new "CART for Schools Program," where we provide funding for CART at important school functions such as graduation ceremonies."

Nooooo....But I gotta admit: that's a really laudable focus. It really is.

"NCRF will fund NCRA members to provide CART in select K-12 school events with hearing-impaired participants that otherwise wouldn't have access to realtime captioning."

Does ALDA qualify as K-12? You've been at an ALDAcon karaoke party, BJ. Exhibit A!

"We've already turned down others this year. However, I'll bring this up to my Board to see if there's something we can do...."

Hey, I used to be on that board.

"I'll keep my fingers crossed and let you know!"

So sweet of BJ to let me down gently. She's good people, no matter what happens.

But, umm...wasn't I, the greatest thing since rye bread, supposed to cop a sponsorship here? That gale you feel is the air coming out of my balloon. Maybe I'm not such a hotshot sponsorship-getter after all. I'm special and I'm loved, but I'm a failure. How did I get into this line of work? And with the U.S. economy tanking, this could be the worst six months of my life.

Or is it seven?

Saturday, April 19, 2008

The Kingdom of CART

Back to the ALDAcon Sponsorship Committee....After scoring so well on my first assignment, Caption First, I felt like nothing could stop me. And the next organization on the list further fed my uncharacteristic buoyancy. Kind, kind Lois again had ceded me rights to friendly fire: the National Court Reporters Foundation (NCRF) and its director B. J. Shorak. It's hardly a secret that B. J. and the NCRF are among ALDA's most enduring friends.

I knew this first-hand. A few weeks after Jerry Miller treated me to the real-time demonstration in the courtroom, he invited me to attend the National Court Reporters Association (NCRA) convention in Orlando, Florida, all expenses paid. At first I'm thinking: Who wants to go to a court reporters convention? What fun is that going to be? Why not just sit in a library for a few days? Or watch ink dry?

I mean, how much fun could a group of court reporters be? These people work in courtrooms day after day year after year, silently typing, silently typing, silently typing away on their uniquely weird machines. Then they go home and feed the cat, right? I had people like that around me 40 hours a week: encyclopedia editors! Our idea of a high time was going out for nonvegan food. With kefir milk. I didn't need to travel to Orlando for kefir milk.

But what the heck, an all-expenses paid trip: nobody ever offered me one of those before. Maybe I could make a side trip to Epcot Center or Sea World to make things interesting. And they invited Karina, too, who was not an encyclopedia editor. Or a court reporter.

Well, the NCRA convention was an eye-opener. It took place at the Orlando World Center Marriott Resort, a quantum leap from my usual away-from-home lodgings of choice, Motel 6. The Marriott had an 18-hole golf course, a full-service spa, a 24-hour fitness center, lighted tennis courts, and a huge, huge outdoor pool that proved a fabulous place to get a tan (this was back in the days before everyone used SPF-90). (It was also the place that I first met Marylyn Howe, the wild woman from Massachusetts who subsequently founded ALDA Boston and the ALDAcon karaoke party.)

The ballroom where the NCRA banquet and entertainment took place was pulsing with people dressed to the nines....could these be court reporters? I had my wedding suit on and I felt pathetically underdressed. Toto, I don't think we're at World Book anymore. Dinner included the most remarkable slice of prime rib I've ever seen. So remarkable that, with Karina's urging, I ended two years of vegetarianism and scarfed it down. Then the dancing started and, woo-hoo, could court reporters hoof it! I bet they could go 15 rounds of karaoke and stay upright.

Some of CART's greatest pioneers were at the convention, among them Marty Block, who was the very first realtime reporter, the first to caption ALDAcon, and co-creator of the term CART; Joe Karlovits, who founded VITAC, now the largest captioning company in the United States; and Saint Woody Waga, who has done CART at ALDAcon forever and a day and who gained canonization when he received the ALDA Angel Award in 1995. Also the irrepressibly effervescent B. J. Shorak, then NCRA's director of technology. B. J. really connected with Karina, and so I got to know her well by chasing their shadows. A year or so after the convention, B. J. invited me to join the board of NCRF, NCRA's nonprofit arm, probably because it gave her another chance to see Karina, who was invited to interpret. Or maybe the invitations came in the opposite order, I don't remember.

So it was with irrational exuberance that I typed my email to B. J. requesting ALDAcon sponsorship from the NCRF.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Court Reporters

Okay, here's the deal: I am so old that I knew a genera of early humans called court reporters before CART became an industry. Court reporters are the direct ancestors of CART reporters, who evolved into a distinct species only over the past few decades in the Galapagos Islands. That's why the ALDA Galapagos chapter has some of the finest captioning on the planet. There are so many CART reporters there that the beaches are littered with stenograph machines. Recent studies indicate that three giant tortoises have learned rudimentary CART.

I'm from the Jurassic Period of real-time, when it was primarily done by court reporters in the seclusion of courtrooms and without display devices. (Fossil evidence of transcripts date to the mid-Triassic.) I came upon this secret society by happenstance. Ancient Chicago ALDAns had begun using a primitive tool called ALDA Crude in self-help groups. The invention of computer manchild Steven Wilhelm (Nevets computicus), ALDA Crude consisted of a simple PC connected to a television and a good, or at least speedy, volunteer typist.

Somehow word of Steven's mischief got around, and I received a call from Jerry Miller, chief shaman of the National Court Reporters Association (NCRA). Jerry's office was in downtown Chicago, only a few blocks from where I worked. We got together for lunch and he told me all about these strange creatures who used an abbreviated keyboard device, inputing a kind of code that enabled them to keep pace with multiple speakers and produce a verbatim record of the conversation after it ended. Subsequently, Jerry took me to the federal courthouse and showed how a court reporter might hook up such a stenograph device to a monitor so that words were displayed in real-time.

The implications astounded my late Jurassic brain. For most species of late-deafened adults, this was the communication equivalent of discovering fire. Court reporters controlled this fire, and thus became our gods.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

AARPed

Karina is in Columbus, Ohio, today through Thursday, and I am being held hostage by my children. They have my hands and feet roped to a chair right now and are playing with matches. Tony is the one with the matches; Eva is the one clapping. I don't think I am going to get any sponsorships tonight, unless somebody wants to sponsor a rescue mission. But nobody knows where Cary, IL is. Except the IRS. And AARP.

I mention AARP because they finally found me today. I got through five years of my 50s without them knowing it. When Karina turned 50, the AARP mailman came the same day. But I had outwitted AARP by acting 18 and having a Kucinich sticker on my car.

But now, it's over. There's the AARP mailing on the table. Kids, if you're going to set me aflame burn that envelope first. I don't want to open it; I want to die young. How can I expect to get any sponsors for ALDAcon if I'm AARPed? With my c.i.'s I can hear them now: "Give money to you, old man? Give money to you? Why don't you raise money for something your age, like AARP?"

Because the kids have me tied to this chair, that's why.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Caption First

Back to the Sponsorship Committee….I was ready to go a’CARTing. But there were several potential ALDAcon CART sponsors so I looked to Lois for guidance. She said: “You are up first with Caption First.” An English major unto death, the lyrical repetition of “first” soothed me.

And so did the assignment. Caption First is one of ALDA’s earliest and most ardent supporters. They sponsored the tote bags for ALDAcon 2007 and, Lois pointed out, they had first dibs at the bags this year. Without my c.i.’s on, “first dibs” sounded an awful lot like “slam dunk.”

It didn’t hurt that I’d known the president of Caption First for almost two decades. That would be Pat Graves. Long before ALDA had tote bags, Pat Graves toted ALDA Chicago’s caption needs on her fingers. Both ALDA and live, real-time captioning were in their infancy in the late 1980s. (I’ll let you decide whether ALDA ever grew up.) Pat was a court reporter who saw a future in real-time captioning, and she volunteered her services to ALDA Chicago so she could do useful work while she improved her skills.

At board and self-help group meetings, Pat would faithfully arrive, set up her equipment, put on her red cape with an S on it, and sit down at her keyboard. Meetings sometimes went two or three hours, and she rarely asked for a break. Once in a while, deep into a meeting, one of us would notice that Pat was kneading and wringing her hands feverishly and looked like she was about to keel over. So we’d finally call a time out. After stretching a while and applying smelling salts, she was ready to soldier on. And on. And on.

The and-on’s continued even after she had set up her own business, Caption First, which flourished. She later moved the business to Colorado, but she never stopped serving ALDA. At ALDAcon 1998 she received the ALDA Angel Award.

The night before I contacted Pat to sponsor us again I got an additional bargaining chip, in the form of a poker chip. I discovered that her deaf brother was in my monthly poker group. I didn’t even know she had a deaf brother. Anyone asking for money should network better than that. But now I had the perfect anecdote-that-precedes-sales-pitch.

Not that I needed one. Pat bleeds ALDA green, red, and blue (see http://www.alda.org/ for team colors). If I blew this one, I’d be selling ALDAcon pencils immediately thereafter.

But my approach to Pat was very savvy. Very savvy indeed. After the know-your-brother anecdote I typed something like: “Hey Pat! Want to do the tote bags for ALDAcon?” She wrote back in capital letters, 20 or 24 pt. font: “CAPTION FIRST WOULD BE HONORED TO BE THE SPONSOR OF THE TOTE BAGS.” Boy, was I good at this sponsorship stuff….Next!

Sunday, April 13, 2008

ALDA Chicago Is 20

Yesterday night Karina and I attended our first ALDA-Chicago event in 15 or 16 years: the 20th birthday party of the chapter. It was held in the southwest suburbs of Chicago, about 60 miles from my Cary exurb to the northwest. That meant making a Grand Prix drive on Chicago tollways on a Saturday evening, when all good drivers are bunkered safely in their homes. That leaves only drunk or stoned drivers, or just plain bad drivers, like me. So I guess I really wanted to go.

And I'm glad I did. I only knew about a quarter of the people there, but it was great to feel their warmth again. And I enjoyed meeting folks who were "new" to me, although a lot of them had been involved with ALDA since the mid or late 1990's. Before leaving home, I crammed on the most recent issue of ALDA-Chicago News--full of photos--so I wouldn't completely flunk the who's who test. It didn't help much. My memory is only a fraction now of what it used to be, and I failed miserably connecting faces with the names in the newsletter. And if there was another party tonight, I'd probably fail again. This getting older stuff is overrated.

I was asked to say a few words. Historically, I bumble horribly through speeches if I don't write them out ahead of time. Nobody's ever needed a teleprompter more than me. Since this was an impromptu gig, I was tempted to apologize before I started and encourage people to use my time for a restroom visit or a smoke outside. But things went pretty well and the people who were still awake applauded at the end.

In the car driving home, Karina and I did the ritual "Well, what do you think?" Although I'm a persnickety editor by profession who believes that nothing is good unless it's perfect, I admitted to my wife that I had a very nice time. And my objective observations after 15 years away? Two things stuck out: (1) the average age of ALDA Chicagoans is older than it used to be, and (2) very few people now use sign language.

"Back in my day" you could count on one hand the people over 60. Most members of ALDA Chicago then were in the 35 to 50 age range. Yesterday there was a lot more gray hair and less hair, and I'll venture that the overall age range has advanced 15 years or so, about the same amount of time I had been away. I like having younger people around; they often have more energy and wilder ideas than older people, oui? Without energy and big ideas organizations start to sputter. ALDA needs young people to do the fancy Grand Prix driving. They karaoke pretty good, too.

My second observation--that few people signed--was hard on my eyes. I am, on good nights, a lousy lipreader. I move closer and squint, lean nearer and squint some more. Looks like I'm sucking a lemon. And this ALDA group was pretty citrus. A high percentage of ALDA people Chicagoans now have cochlear implants. Most of them seem to hear very well (or they bluff very well), even at last night's noisy party. I myself now have two implants, and I hear better than when I was implantless of course; nevertheless, I would have died for more signing at the party.

But not any kind of signing--not the good kind. Only the kind that Kathryn Woodcock, Ph.D., an impeccably erudite Canadian ALDAn, calls Classic ALDA Crappy Sign. I am passionate about ALDA Crappy Sign because it accomplishes two things: It helps me understand a person better because it S-L-O-W-S the person down. Few ALDAns can talk and sign fast at the same time. One of my primary problems with reading lips is that the lips go too fast, just like my problem with people who know ASL from childhood is that their hands go too fast. And as I get older, even with dual implants, it's mostly citrus and so I squint, squint, and squint some more.

The other great thing about Crappy Sign is that it's unique to ALDA: You just can't use it anywhere else in the world without shame. ALDA IS A GREAT PLACE TO PRACTICE CRAPPY SIGN!! (There, I feel better.) And signing badly together can be a lot of fun, just like singing badly at karaoke can be a blast. But there wasn't much Crappy Sign at the ALDA birthday party. Crap.

I had a good time at the party anyway. I just need a few days or so for my eyes to recover.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

ALDA Mom's Mom

Yesterday I made reference to a group of people who made me feel blessed to be alive. And I was going to write about them here. But I've changed my mind because somebody's no longer alive. Mary Clark's mother died yesterday.

Mary Clark is the planning chair for ALDAcon who badgered me until I got involved on a committee. I didn't know her mother, who lived in Maine far from my home in not-Gary Cary, IL. But it doesn't matter. Whenever somebody else's mom dies, I think of my own mother and her death even though it happened very long ago, in 1989. That adds to the compassion and empathy I feel for that somebody else, and today it is Mary.

Mary and I have had our differences, and what is customarily called a "falling out." We got angry at each other and for quite a few years we didn't communicate. Then one day I got an email from her, friendly in tone, asking how I and my family were doing. I responded in a humorless sentence or two, something like "I'm fine and Karina is fine and the kids are doing great." Thereafter she periodically sent me email asking questions about something or other, and I would always respond brusquely because I didn't really care to correspond. But with the persistence that sucked me into ALDAcon slavery, her emails eventually broke through my intransigence. So completely that at ALDAcon 2006 we closed down a 2 o'clock bar a couple blocks from the hotel.

Occasionally Mary writes pieces in ALDA News about her everyday experiences as a deaf parent, calling herself ALDA Mom. They are rambling and lighthearted, while still expressing the oft-repressed truth that deafness ain't much fun. The trip to Maine for her mother's services will be a solemn one for ALDA Mom. I don't know how easily her family communicates with her, but I suspect that too won't be fun. Fortunately she has the support of her immense family of ALDA friends to help see her through. Which reminds me all over again of the fundamental value of ALDA: emotional and psychological support for late-deafened adults when they need it.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Centennial

Today's entry is dedicated to my father, who would have been 100 years old this week. He was a medical professional, a dentist, and he loved me a lot. But it was love with topspin: Between his many terms of endearment, he periodically would assert that I could do better, that I didn't apply myself, and that, therefore, I might not amount to anything. Then I became an English major in college, and he knew it. When he died at 72 I was an encyclopedia editor, not exactly following in his footsteps.

Today, I am still an encyclopedia editor. In the Age of Wikipedia you don't need an actuary to explain why that's living dangerously. My father would turn in his grave except I already caused him to do that years ago. But I've got some good news for you, Dad; a 100th birthday present, if you will. I've finally amounted to something: I'm on the ALDAcon Sponsorship Committee!

And indeed I am. Lois broke me in very gently, as if she expected me to snap any minute. She discreetly rolled out the list of sponsors from last year's ALDAcon and explained the dollar level at which they had sponsored. It was a pretty impressive list: Sprint, Advanced Bionics, Motorola, Verizon, Ultratec, T-Mobile, AT&T, Cochlear--corporations that would put a smile on the face of any sponsorship chair. Lois was on the committee last year with the indomitable Cheryl Heppner, and they obviously had done a fabulous job. Well, I stood ready to hold the ladder: Go get em, Lois! Show them my name! Let me know when you're done and we'll drink to the memory of Jerry Barnhart.

But no, as I said in an earlier post, I couldn't let her take the blame if my name on the solicitation materials sunk a deal. I really couldn't. So I volunteered to handle some companies on my own. I reviewed the list again, looking for places that I'd feel more or less comfortable approaching. Maybe some sold cheeseburgers, for instance. But alas, most of them were technology companies. So I picked a few that might remember me from the early days of ALDA. My dad would have said that's exactly the wrong strategy, but I had a sudden rush of buoyancy and yes-I-can-ness. Because a couple of organizations on the list were run by people who way back when had come out of nowhere and made me feel blessed to be alive. And those are the people I decided to approach first: CART reporters.

Renegade

HI ho, HI ho, HI ho, HI ho, HI ho, HI ho, HI ho, HUM!....hi HO! HI ho! It's off to work...OH NO! The first e-mail from Lois Maroney came on a Tuesday night in February. "Hi Bill, I have Kathy copied in. She is going to update the exhibit and sponsorship forms that will appear on the web site with your name and email address...." Oh no no no NO: This meant work was on the way. Wall Street was tanking at about the same time so it was easy to connect the dots... Tuesday night...ALDA work...Black Tuesday. Bad, bad karma.

Kathy was Kathy Schlueter, the ALDAcon 2008 Sponsor and Exhibitor Business Manager. I hadn't been paying close attention to ALDA for years, but every time I did look Kathy seemed to be on the ALDA Board, at least once as President. And now she's President-elect. Some people just don't know the word uncle.

Kathy and I go way back, all the way to ALDAcon I. I guess that's how we inscribed it then: like a Super Bowl, with Roman numerals. Kathy lives in far northwestern Illinois. To come to Chicago for that first Con it took her about as much time to drive as it took Marylyn to fly in from Boston. Kathy was new to deafness then, and living way out there in the, um, sticks she didn't have much of a support network to lean on. I think she'd be the first one to tell you that she came to ALDAcon scared as hell, depressed at being deaf, and low on self-esteem. We needed a crowbar to pry words out of her. And nobody had one.

But Kathy got through that meeting and she kept coming back and she kept coming back. Now she's one of the most vocal and persistent leaders in ALDA. Some people call her the Energizer Bunny, but I've always called her Ren, short for Renegade. I don't remember exactly how that nickname came to be; I suppose it had to do with her being a free spirit who did things her way. She flirted with me, for example. She told me if she wasn't married she'd run away with me. If I had carried my brother's business card I would have presented it to her. He's an eye doctor.

Be that as it may, the once-reticent and uncertain Ren is now one of my mentors on the ALDAcon Sponsorship Committee. The other is Lois Maroney. Stay tuned.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

What's in a Name?

So I agreed to have my name on mailings from the ALDAcon Sponsorship Committee. Well, I could handle that, but I'm thinking: What good will it do? I had my name on Gallaudet diplomas for 11 or 12 years and I don't think anybody but Bob Dorn noticed. Bob was my roommate in Chicago for a while before I got married. He was Big D deaf at heart and I barely knew what Gallaudet was at the time we were roommates. Ten years later, in one of life's greatest miracles, he somehow graduated from Gallaudet, and there was my name on his diploma because I was secretary of the board of trustees by then. He felt I cheapened the diploma; I felt he cheapened the diploma. We probably were both right.

The Sponsorship Committee turned out to actually be one person: Lois Maroney. She lives in Florida and has been involved with ALDA for half a generation, which still makes her mostly AMT (after my time of disappearance 15 years ago). I've only met her twice, I think, but she had obvious energy and commitment. The curse of the volunteer. So it was: Hello again, Lois, feel free to use my name, it won't do you any good. Good luck anyway.

But then the curse started to affect me. I'm a Cubs fan, which means I attract curses. And so it was again: How could I let Lois take the blame when people saw my name on the email and hit the delete key? It wasn't fair to her or to ALDA. I had to at least give people palpable cause to hit delete by approaching them on my own. And thus...the curse was on...

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

ALDAcon Ambush

How did this happen? Why am I involved with ALDA again? Why, oh why. For 15 years, except for speeches at two ALDAcons, I've been able to avoid ALDA craziness. I avoided Mary Clark, I avoided Marylyn Howe: These people are certifiably crazy, and I had two young kids who needed me sane. I WAS FINE.

Well, mostly so. I got laid off from my job in Seattle and moved back to Chicago, and that really wasn't so much fun, even though I love Chicago. I mean, I live with my mother-in-law now. Many days, that defines un-fun. And I work from home most of the month and have no interaction with my colleagues at work other than email, IM, and videocon. And I'm living way out in nobody's-ever-heard-of-it Cary, about 40 miles from Chicago, where my two brothers and a lot of old friends live. I hardly ever see them. Maybe I wasn't so fine. But I wasn't crazy.

Then a couple of months ago Mary Clark emailed me and Marylyn Howe. Mary's the planning chair for ALDAcon 2008, poor girl. Being planning chair of a conference is even less fun than living with an in-law. The conference is in Chicago; 20th anniversary of ALDA and all that. I should have deleted Mary's email straightaway. Sure enough, she had come begging. Would Marylyn and/or I help with the conference program book? I don't like to be rude but staying sane is important: I politely said no. I also said no on behalf of Marylyn. Hell, we did enough--way too much--a long time ago. Nearly killed us. We're older now: time to kick back in the La-Z-Boy and on energetic days go golf. So I said no, no thank you.

But Mary Clark, she doesn't take a hint. She asked us to do something else, and I again said no for both of us. Then she asked us to do something else...no, no, no. But now I was going crazy trying to be polite with the no's. So the next time she asked--something about having my name connected with the Sponsorship Committee--I said okay, just so I don't have to do any work. It'll be okay if I don't have to work. Right. But this was ALDA. Crazy ALDA. Uh-oh.