Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Week of 3/4

I miss class. I hate when I can't walk. I hate that's it's more often... but none the less. I study ASL as much as I can. I love ASL a lot and I really enjoy learning it. I found all these awesome ASL study resources I've been using. I've also been using the Signing Naturally materials, of course. I feel like I've been learning a bunch still, I still feel bad when I'm signing and I cannot recall a sign I know I have used before nor can I think of a synonymous one.

I've been making sure I know all the months, seasons, days of the week, etc. as well as how to sign different numbers of x - x being minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years, et cetera.  As well as just being able to count past a certain point, ya know? It's important to know your numbers as best you can.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Week of 2/25

Class this week went really well. We worked with note cards and I learned a myriad of new useful signs with Olivia. Most of them were phrases I didn't know or recall. Evaluations were Monday also. I really need to work on things more often.

More specifically about class Monday. (I got to class and there was no class today. 4 hours of transit for a cancelled class...) I acquired knowledge about signs for more professions, descriptive signs I can use for classifiers, things of that nature.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Freesigning!

Hey, sorry this is posted at freakin' almost midnight... just.. so happy right now! :D


Friday, February 15, 2013

Week of 2/11-2/15

This week in ASL, I got to practice signing in groups using bunches of note cards. We signed the words and sometimes signed whole thoughts using the words we were going over to help them stick better. It was really fun and interesting. It helped everything stick better. I really like using conversations to practice ASL. Using the information you just got always helps it sink in better.

“Tell me and I'll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I'll understand.”

I don't have many people I can practice with and me friend Vincent, I used to practice with just moved down to California today. He'll be gone for the next three months so I won't be able to converse with him for a while. It's less than ideal for everyone involved in his life, but it's for a career opportunity that will be pretty great for him. So as much as everyone, including his girlfriend up here, will miss him a bunch and he doesn't want to be away for that long. He's really stoked about the opportunity.

I've been looking into groups for people learning ASL to get together to practice up here in Portland. It's an exciting venture. Hopefully it'll work out. Who knows, maybe I'll make some new friends at the same time.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Mid-Term ASL Video - Merpeople


Mid-Term Essay

Watching my midterm video was rather... enlightening. I screwed up a couple signs, I got married and wedding mixed up. I didn't name the LEGO princesses, which is just confusing if you aren't in my mind to follow the same chain of thought I had. I did mermaid wrong and I accidentally signed VARIETY instead of ARGUING. A lot of the signs I did get right were muscle memory though. My vocabulary is way better now also. I've gotten better at not being an expressionless robot while signing in videos. I have a lot of growing to do, but it could have been a lot worse.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Two types of deaf people I've met...

Over time I've been learning a bunch about people who are deaf or severely hearing-impaired, and I've found there seem to be two groups that they can be grouped into on some level.


  • There seem to be deaf people who accept their deafness, who they are, their culture and themselves in society. They use sign language to communicate and think that deaf people can do anything anyone else could do except for hear. Which is right, deaf people can do anything they want to or that they put their minds to except for hearing.
  • Then there seem to be deaf people. People who are hard-of-hearing/hearing-impaired or may even actually be completely deaf, but don't accept themselves as such and don't communicate with sign language. These deaf people don't involve themselves with other deaf people or the deaf community either.

There's a rather clear difference I've found because deaf people are proud of who they are, they aren't ashamed of being deaf and they darn well shouldn't be ashamed either. It's who they are and there is absolutely nothing wrong with that.

Deaf culture is fascinating and wonderful, and really great to learn more about all the time. I really enjoy learning about it and I really enjoy signing with people that I met.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Horses...

I love horses and I enjoy talking about them in class. But I won't get to ride one a first time until this Spring or Summer at events with equestrian activities as well as the archery events I do over those weekends.

I have a great deal of respect for them and I've always wanted to get to try to ride one. The time I almost got to ride them, here's what happened:

So, I have family on a farm. More of them were on said farm when I was younger, but still... my aunt who lived on said farm had a friend with several horses my immediate family got to go visit one day. My older brother, Beau, got to ride the horses first and then I'd get to ride one. Well, my mother (being a very protective woman) decided she had to ride the horse with Beau... she insisted that if he was going to be on a horse she was going to be on it at the same time even though everyone tired to advise against it. Yeeeaah. The horse was less than plussed by this idea and very quickly got tired of so much weight on his poor back. The horse bucked them off and walked away like nothing happened. Mom and Beau weren't hurt more than a couple bruises, Mom lost an earring... and Mom lost any chance of being willing to be near a horse again - let alone, let her kids on one. So we looked for her earring and then hurried away from the family friends' farm to stay far away from horses for a grip.

Anywho, I didn't get to even be in the same area as horses until I moved out of my mom's place a few years ago. I still have yet to get a chance to ride one again since back then.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

What I've Learned...

Over the course of these first couple weeks of this term I can only say I've learned so much. I feel like I always learn a bunch when I'm in Deb's class though. I wish I hadn't missed so much of this term already, but I plan on fixing that. In the first two weeks I got learned about everything from deixis and other grammar parts, to some really fun new signs and more in depth defining of classifiers. I also learned that as much as really enjoy talking to Professor Carl and enjoy all the classwork he comes up with... I'm really happy that Deb's my teacher. Deb's easier to follow and handles her students in a way I really enjoy. She's really great and easy to learn from while still learning a bunch. I'm really happy that when I decided it was time to start my ASL classes I got a teacher like her. :)