Being Blind VS. Being Deaf!

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  • čas přidán 14. 07. 2016
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Komentáře • 4,3K

  • @fab4880
    @fab4880 Před 5 lety +7695

    It's crazy how they don't even seem like they are deaf/blind

    • @sugabtsarmy4479
      @sugabtsarmy4479 Před 5 lety +19

      Fab _ your pfp pic oof

    • @slee9604
      @slee9604 Před 5 lety +151

      Yeah, they're both incredible people!

    • @olive6957
      @olive6957 Před 5 lety +197

      It’s not nessesarily visual unless they tell you you might not know.
      Edit: cause I’m deaf, and I use hearing aids but people don’t tend to know I’m deaf unless I tell them, because I talk so clearly.

    • @yumeko7781
      @yumeko7781 Před 5 lety +9

      hi army xd

    • @slee9604
      @slee9604 Před 5 lety +3

      @@yumeko7781 Hello!

  • @CementCakeisboss101
    @CementCakeisboss101 Před 8 lety +5507

    Molly speaks pretty fast and I'm very impressed when Rikki understands it very well

  • @ultimatefruitloop8473
    @ultimatefruitloop8473 Před 5 lety +1608

    one of my good friends is deaf so instead of taking French like I wanted I decided to take ASL for her

    • @nunalunaberey_
      @nunalunaberey_ Před 4 lety +73

      ultimate fruit loop OMG HOW DO YOU ONLY HAVE 9 LIKES YOU BEAUTIFUL PERSON!?! HERES ONE FROM ME(btw I’m deaf too!)😁😁😁

    • @heatherwalder1677
      @heatherwalder1677 Před 4 lety +45

      Awww my brother is deaf I did the same

    • @arandommonth765
      @arandommonth765 Před 4 lety +31

      That’s so sweet

    • @tylernicholas4560
      @tylernicholas4560 Před 4 lety +24

      That’s nice

    • @AddisonC1987
      @AddisonC1987 Před 4 lety +74

      I wish ASL was an option at our local schools. My daughter who is Deaf is transported to a different school district to attend a Deaf Ed class. 😥
      My daughter made a friend at church years ago, who was just visiting her grandparents for the summer, who went back home and took ASL classes at her school and now returns every summer to interpret for my daughter during summer activities at church.

  • @stephysteph8558
    @stephysteph8558 Před 4 lety +1513

    The lady at the airport who said "If you're blind why don't you have a cane or a service dog?" Wut. Would be tempting to reply "Oh SH*T he isn't here??????"

    • @briannasmith1497
      @briannasmith1497 Před 4 lety +140

      The lady who, when I was at the city bus's main office...
      I brought in my half fare paperwork (in my town you get on the bus for half price) and the receptionist goes "why does this say you're blind?" I HAD my cane and she asked... my only response was "Uhhh because I am..."

    • @phoenixc8328
      @phoenixc8328 Před 4 lety +40

      this is like when i get questions from people (mostly kids tho) about how i walk and my braces and i'm like "idk it just happened one day"

    • @lifethroughhereyes3958
      @lifethroughhereyes3958 Před 4 lety +37

      Brianna Smith sounds so familiar. Sometimes when I ask the bus number or the destination, the driver asks “isn’t it on the front of the bus?”. Well... I guess it is... Usually lifting my cane a little higher says enough for them to apologize, but I don’t mind...
      I prefer for people to forget or not notice that I am visually impaired, over acting so obviously impaired that no one can not notice🙈.

    • @courtney.corinne
      @courtney.corinne Před 4 lety +3

      LOL

    • @mr.harambe2658
      @mr.harambe2658 Před 4 lety +2

      @@sabbaby4430 cane corso

  • @madisonmaggio7628
    @madisonmaggio7628 Před 6 lety +1920

    Her speech is amazing! I’ve heard many deef people can’t talk because they can’t hear but hers is so good!

    • @leetee3207
      @leetee3207 Před 6 lety +57

      lol. I think you mean "deaf".

    • @colleen5807
      @colleen5807 Před 6 lety +30

      A lot of deaf people who talk went deaf later in life after they have already learned how to speak. A lot of people who go deaf as young children or were born deaf don't or have a much harder time talking.

    • @a.r.m.yblink2193
      @a.r.m.yblink2193 Před 6 lety +9

      Shia sorry but you put a d instead of f that confused me for a second

    • @a.r.m.yblink2193
      @a.r.m.yblink2193 Před 6 lety +5

      Madison Maggio sorry but its deaf*

    • @macm.3889
      @macm.3889 Před 6 lety +8

      Riki was hearing and gradually went deaf, I don’t know if she’s been getting speech therapy, but she has a background in speech. Every person is different, this Deaf actress was born deaf and grew up with asl, but learned speech because she wanted to and she can speak more clearly than Riki. Did you know that ASL was banned in classrooms for several years?(this was a while ago) Many deaf children were forced to receive oral education and do speech therapy. Thank goodness that’s gone now, but what came out of that was many children being successful in speech and many children with the same education struggled because they weren’t allowed to use asl(which is messed up). Some deaf people are comfortable with their voice and some just don’t see the point in using it, because they identify with their language and it’s associated culture(like a French person might) It’s a frustrating thing to learn, or it can be easier for different people.

  • @kayla1357
    @kayla1357 Před 6 lety +9720

    lip reading PRO

    • @luharrell1
      @luharrell1 Před 6 lety +225

      Well I mean a lot of deaf people have to lip read so they kindav have to be “pros”

    • @tahlia8718
      @tahlia8718 Před 6 lety +63

      um did you mean deaf i just confused btw im not hating

    • @isabellacoppola4760
      @isabellacoppola4760 Před 6 lety +167

      Tahlia Crossie the fact that u couldn’t read through that spelling mistake is annoying

    • @kayla1357
      @kayla1357 Před 6 lety +28

      Maddie_ Unicorn ik it’s amazing

    • @mercedestaverner5595
      @mercedestaverner5595 Před 6 lety +22

      Tahlia Crossie wtf common sense ???

  • @state924
    @state924 Před 4 lety +439

    OMG, that hit me hard!
    “Nevermind” is so disrespectful to those of us who can’t hear!!!!
    Sadly, everyone I know does this. 😭

    • @laurateamer
      @laurateamer Před 4 lety +31

      state924 I admit that I did do that once. Then I found out how offensive it is. I will never do it again!!! I truly apologize for doing that in the past. Respect to you, my friend.

    • @decgal81
      @decgal81 Před 4 lety +22

      I have auditory processing disorder and hyperaccussis.... I hate this more than anything. Please just repeat yourself more clearly.

    • @laurateamer
      @laurateamer Před 4 lety +9

      Purple • Seal Awww, thank you. Yes, I still feel bad for doing it at all but I truly didn’t know at the time that it was rude and condescending. I will never do it again and I’m educating myself more now!

    • @laurateamer
      @laurateamer Před 4 lety +1

      Purple • Seal Always!

    • @sleekoduck
      @sleekoduck Před 4 lety +3

      It drives me crazy, but then I remember that I used to do the same thing to my dad before I went Deaf. People are careless.

  • @briannasmith1497
    @briannasmith1497 Před 4 lety +169

    I'm blind but I've heard that a deaf service dog can:
    Alert you to someone knocking or saying your name
    Alert you to somebody approaching you from an angle you can't see
    Stuff like that

    • @gracecate2363
      @gracecate2363 Před 4 lety +4

      That's cool!

    • @lilystanford5355
      @lilystanford5355 Před 3 lety +5

      They can also help balance because sometimes deaf people have bad balance i am not deaf but this is what a deaf person told me

  • @laowyn4414
    @laowyn4414 Před 8 lety +2484

    Hi Molly, I've just submitted italian subtitles for this video so italian people who don't understand english very well will be able to watch it! The subtitles will be available soon. Have a nice day!

    • @sirvosterzo
      @sirvosterzo Před 6 lety +41

      Ecco chi è stato. Io sono bilingue, ma ti ringrazio comunque a nome di chiunque sia italiano e abbia problemi con l'inglese. Much love.

    • @whitehoney9230
      @whitehoney9230 Před 6 lety +8

      How do you do that and why only Italian ppl

    • @Quietsloths
      @Quietsloths Před 6 lety +146

      Gracie Plays I guess because that’s the only language he knows lol. He can’t do Chinese,Japanese etc if he doesn’t know it

    • @SrirachaPichacha
      @SrirachaPichacha Před 6 lety +16

      Laowyn aw that’s so nice 👍

    • @XxJoeyStar100xX
      @XxJoeyStar100xX Před 6 lety +21

      That’s very thoughtful of you!

  • @lyssasalinas
    @lyssasalinas Před 6 lety +1136

    I work in food and at my first job there was always an older deaf couple who would come in (it was a hot dog place) and they would always order the same thing and I started learning a bit of ASL just for them and when they came in one day I started signing to them and they’re faces lit up cause I was able to talk to them and ask them they’re order and drinks instead of them having to write it down, and my manger told me every time they would come in and I want there they would ask for me cause we had name tags of course, and after I quit working there they asked for where I worked after and they would stop in and visit and tell me hello and everything I quit that job to work at my current job and I haven’t seen them since but I hope I see them again cause they were so nice and sweet!

    • @jamescurfman3284
      @jamescurfman3284 Před 6 lety +79

      You are the sweet one! You learned ASL JUST so you could communicate with TWO SPECIFIC people? That takes some HUGE dedication! Bless you!

    • @bellamarie8381
      @bellamarie8381 Před 6 lety +27

      Lyssa Salinas That is so kind and generous of you this makes me so happy. I feel like the world needs more people like you. I feel like living is harder when nobody understands and you listened and understood. People like you make people feel better every single day. Thank-you for being an awesome, we need more people like you in this world.

    • @kennabrienn4437
      @kennabrienn4437 Před 6 lety +13

      The little bit of ASL I learned as a toddler has helped me so much in working in restaurants! You can just tell how relieved people are when they can put away their notepads and just order. You're amazing for learning ASL just for these customers💕

    • @radiomandelbrot5868
      @radiomandelbrot5868 Před 6 lety +25

      That is so sweet my eyes are watering a little...
      That being said, I don't understand why we don't all learn some ASL basics in school instead of foreign languages that most of us will never use.

    • @rupantiii
      @rupantiii Před 6 lety +3

      That is so sweet!

  • @XLuxiosfantasyX
    @XLuxiosfantasyX Před 5 lety +501

    When Molly is talking... take off the sound from your speakers, and just for a second try to lip read her. Then when Rikki is talking, close your eyes and just listen to her, no subtitles on. Both things are absolutly possible to do. But the excercise might give us, priviledged audience, a deeper experience to thos video.

    • @XLuxiosfantasyX
      @XLuxiosfantasyX Před 4 lety +9

      Yeees! Totally, the first thing i noticed was much i was unable to get them

    • @fluffyunicorn7187
      @fluffyunicorn7187 Před 4 lety +9

      I'm not an expert on lip reading but I have APD so I've learned to read people's lips while they're talking so I have better understanding on what they're saying

    • @arandommonth765
      @arandommonth765 Před 4 lety +4

      Personally I can’t lip read, so it was really hard to understand molly especially since she talks sorta fast. I watch videos without looking at them all the time so I’m fairly used to it if I had to chose whether to be blind or deaf I would chose to be blind since I have more experience with it

    • @kerryh3833
      @kerryh3833 Před 4 lety +1

      Luckily not everyone talks as fast as Molly! She's very passionate, but i imagine it's difficult for lip readers.

    • @haltersandhorses418
      @haltersandhorses418 Před 4 lety

      Molly is blind and rikki is deaf

  • @abbiegordon5703
    @abbiegordon5703 Před 4 lety +243

    I’ve seen deaf girls in college being isolated socially and it always got to me and still does. I tried to communicate with a girl once, I went over and used the notes on my phone to say hello to her and I was so worried I’d accidentally offend her or make her uncomfortable. I believe asl/bsl should be taught in school, like we learn french and Spanish because had that happened we’d have been able to include her and any deaf person ever, and he/she could sign in class during discussions and it wouldn’t be as difficult to keep up, in a world we’d all know the signs and could talk and sign together. I noticed that in her, and it must be tiring and frustrating because I know she would’ve missed bits and bobs because we’d go too fast often as a group. Same with basic education for the blind, explaining how service dogs work, how to properly react and not go by the Hollywood stereotypes. I’ve learned so much by watching your videos molly and it’s frustrating that as simple as it is to learn and understand, the ableist community are taking so long to take these things into consideration. Really hope soon these things start happening

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Před 4 lety +8

      That's not practical in the modern era, especially with virtually everybody having a phone with them. Yes, it would be nice for more people to know how to sign, but is it really worth that kind of effort? You could say the same thing about just about any foreign language or knowing how to better communicate with people that have other disabilities.
      One of the big concerns that the deaf/hard of hearing community has is the loss of their culture as even people who are themselves unable to hear well enough to communicate either get implants or use other means of communicating. Adding additional people on top of that who don't need to know how, isn't going to address that.
      But yeah, one of the big differences between being blind versus deaf is that being blind cuts you off from the world, but being deaf tends to cut you off from other people. I had know idea just how bad my vision had gotten until I went on a date with a deaf woman. Granted, she's a graphic artist, but I had no idea just how much I was favoring my hearing over my sight.

    • @faithplaisance1270
      @faithplaisance1270 Před 4 lety +5

      I get it there was a sweet girl that was deaf in my class and she was so so sweet her name is Kaylee. She would braid my hair in 8th grade and I would try to make her laugh.:) People for real labeled her as deaf girl. I think that is offensive but idk

    • @abbiegordon5703
      @abbiegordon5703 Před 4 lety +3

      Faith Plaisance aw that’s so sweet. I don’t wanna speak for her or her community, but I will say I’d never call someone the “deaf girl”. The best we can do is learn, be open minded and care for everyone, regardless of abilities.

    • @faithplaisance1270
      @faithplaisance1270 Před 4 lety +3

      @@abbiegordon5703 fr imagine being deaf and Spanish. No one speaks your language and your deaf poor Kaylee
      :( thanks for the reply!

    • @danaepeters6019
      @danaepeters6019 Před 4 lety +2

      I wish I could learn ASL so bad but it just isn't an option at my school and I just don't have the time to learn it outside school

  • @iexist1738
    @iexist1738 Před 6 lety +1393

    This is an actual conversation I had with my teacher twice.
    Me: Can I be moved closer to the board? I can't see.
    Her: You can't see?
    Me: No.
    Her: Okay. *walks away*

    • @dreamsthingsaardvarks7343
      @dreamsthingsaardvarks7343 Před 6 lety +204

      Shiningsheep 5 I used to tell my teacher all the time that I couldn't see the board and ask if I could move forward and people used to always get super ticked off like students would stand next to my desk and go "I can see that so you can too"

    • @marianaresendez5634
      @marianaresendez5634 Před 6 lety +41

      Wow that’s so not cool

    • @amycoronaful
      @amycoronaful Před 6 lety +26

      That's mean 😡

    • @rachaelholland1942
      @rachaelholland1942 Před 6 lety +74

      Ahhh some teachers just dont understand and thats scary as they are teaching the next gen

    • @iexist1738
      @iexist1738 Před 6 lety +76

      DreamsThings&Aardvarks. Same. I wear glasses but my prescription is changing really fast so I get new glasses every 6-8 months. I have to ask people what the board says and they ignore me and it's so annoying.

  • @Catcat55566
    @Catcat55566 Před 7 lety +1379

    I feel so bad for them because people can be such assholes and i would love to be their friend

  • @laneyyk804
    @laneyyk804 Před 4 lety +290

    bro the deaf person is so talented it almost makes me think she’s not deaf and molly does such a good job too it’s so hard to tell that they’re blind and deaf

    • @carlyduhlesseo3199
      @carlyduhlesseo3199 Před 4 lety +31

      Are deaf people usually not talented. That is so sad that deaf or blind people get such low expectations from society.

    • @jazminemcdonnell7411
      @jazminemcdonnell7411 Před 4 lety

      @@carlyduhlesseo3199 yassss

    • @GrimesTheOG
      @GrimesTheOG Před 4 lety +6

      @@carlyduhlesseo3199 I think she probably thought the deaf girl was lip reading

    • @veroniquecastel9582
      @veroniquecastel9582 Před 4 lety +9

      Stop patronising people ffs. They’re just humans loving their lives their way, they can manage their abilities with understanding and support and don’t deserve pity or special praise and pats on the back for doing things their way.

    • @diellaco8126
      @diellaco8126 Před 4 lety +2

      @@carlyduhlesseo3199 like the other comment said, i think she means that she is really good at lip reading and stuff. No offense was meant and i dont think they meant to say that theyre usually less talented or anything like that. Theyre just complimenting them

  • @TheStepheyy
    @TheStepheyy Před 5 lety +609

    my grandpa is blind and my grandmas sister (my great aunt) is deaf and they’re always talking

  • @wowdelocksvonderghist1648
    @wowdelocksvonderghist1648 Před 6 lety +1443

    my best friend is deaf and i learned ASL so i could talk to him.

    • @dezh6345
      @dezh6345 Před 5 lety +41

      That's so nice. I learned some Spanish and some very simple Mandarin for friends. I wanted to learn ASL, but I keep quitting when I start to forget stuff.

    • @bellacastro6301
      @bellacastro6301 Před 5 lety +12

      Same. But for me, she a girl.

    • @msbluejay86
      @msbluejay86 Před 5 lety +9

      Lol I learned some asl for no reason

    • @lillyatterberry6306
      @lillyatterberry6306 Před 5 lety +5

      wowdelocks vonderghist My brother is deaf too, I’m still learning ASL but I hope to learn more.

    • @ayiaras
      @ayiaras Před 5 lety +1

      That’s so nice

  • @haleyk6359
    @haleyk6359 Před 6 lety +1831

    My boyfriend was born 70% deaf. I really love youtube and its frustrating sometimes because i wanna watch videos with him but he cant hear and there arent any CCs which he needs even to watch movies. I just wish more people did CCs on there videos... :/

    • @lacyyannep
      @lacyyannep Před 6 lety +27

      Haley K yeah I wish movies/youtube/tv/ or anything could all have the cc option because my boyfriend's grandpa can't hear so he has to have the cc on the tv. Sometimes it won't let us do the cc on an Astros game we want to watch. Also in conversations I have to almost yell for him to hear me and it don't help he just got out of the hospital for a minor aneurism in his brain. Sorry I'm rambling but yes I wish everything could be helpful for the deaf and the blind

    • @haruxsaru
      @haruxsaru Před 6 lety +25

      I’m not deaf but I have a hard time focusing on individual sounds (maybe the best way to describe it would be that everything sounds “blurry”?) so captions really help when I’m watching videos. I also wish more videos would do captioning.

    • @fragmentsofanusha
      @fragmentsofanusha Před 6 lety +7

      I have issues with just listening to movies cause of disability stuff I'm not going into here, But I always use closed captions when possible and literally hate it when movies, tv doesn't have it because I miss stuff it's so c.rap, I don't see why they don't just put CC or the option for it on everything.

    • @tabitas.2719
      @tabitas.2719 Před 6 lety +9

      You can help with the CCs - I recently found that :)
      So the more of us do a bit, the better it will get!

    • @giulialana2815
      @giulialana2815 Před 5 lety +10

      I totally agree. Also CC are useful for people who are learning the language, usually reading a foreign language is easier than listening to it.

  • @kitkitkatty7
    @kitkitkatty7 Před 5 lety +4452

    Imagine being deaf and blind
    ( plz stop commenting Helen Keller Ik she was blind and deaf but I’m just saying imagine if you were)

    • @nancyorogun4494
      @nancyorogun4494 Před 5 lety +322

      Like Helen Keller she was blind and deaf

    • @garrettlotts6268
      @garrettlotts6268 Před 5 lety +318

      There are plenty of people who are blind and deaf. (To me it seems quite hard but maybe that's just cause I'm sighted and hearing)

    • @plushdude9624
      @plushdude9624 Před 5 lety +66

      Helen Keller was

    • @emocat876
      @emocat876 Před 5 lety +49

      Helen Keller

    • @PROPUPZPlayz
      @PROPUPZPlayz Před 5 lety +96

      banana bunny i’ve always been confused on helen keller because wasn’t she born deaf and blind? i really don’t want to sound offensive or anything i’m just curious on how she learned to be like so successful and to communicate or anything??

  • @susannea4196
    @susannea4196 Před 4 lety +40

    Just have a look at Molly (she's looking at Rikki, following her backwards) when Rikki leans back into the sofa when imitating being dramatic. Molly can't see her but is soo in-tuned with feeling and listening. That's really cool to me! :)

  • @ViolentNightshade
    @ViolentNightshade Před 6 lety +2974

    The fly buzzing around the room had me trippin

  • @sanderhonig8276
    @sanderhonig8276 Před 7 lety +2230

    I am deaf at my left ear. It's pretty frustrating sometimes, because you dont know where the sound is coming from.

    • @savannahr8248
      @savannahr8248 Před 7 lety +55

      Sander Honig same, I wasn't born with it, last year I got frost bite on my left ear and they had to take off my ear, and then close the hole so I can't hear at all out of it.

    • @emilybray8045
      @emilybray8045 Před 6 lety +33

      My brother is deaf in his right ear. He had a brain tumor and lost his hearing on the right side. He has the same problem with not knowing what direction a sound is coming from. :/

    • @emilflarsen
      @emilflarsen Před 6 lety +35

      fyi, Millie Bobby Brown, a famous actor known for the series Stranger Things, she's also deaf in one ear.

    • @janelowery4465
      @janelowery4465 Před 6 lety +34

      I hit my head about a year and a half ago and lost hearing completely from my left ear and have the same problem being on a sports team and dancing I never know where sounds are coming from and people are really rude about it. And if sounds are too loud I can’t hear people talking or sports corrections and it’s really frustrating always feeling like I’m missing half of what’s going on. So I’m glad I’m not alone.

    • @Awesomeness10110
      @Awesomeness10110 Před 6 lety +24

      My brother and mom are both pretty much deaf in one ear and what gets me is insurance covers glasses, but it doesn't cover hearing aids.

  • @Bummer1980
    @Bummer1980 Před 5 lety +66

    I love the open conversation about things that are difficult for blind and deaf. I love my hearing dog! She is amazing!! Shes trained specifically for my needs. I am also in a power chair due to other health issues. I have a condition called hEDS. Basically my joints hyperextend and can dislocate or the soft tissues rip, it also causes a lot of other health issues, like my hearing loss and vision strain (I also wear bi-focal glasses). Some of the things she alerts me to is when my name is being called (that was the hardest thing to train) when someone walks up behind me, when my kids are crying or fighting (not a taught alert, just something she figured out herself, she’s amazing!!) when someone is at the door, when someone is talking to me, she does a lot! One thing she alerted me to that she is NOT AT ALL trained for is when I started to have a heart attack. She had never ever scream barked before. She was acting weird all morning. I really felt sick all morning too, but I decided to drive my kids to school anyway. On the way I started to feel nauseated, achey and I knew something wasn’t right but it was when she started to scream bark that I realized I needed to get to the hospital. I was actually only minutes away so I drove myself. She scream barked all the way till I got to the ER. I don’t know how else to explain it, it wasn’t a normal dog bark, it was like the sound of a dog being murdered or something, she’s never made that sound since either. They triaged me and immediately put me in a bed. Bella laid on my chest licking the nurse as she put the heart monitor leads on me. It was like she was asking them to take care of me. They had her move to the end of the bed and finished that test and then gave me meds to slow my heart rate which was up at like 250bpm! (My heart has damage already from pulmonary embolisms) I have a bed for Bella to lay in when I’m out with her, I just hang it on the back of my power chair when not using it and then when I want her to lay down and stay I just place it where I want her and she stays there. As soon as my heart began to beat at a normal rhythm, you could see her body begin to relax. The drs and nurses were all so shocked at how in tune with my body she was (but we are together 24/7, she even sleeps in bed on a pillow next to my head with me). They had to do more tests to make sure I was ok (echo cardiogram and CT scan and some other stuff) they let her stay with me through it all. (During the CT scan she stayed with the technician in the booth.) I had a stroke a few years before and a few before that I had massive bi-lateral pulmonary embolisms. So I’ve had a lot of serious health issues. I spend a lot of my time in bed and she spends a lot of her time with me in bed. She plays a lot too. My 4 kids love her too! She’s so much more than just a service animal to me. She’s like my 5th kid. We have 2 other dogs as well. I love them to bits too, but the bond between and service animal and their person is just so special. Don’t get me wrong I really love my other 2 dogs as well. They are amazing!!! They are both 11 years old. One is a pit mix and the other a golden retriever. Bella is just with me 24/7, I rarely ever go anywhere with out her.
    I am not 100% deaf, some people don’t understand that. It’s like they think your only hearing or only deaf. But there is a huge range of in between. I actually can hear a lot! But there is A LOT I can’t hear. High pitch sounds I can’t hear at all. Women and children are hard to hear. There are other tones I can’t hear as well. I can’t hear anything outside of a room with a closed door, someone calling my name in a place with back ground noise. I miss out on a lot of words in conversations where there are a lot of people or back ground noises. I can’t hear an ambulance, fire truck or police siren until it’s right next to me. (She alerts me to those too) When I got my hearing aides for the first time my 4 kids were standing behind me and the Dr asked them to talk to me. I couldn’t tell who was who because I had NEVER heard their “real” voices before. (I balled my eyes out!) They sound totally different with out my hearing aides. I was 28 when I got my hearing aides. I’m 38 now. I got Bella is almost 4 years old. I got her when she was a puppy. She’s a small dog. She’s a wire hair Parsons Terrier (very similar to a Jack Russell). She’s white and peach. She weighs about 30 pounds. Since I’m in a chair I had her trained to stay in my lap when we are out. It’s easier for me to see her cues and to handle her. Since in a chair one hand is working the chair controls. She is trained to stand up to alert me. If I don’t pay attention to that she will begin to lick the top of my hand. If I don’t pay attention to that, her last ditch effort is a bark. Which really she never needs to do. She is just so smart! We recently went to my daughters college for orientation. (My oldest is 17 and graduated high school and starts college in Aug) They had different speakers come up to talk. She was in her bed in front of me on the floor and what was really cool was she would alert me each time there was a new speaker. She couldn’t see anything on stage, but each time a new person spoke she would alert me. It just always amazes me how smart she is and how she doesn’t forget her training. People in the row in front of me didn’t know I had a service dog and finally started giving me weird looks when I would tell her “thank you, good girl, lay down”. LOL! I finally said, sorry I have a service dog, they quickly apologized and quietly said they legit thought I was talking to a small child like it was a dog. So when I told them I was actually talking to my dog they felt silly. We all laughed!! It may sound weird but I always thank her when she alerts me, it’s her positive reinforcement.
    I didn’t even realize I was loosing my hearing. I thought that’s how it was for everyone. It was the same way when I found out I had Narcolepsy. I thought everyone was always tired and could sleep anywhere. LOL! My husband was the one that told my Dr that he thought I was going deaf. So I saw an audiologist and had my hearing tested and it came back I had profound hearing loss. Mine is progressive so as I get older I loose more of my ability to hear. I do and don’t like my hearing aides. I do when there is something I really want to hear. Like a parent teacher conference, or a movie. But then hearing gets overwhelming. I haven’t heard all the sounds most everyone hears on the daily. For instance the first time I went to the grocery store with my hearing aides in, I kept hearing a beeping noise. Like it was constant!!! Beep.. beep.. beep.. beep.. it was louder closer to the front of the store too. So finally I was like what is that noise!!! The scanner that scans the barcodes on items beeps. I’d never heard that, it drives me nuts! Or the shopping cart noise. The air conditioner, the sound of your hair on your clothes. Footsteps on carpet, those are all things hearing people hear all the time and just tune out. There were/are some sounds I hear and I don’t know what they are. Like the first time I heard the AC turn on in the house. I’d never heard that (it don’t remember hearing it when I was a kid) so it was confusing to me. Some people would get irritated or annoyed when I would ask what certain sounds were. For me I don’t know how to tune it out so it’s overwhelming. Also the toilet flushing in a public bathroom scared the living crap out of me the first time I went to the bathroom with my hearing aids in. It’s soooo loud!! My hearing aides don’t make things any louder than they are to anyone else. It’s just I normally hear things like I have ear plugs in and noise canceling headphones on, with pillows over them. LOL! I’m thankful I have the option of hearing aides. At some point I don’t know that they will work for me anymore. But I honestly don’t wear them very often. It’s just too overwhelming. Ok that was the longest comment I’ve ever left anywhere. LOL!! 💗🌵

    • @heehehoohoo
      @heehehoohoo Před 4 lety +3

      Wow thats long

    • @martharose9384
      @martharose9384 Před 4 lety +7

      Tricia Smith my sister has hyper mobile EDS too! I know you wrote that comment a long time ago but it’s such a rare and little-understood condition it’s kinda exciting to find other people with it. I often have to put her joints back in and things like that, it’s stressful but rewarding. People are the worst on days where it’s hidden and she’s walking without crutches or a wheelchair, because they don’t see a disability unless there’s a chair. Breaking stereotypes like this is so important and I know it’s pretty much the same for every disability. Stay strong, you’re tough and beautiful and you can do anything you want 💗

    • @jacquelinesmith-jackson2815
      @jacquelinesmith-jackson2815 Před 4 lety +7

      Thank You for sharing your story💜.One day I will be completely blind due to a childhood autoimmune disease called Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis. Trust me I was diagnosed at age 11 and teachers and other students who were psychotic, they told me all the time that children do not get arthritis. I wanted so badly to punch everyone's teeth out because that statement is bullshit. Children get arthritis too and most children die.
      😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
      Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis attacks one of the major structures of the body the immune system. Everytime I get a cold it can travel to my heart and lungs and be life threatening from there. But the infection can also settle in the joints and eyes and it could paralyze someone or cause blindness.
      😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱
      The gene came from my aunt Jeanelle and I promise I have had tuberculosis over 5 times in my life. TB is a infection from hell.

    • @missjoy2698
      @missjoy2698 Před 4 lety +2

      @@jacquelinesmith-jackson2815 praying for you sis.

    • @missjoy2698
      @missjoy2698 Před 4 lety +6

      @Tricia Smith even though your comment is long, I kind of enjoyed it. It gave me a lit bit inside info on how you cope and I have to say I am extremely proud of you. You are also a strong mama to top it all. My prayers are with you

  • @TheGothamEmpire
    @TheGothamEmpire Před 4 lety +67

    "Why don't you have a stick or a dog?"
    _Never_ and I mean _never_ confront someone if they say they have a disability. Pisses me off. I get it. There are people who fake it, but don't have the stereotypes stuck in your head on what someone with a disability should look like.

    • @CatScreenTime
      @CatScreenTime Před 3 lety +3

      I’ve had people tell me my disability isn’t quadriplegia just because I can move my arms. Quadriplegic doesn’t mean you can’t move four limbs, it means four limbs are affected. They failed to notice that my fingers don’t function well. Nor did they see that my triceps don’t work. So they instantly made a judgement that my disability was paraplegia. As if I would lie about my own disability for heaven sake!

  • @soulsmusic15
    @soulsmusic15 Před 6 lety +1757

    Wow I'm surprised she was able to red HER lips, she talks so fast!!

    • @all_is_well_Mara
      @all_is_well_Mara Před 5 lety +63

      soulsmusic15 she doesn’t read lips, as she can’t do lipreading. Rather she has a device in her ear :-)

    • @elle.4437
      @elle.4437 Před 5 lety +2

      Suzy why can’t she 💀

    • @niclastname9123
      @niclastname9123 Před 5 lety +39

      TheChicas cuz lip reading is incredibly difficult and isn’t a good way of communication.

    • @user-oq5eq4ne3p
      @user-oq5eq4ne3p Před 5 lety +23

      @@niclastname9123 Uh *alot* of people can do lip reading. When its one person, and you are used to being deaf, it becomes easier and more normal to understand.

    • @theavuthsom
      @theavuthsom Před 5 lety +7

      soulsmusic15 most deaf people are used to it because they get it when there’re younger and it’s read*

  • @wonteatit
    @wonteatit Před 6 lety +1280

    I'm really grateful for every video that has captioning. I'm not completely deaf but it really helps people like me enjoy videos.

    • @OliviaM-hr7vw
      @OliviaM-hr7vw Před 6 lety +36

      Saland Findles Same ☺ I'm not deaf, but I have mild hearing loss so I usually have the volume all the way up to watch CZcams and I've gone through so many pairs of headphones because they just stop working from the vibration 😂

    • @fucoff5327
      @fucoff5327 Před 6 lety +7

      Saland Findles im half deaf too ;)

    • @cosmologicalx
      @cosmologicalx Před 6 lety +10

      Captions really do help! I'm glad I'm not alone in reading with captions and subtitle.

    • @calistahoskins_2414
      @calistahoskins_2414 Před 6 lety +9

      I’m glad for the sound because I’m partially blind 😅

    • @jessicamacneill1772
      @jessicamacneill1772 Před 6 lety +3

      You can turn on captions for every video now!

  • @Secretzstolen
    @Secretzstolen Před 4 lety +13

    I'm so annoyed they didn't support her as a child. I'm so happy for Molly that her school, community, and family all ensured she got the support she needed, I love that so much.

  • @annemiekvannorel
    @annemiekvannorel Před 4 lety +13

    I honestly think it is so amazing that she talks even though she is deaf, I know a few deaf people and they are all afraid to talk because they dont know how they sound. Respect

  • @marianad.1361
    @marianad.1361 Před 7 lety +495

    I don't know if you have heard of it, but there is a pretty interesting place in Germany (I am not sure if it exists anywhere else) where you can experience being blind or deaf for 30 minutes. I did the blind thing and they basically set up several rooms as common places (a park, a market, a house, a bar) completely in the dark. And then a blind guide is in there waiting to walk you through it. He never touched my arm or anything, he always knew where I was based on the sound of my voice. It was a really impressive and interesting experience. I felt like I had been invited to his world.

    • @esther1848
      @esther1848 Před 6 lety +9

      I did this in Hamburg it was scary but really enlightening. If you have the chance I would recommend doing it as it's honestly amazing and the guides are incredible and can listen to yoir voice once and know who you are.

    • @TheMaddestHatter234
      @TheMaddestHatter234 Před 6 lety +2

      Mariana D. I did it in Israel, it was pretty cool

    • @cherryberry3020
      @cherryberry3020 Před 6 lety +4

      ohh I did that with my sister, and it was really eye opening

    • @iexist1738
      @iexist1738 Před 6 lety +3

      Wait, I don't understand. Why don't you just blindfold yourself?

    • @maanappelman6692
      @maanappelman6692 Před 6 lety

      You can do that in the Netherlands too

  • @anielson6152
    @anielson6152 Před 6 lety +490

    Service dogs for the deaf do things like alert you when someone is trying to get your attention, your phone is ringing, door knocking, police sirens, etc etc. To my understanding, it is just mostly little things like that

    • @juliebolduc802
      @juliebolduc802 Před 5 lety +48

      A Nielson to those of us that cannot hear and need these services that a trained service dog can provide, they certainly mean more than “little things”. Just thought I would point that out.

    • @charlottebradford6425
      @charlottebradford6425 Před 5 lety +38

      A Nielson they are also to alert you to subtle noises like, road crossings, cars, other people and general house hold items. Those dogs are the difference between life and death for some people. ( myself included ).

    • @concentrate828
      @concentrate828 Před 5 lety +3

      A nielson, it sounded like you literally just repeated what they listed in the video lmao

    • @ashlynsmith7995
      @ashlynsmith7995 Před 5 lety +6

      It's not just little things some of it is a life and deaf situations

    • @callietheservicepooch7826
      @callietheservicepooch7826 Před 5 lety +5

      A big thing they can help alert to (as a service dog user and with my mother being 80% deaf) is alerting to fire alarms and/or smoke detectors.

  • @juniper617
    @juniper617 Před 5 lety +123

    Molly, getting 3 out of the 5 jobs you’ve applied for is an incredibly high success rate. I don’t know a single sighted person who has done that well.

    • @Rin-ef2tp
      @Rin-ef2tp Před 4 lety +7

      Juniper Hill mine is like 1 in 300 on average 😭

    • @JuMixBoox
      @JuMixBoox Před 4 lety +8

      While that is true, getting denied 2 out of 2 times because you are disabled is not so great. And she is right, blind people have an employment rate of less than ten percent. And that's while most jobs could actually be done by a blind person with minor accommodations.

    • @caitycameron
      @caitycameron Před 4 lety +4

      Every job I've interviewed for I've gotten but I have been turned down from my resume alone

  • @daphne10120
    @daphne10120 Před 4 lety +7

    My lab partner in organic chemistry was deaf. We had zero problems communicating and working together. My friend is an amazing person, and so many people are afraid to approach her or feel awkward around her and you can see it makes her upset. Never let a disability prevent you from reaching out to someone and making new friends.

  • @alexandramadeira4345
    @alexandramadeira4345 Před 7 lety +1509

    Isn't it illegal to not hire somebody based solely on their disability if the disability doesn't affect the job. ie: deaf person applying for a janitorial position.

    • @pablodanieljiang961
      @pablodanieljiang961 Před 7 lety +57

      not like the police or lawyer were present in the place to oversee the situation

    • @valerief1231
      @valerief1231 Před 7 lety +81

      Alexandra Madeira you know it is, but it is not considered discriminatory if they company feels that they would not be able to perform the job with very limited accommodation. So because chipotle is noisy, that would be already distracting for Rikki, then the pace of working on the line, with out a ASL interpreter to verify the order is correct, and so on. The accommodation for the position and pay has to be with in reason.

    • @livelaughlobotomy97
      @livelaughlobotomy97 Před 7 lety +53

      Alexandra Madeira It all depends. It is illegal to not hire someone solely on disability, yes. But if it interferes with the job being done as a whole, the employer does have some sort of right to deny the person. However, if you can still do the job, just not as well, I'd say it's arguable. For example, I have a stutter. It's technically considered a disability, but I'm obviously still able to speak, I'm just not as fluent as the next person. In that case, employers can't not hire me solely based on the fact that I have a stutter. If I can get the job done, why not at least let me try?

    • @alexandramadeira4345
      @alexandramadeira4345 Před 7 lety +32

      True. &imagine proving that a company didn't hire you based solely on your disability. No company is going to admit it, they'll just say "we hired somebody who was more qualified."

    • @makaylaserniotti1474
      @makaylaserniotti1474 Před 7 lety +70

      Alexandra Madeira
      speaking as someone disabled, just because it's illegal doesn't mean that it doesn't happen

  • @ASLAnissaOfficial
    @ASLAnissaOfficial Před 6 lety +225

    When I worked for a women who was completely blind for over a year. She asked me to try out things with my eyes closed to better understand how and what she needs and how she lives. I think it really helped me! I also became a pro with voiceover on apple products! She was also on the spectrum so I did a few sensory simulation too to try and understand how she experiences things. I think it really helped me gain an understanding of her perspective. Im also a therapist so understanding other people is just something I love doing and basically part of my profession :P

  • @Karen-uu5fj
    @Karen-uu5fj Před 5 lety +37

    I have anxiety and that affects my life but gods hearing how badly adapted the world is to disability in education and work life is giving me lots of perspective for myself and also pissing me off, how could the teacher mock the student! That is so wrong. And how people disrespect you. I just feel like screaming, and I don't have to live with it.
    Credit to disabled people everywhere for dealing with us "normal" people's shit.

    • @jacquelinesmith-jackson2815
      @jacquelinesmith-jackson2815 Před 4 lety +1

      Karen
      I 💙💜💚
      I really like your perspective on the topic. I was told by my mom at age 14 that she got me a job and I actually got fired from that job.
      😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
      I got fired because people are ignorant and they do not understand disability.

    • @cecefernandes5657
      @cecefernandes5657 Před 4 lety +1

      The education system is constantly failing to meet certain accommodations or just common decency and it's really disappointing and ignorant of them

  • @tealcloe4230
    @tealcloe4230 Před 3 lety +4

    I’m glad I’m not blind or deaf, but it’s amazing how people who are are able to live like they aren’t. I admire it.

  • @jaedenissleepy2775
    @jaedenissleepy2775 Před 7 lety +263

    I'm not Deaf Personally but one girl out of my hole school, is blind, and she gets allot of hate for that. She is one of the Happiest people I have EVER Met! She's an AMAZING Singer and a Great Friend. I love this video so much, it means allot to me and my Friend.

    • @Alyzzardo
      @Alyzzardo Před 6 lety +2

      That's beautiful.

    • @angeleyeszarai
      @angeleyeszarai Před 6 lety +2

      Who is "hating" on a blind person at your school? Just curious

    • @crystallizationofthesoul7095
      @crystallizationofthesoul7095 Před 6 lety +6

      When someone is different people pick up on them whether is jealousy of their talent or mockery on their disability!
      But I guess people born with certain disability to experience the world differently!

    • @moleish1763
      @moleish1763 Před 6 lety

      That’s really sweet and great but you spelt whole wrong I’m sorry lol

    • @lydialaeke6647
      @lydialaeke6647 Před 6 lety

      Yah I agree, I’m partially blind so this was a huge problem for me.
      Also this story specifically is so inspirational

  • @nola1439
    @nola1439 Před 7 lety +145

    I love you guys. It's so great to have you both as representatives of your communities on CZcams. You're both such intelligent, beautiful, independent, and inspiring women. you show that blind, deaf, and other disabled people are just as smart, fun, talented, friendly, attractive, capable, etc. as sighted/hearing people. Too many people assume deaf or blind people are incapable recluses who don't care about their appearance, can't have friends or jobs. One of my close friends is partially blind, and people always say "but you're so pretty!" Or "but you are so smart!" Like there's no correlation between being blind and your attractiveness or intelligence, so it's offensive to her that people act shocked that she's just a normal person or when they say she's this or that "for a blind girl"

  • @edenbaylilatour6316
    @edenbaylilatour6316 Před 4 lety +7

    This is incredibly humbling to watch.
    The fact that I’ve been blessed enough to not have to consider what people with those disabilities deal with a go through almost makes me sick. It’s amazing to watch people who have to deal with these things that we don’t even consider an issue is amazing

  • @manikaaa_
    @manikaaa_ Před 5 lety +72

    It’s fascinating how rikki is so good at talking!!

    • @manikaaa_
      @manikaaa_ Před 5 lety +4

      John Thomas yeah I know but even if she has a little bit of hearing it would be hard to talk coz you probably couldn’t hear as much to know that your saying things right

    • @zozoguh
      @zozoguh Před 4 lety +10

      Also, if you aren’t born deaf and your hearing decreases as you get older, you will remember how to form words and stuff. Like how you speak now, your just not able to hear yourself as well or even at all,

  • @starhill6792
    @starhill6792 Před 7 lety +1749

    I kinda feel guilty for enjoying the whisper challenge.. it's never something I considered.

    • @nataliar5293
      @nataliar5293 Před 7 lety +391

      Star Shine I really don't think the point of the whisper challenge was to poke fun or simulate being deaf. It was just a game. Just like pictionary but instead of drawing it was attempting to read lips.

    • @starhill6792
      @starhill6792 Před 7 lety +174

      Natalia R True. It wasn't done with any malicious intent of anything.

    • @nataliar5293
      @nataliar5293 Před 7 lety +16

      Star Shine that's what I think too

    • @SimmSumm
      @SimmSumm Před 7 lety +126

      Star Shine Don't feel guilty. It's really not that big of a deal. Both of them commenting on videos that are nothing but pure entertainment and are not ment to make fun or light of their specific disabilities just sounds like they are over sensitive and just want to complain about something to have something to talk about.

    • @ammylover1
      @ammylover1 Před 7 lety +67

      Star Shine it's a game... It has nothing to do with being deaf or making fun of being deaf

  • @skyshooter66
    @skyshooter66 Před 6 lety +315

    I wanna be able to lip read that well!!!! Props to her!!!!

    • @ww-bp3sl
      @ww-bp3sl Před 5 lety +8

      Sky Shooter that’s a pro of being deaf you’re kind of forced to learn and you do it everyday so you learn but, there’s way more cons then pros. Lip read is not worth it if it’s to have no ability to hear.

    • @plutoporn
      @plutoporn Před 5 lety +5

      Sky Shooter bruh did you not watch the video 😂

    • @ick.y
      @ick.y Před 5 lety +1

      Im pretty sure bc of the video and what she said, she can hear molly but its like the whisper challenge. Just like molly can still see shadows and light. Shes said in her videos before tho, that she can’t lip read. (Also ik Im replying like a year later, sorry😂)

  • @nessieXtheXlochness
    @nessieXtheXlochness Před 5 lety +3

    I took an ASL class at community college. My teacher, who is deaf, got a guide dog around the end of our class. She said the dog would alert her to things like the fire alarm and such. And she brought her kids with her, who are hearing, and the kids were making a bunch of noise in the middle of class, which they weren’t supposed to be doing. The dog actually barked and nudged her to communicate that, which was pretty cool to see, and she was able to stop and deal with her kids and get the class back on track.

  • @ceciliabasurto
    @ceciliabasurto Před 5 lety +4

    I live very close to Rikki and I'm not suprised she didnt recieve the accommodations she needed. Such a strong girl.

  • @essiestylez304
    @essiestylez304 Před 6 lety +197

    I JUST REALIZED MOLLYS OLD INTRO IS MB IN BRAILLE

  • @user-vw2bi8zv1s
    @user-vw2bi8zv1s Před 8 lety +482

    I've read this super cute manga about how a deaf person and a blind person fell in love, and the struggles they went through to be together. Just thought I'd mention it in case anyone else had read it. It was a korean manhua I believe, but I can't remember the title. It was really cute though, something like no ( ), no ( ), but love. Something like that.

    • @Bucherviews
      @Bucherviews Před 7 lety +103

      It's 'Can't See Can't Hear But Love'. There's a lot of good manga and manhua with deafness and blindness actually - I mainly know the deafness ones (like 'Gangsta', 'Kingyou Sou', 'Koe No Katachi' and 'Hidamari Ga Kikoeru'), but it's great to read stuff like that (:

    • @user-vw2bi8zv1s
      @user-vw2bi8zv1s Před 7 lety +3

      Bucherviews Yeah! D=

    • @exotic_rubberduckyy8664
      @exotic_rubberduckyy8664 Před 6 lety +2

      Maybe it was no ears no eyes but can still love, idk....

    • @thesofiaandkayachannel6254
      @thesofiaandkayachannel6254 Před 6 lety +2

      It could have been; no (sight) no (sound)

    • @melodymartin5966
      @melodymartin5966 Před 6 lety +2

      Jade DragonStone Yeah, I just looked it up. It's "Can't hear, can't see, but love." It looks awesome! :)

  • @lillelektor
    @lillelektor Před 5 lety +1

    Closed captions are excellent for so many different reasons. I love it because it is such an excellent tool for language learning. It also helps if your attention slips, or if someone speaks in an accent you are unfamiliar with, or any of the little things that make communication and understanding challenging. Thanks for adding them to this video :)

  • @notmyname-_-6097
    @notmyname-_-6097 Před 5 lety +7

    I have no respect in who disliked this. This is a great video and helped me learn more about deaf and blind peoples lives and helped me realize how their lives actually are and to be careful of the things I say and do to make sure I’m not being disrespectful. Much respect given!❤️💕

  • @DarkAurora2002
    @DarkAurora2002 Před 8 lety +43

    The big problem I have with the whisper challenge is that it could have been used a chance to raise deaf awareness the same way the ice bucket challenge was used to raise ALS awareness but instead it just comes off as a big joke

    • @originalsayori
      @originalsayori Před 6 lety +6

      I mean, the whisper challenge wasn’t intended for that. It could’ve, and hell maybe someone should’ve! (Sounds like something Markiplier could do for one of his charity livestreams.) But again, the whisper challenge is just meant to be a silly game. 🤷🏼‍♀️ But that’s just my take on it.

  • @ahliyajordan4540
    @ahliyajordan4540 Před 7 lety +79

    I am deaf in 1 ear and I hate it when people wisper in my deaf ear on purpose

  • @jackcombs8273
    @jackcombs8273 Před 5 lety

    Love love LOVE that this video has CC, recently my hearing has gotten progressively worse and now I get almost nothing in my right ear and loud ringing in my left that doesn't go away. Thank you so very much for doing captions.

  • @Hey.howdy.hey39
    @Hey.howdy.hey39 Před 4 lety +1

    As a person who is hard of hearing, this is such a relatable video. So many people are ignorant and I’m so thankful for people like the both of y’all raising awareness about these types of subjects. It really makes me feel very happy to know I’m not the only person who lives life this way. I honestly cried. Thank you, the both of you!

  • @colahoe4390
    @colahoe4390 Před 6 lety +140

    I have a blind friend but she doesn't seem it bcs when someone talks she'll look at them bcs it's we're the sounds coming from and she laughs when ppl say your not blind bcs this and this and she's just so strong ❤️❤️

    • @xxali_munnyxx2202
      @xxali_munnyxx2202 Před 5 lety +1

      Yea I hate it when people say that you're not blind or deaf or disabled in general, it's just rude when they say that, good for your friend, she is thinking positively. Oh and where**

  • @poopityscoop4126
    @poopityscoop4126 Před 6 lety +990

    People say your not blind but why would you pretend to be blind like honestly

    • @sunkissedbriana9674
      @sunkissedbriana9674 Před 6 lety +78

      kawaii waffle cat people are ignorant. She has provided countless proof that she is blind with a rare condition. She suffers with this every day and people need to recognize that

    • @Tintenfischchen
      @Tintenfischchen Před 6 lety +36

      I know a hearing child of a deaf couple who used to act like and sometimes even actively pretend she was deaf too. Since she grew up within the deaf community, she kinda learned to not pay too much attention to sound and to not rely on her hearing as much as hearing people usually do, which makes sense, knowing that children learn through observing and imitating their parents. I guess she also just wanted to fit in and not be 'the hearing kid' in a deaf community. Pretty interesting.

    • @marchymeow4584
      @marchymeow4584 Před 6 lety +2

      kawaii waffle cat ikr

    • @lindsay3460
      @lindsay3460 Před 5 lety +7

      I'm in no way saying they are lying.. but to answer your question people lie about so many things just to get views and subscribers. I personally find blind life so fascinating so for people like me, we would give her more views.

    • @all_is_well_Mara
      @all_is_well_Mara Před 5 lety

      Kailey Hutson *you’re

  • @shadow-instinct7112
    @shadow-instinct7112 Před 5 lety +2

    i love how confident they are on youtube, you’re really good at it ily both!!😘❤️❤️

  • @The_A_Cast
    @The_A_Cast Před 3 lety +2

    I’m sooooo happy y’all did this collab!
    I’m an ASL interpreter and I LOVE deaf/hard-of-hearing community and blind community empowerment!!!

  • @icyiyes4846
    @icyiyes4846 Před 6 lety +65

    I'm deaf in one ear
    Funny story : when I was doing my hearing test I got onto the normal machine and the person who was testing me thought the machine was broken and I saw on the paper that I got 50% of it right so I'm 100% in one ear. YES

    • @marybellbermudez8604
      @marybellbermudez8604 Před 5 lety +1

      Same here!!

    • @ww-bp3sl
      @ww-bp3sl Před 5 lety

      Icy guy sorry about that, but at least you can hear at 50 percent! But hope it doesn’t affect you’re everyday life

    • @ZelinArt
      @ZelinArt Před 5 lety

      Same! I was born with it

    • @katfortner4426
      @katfortner4426 Před 5 lety

      Icy guy that’s crazy cool!!! But I’m sure it’s not fun. Just fascinating!!

    • @jasmini757
      @jasmini757 Před 5 lety

      LOL rip

  • @Katie.bum05
    @Katie.bum05 Před 6 lety +139

    There is a girl at my school who is deaf she is really nice and there is a signing teacher who goes to every class with her

    • @beef3618
      @beef3618 Před 6 lety +1

      Miss Elephant hmm and I used to have a deaf kid in my class and he was a total jackass

    • @tiryaclearsong421
      @tiryaclearsong421 Před 5 lety +1

      Most US schools (not all sadly, poorer schools struggle) have the accomadations that Molly mentioned for deaf as well as blind and other disabilities. I feel bad for her that she didn't have access because it sounds like her school and her father were uninterested in advocating for her rights. My grandma would be the type of person who would be called though she specialized with the profoundly autistic.

    • @ivyrose5153
      @ivyrose5153 Před 5 lety

      Annelise Koskiniemi at about 6:15 she talks about having 2 separate kinds of assistance in education for her being blind. Im not sure where you got your information from.

    • @tiryaclearsong421
      @tiryaclearsong421 Před 5 lety +2

      @@ivyrose5153 I was talking about Rickie. Sorry that wasn't clear. US schools have advocates for children who need accommodations or at least most of them do. Molly is from Canada I think and it seems people think she only got that care because she's Canadian but Rickie should have had access to the same support.

    • @NicosW0rld
      @NicosW0rld Před 5 lety

      Miss Elephant there was a deaf lady in my college classes and she had a signing person next to her too

  • @Evokaos
    @Evokaos Před 4 lety

    THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR DOING A COLLAB! I've been watching your videos for about a month and with every video I watch I get a new perspective of the world. I've always been heavily interested in the deaf community and I want to be an asl interpreter, I've been looking for a deaf you tuber for years that didn't just put asl videos on their channels. So thank you 1,000 times!

  • @annakarbo9093
    @annakarbo9093 Před 5 lety +2

    You guys are very kind and I appreciate what you do on CZcams

  • @afloatingpineapple6170
    @afloatingpineapple6170 Před 6 lety +850

    That fly really annoyed me 😂

    • @nihkki
      @nihkki Před 5 lety +40

      A Floating Pineapple one couldn’t see it, one couldn’t hear it 🤷‍♀️

    • @jahzara.d
      @jahzara.d Před 5 lety +4

      I didn't see it

    • @tgrier4181
      @tgrier4181 Před 5 lety +1

      A Floating Pineapple I know right

    • @severussnape5800
      @severussnape5800 Před 5 lety +2

      A Floating Pineapple what fly

    • @lavenergacha9605
      @lavenergacha9605 Před 5 lety

      A floating pineapple

  • @VicandWes
    @VicandWes Před 6 lety +28

    I’m not deaf or blind but I am physically disabled. I have mild Cerebral Palsy. I was mainstreamed in school and I had a love hate relationship with it. Like Molly I had a 1 on 1 aide with me all the time. There were kids in my class that would ask my aide where she was if I was out sick from school instead of asking if I was okay. I was bullied by being called cripple and robot and a bunch of other things. I’m now in college studying pre-med. I’ve been told that I can’t be a doctor because I am disabled. I’m actually going to be getting a mobility service dog in May! Sorry if this comment was all over the place I was trying to listen to what you guys were saying and type. Have a blessed day ❤️

    • @sunflowerss122
      @sunflowerss122 Před 5 lety +1

      I have mild cerebral palsy too. I have it on the entire left side of my body. In PE I don't run as much and I doing do as much exercises. People always say lucky you! I get annoyed by that bc they think I'm lucky for being disabled. So I get what you are saying

    • @ww-bp3sl
      @ww-bp3sl Před 5 lety +1

      I’m so sorry and it breaks my heart so much that humans can cause such pain to other humans, it’s not you’re fault so I don’t know why you should go trought all of that. You should love yourself and I know that as myself a girl with no disabilities it’s easy to say that since I don’t go trought that and that’s kind of real. I cannot imagine how terrible it’ll be for me, but I also think about how this is the usual for some peoples. I’m happy that peoples like you exist and I hope you get you’re dream job. Continue like that you’re an inspiration to me.

  • @cecefernandes5657
    @cecefernandes5657 Před 4 lety +6

    My dream, since third grade, has been to be a Deaf Education Teacher. It's really heartbreaking that deaf kids in the world don't have proper communication with others or even their parents, not from their own lack of trying, but because the school system, their families or even people around them have failed. I don't want to be their voice, I want them to find their own voice through beautiful ASL💗 I love Molly and I love Rikki💝💝💝

  • @anniebertolini724
    @anniebertolini724 Před 5 lety +1

    I love how even though molly couldn’t see her face and stuff she looked at her to show respect not only so she could hear better but in general she does that molly is soo wonderful and kind she deserves soo much
    I’m moderate to severely deaf so I can relate to the deaf girl this was an awesome video

  • @Mothman_In_a_T-Pose
    @Mothman_In_a_T-Pose Před 6 lety +100

    Rikki's story of education really reminded me of what it was like growing up with a nonverbal learning disorder. It went undiagnosed until I was fifteen, but teachers always noticed something was...off. I had a peculiar stutter and an odd form of reasoning; rather than looking into it, the school threw me into speech therapy and expected me to fend for myself in the school environment. I was eventually misdiagnosed with ADD, and the accommodations were horrid. Basically, "make sure Alma takes her medicine before school and doesn't disrupt others. Good luck!"
    It wasn't until I was fifteen that my parents decided to take my issues to the school itself. I was known to be smart, but there were so many discrepancies in my reasoning and grades that it didn't seem to match up. (The tentative excuse was because of my depression and ADD.) Through a school-recommended neuropsychologist, I was finally diagnosed, but the school still had little to offer by way of accommodations. Basically, I could take tests in a quiet room. That was literally it. No shifts in homework, no shifts in the classroom, just a goddamn quiet room for tests.
    I dropped out shortly thereafter, and bounced around to different programs with the hope that I might find the fit. But, instead, I'm a proud high school drop-out with a GED who's at a college that actually has some idea of what accommodations should be. (I have a smart pen for notes, more time for tests, and specialty tutors I can make appointments with if need be.) (I'm also working with a different neuropsychologist than the one who diagnosed me to help 'fix' my brain--and it's really been working!)

    • @skydiy90
      @skydiy90 Před 6 lety +3

      Alma Saon wow that was a looong comment but interesting

    • @Mothman_In_a_T-Pose
      @Mothman_In_a_T-Pose Před 6 lety +7

      Sky DIY Well, it's a story about my life; I can't compress it into a 5-sentence paragraph.
      I'm glad you found it interesting, though. I've been thinking about talking about it more to raise awareness about the state of school education and how the system treats those with disabilities and learning disorders.

    • @skydiy90
      @skydiy90 Před 6 lety +2

      Alma Saon That would be a great idea, good for you!

    • @balyss4833
      @balyss4833 Před 5 lety +3

      I have EoE, and my teachers get really mad when I am absent. Like, "Sure! I will just take my endoscopies in the classroom! Grab an IV, teach'!"
      Not trying to sound dramatic, but I am scared to miss school now because they act like I am a lazy prick who loves playing hooky. Schools can only accommodate to normal students, and do not know how to deal with anyone dancing around the line, ya know? 😂

    • @balyss4833
      @balyss4833 Před 5 lety +2

      @theinquirer13 I do not exactly need any special time and/or dedication in terms of learning. I have told the administration about it, and my teachers know. It just seems like they are ticked at me all of the time. Like, I do not care if they sympathize or give a shit, I just want them to tolerate me. Sorry if I am being overly sensitive, and thanks for responding!

  • @theannieelainey
    @theannieelainey Před 8 lety +1184

    Glad you two talked about Whisper Challenge and Blind Make Up Challenge which felt like benevolent mockery of the deaf and blind community as it was used for laughs, but if it's done respectfully and acknowledgment of real people that live like that daily, and that if someone cannot hear or see something it's not cool to laugh at them (which happens all the time).
    I'm so honored to hear your discussions about the trauma of growing up with disability and losing ability, my only experience with that is having symptoms and not realizing they were symptoms, I thought they were typical things that would happen to everyone, but it did not play a role into the bullying that I experienced. Your stories are so important and relatable to so many people and so many kids to this day and it's important for people to know that it happens and it's possible impacts.
    Great personal examples about how ignorance can create very inaccessible and dangerous experiences for people with disabilities (at the airport). SO glad you shared all of this!!

    • @floralisa1975
      @floralisa1975 Před 8 lety +53

      I've seen dozens of both the Whisper Challenge and Blindfolded Makeup Challenge and unfortunately I don't think many people have the deaf and blind communities in mind when creating them. The deaf and blind community actually never crossed my own mind when watching them until it was brought up in this video which I guess stems from having the privilege of being an abled person who has both their sight and their hearing.

    • @HalfEye79
      @HalfEye79 Před 8 lety

      I'm not completely blind. Just halfway blind on one eye.
      I can understand, that some people want to understand, what is it like to be blind or deaf. But there is no chance, they get it. It can't be done in a few minutes. I would rather say, it needs a couple of months, to get the idea.
      I experienced that bullying, too, because I was the only person in the classroom, who wore glasses.
      One funny moment, was at the day, my parents realized, I am halfway blind on one eye:
      I was a little child (ca. 4 years old). The eye specialist controlled my eyes and blindfolded my good eye with his hand and I thought: "Look, I can look through his hand."
      An awkward moment (too many times to count):
      My first glasses had different glass for each eye. With (much) different weights. In the kindergarden I lost the glass for my bad eye. And I hadn't noticed it!

    • @Are.Baires
      @Are.Baires Před 7 lety

      Joy Hu I do not mean to be disrespectful in any way, but what do you mean you're completely blind? I'm new to all this and I'm actually very interested in understanding both the world of the blind and of the deaf.

    • @HalfEye79
      @HalfEye79 Před 7 lety

      Arely Alfaro
      I'm not sure which percentage of ability to see is the border of being called "blind". But it isn't 0%. Complete blind is just that.

    • @brattrox2939
      @brattrox2939 Před 7 lety +50

      most of the people I see who do those challenges are laughing at their inability to do something that other people do on a daily basis and it feels weird to do stuff differently than you know how to do. usually they aren't laughing or mocking someone who is blind of deaf on a daily basis honestly they just think it's funny it's so difficult for them and it feels weird.
      if someone did do the challenge mocking the blind or deaf communities that's just wrong obviously and me along with many other people would be upset about it deaf, blind, or not

  • @bellaisacoolkid6664
    @bellaisacoolkid6664 Před 5 lety +5

    Tbh if they did this video on a different topic and didn’t say anything about being blind or deaf I would have never guessed. They are both incredible.

  • @mary-annpinchin8711
    @mary-annpinchin8711 Před 5 lety +633

    Literally they just look like they don't have any disabilities sitting there talking. 💓

    • @jadahmarenaa1847
      @jadahmarenaa1847 Před 5 lety +1

      Ik its amazing how they communicate!!

    • @wickedmoonwitch2822
      @wickedmoonwitch2822 Před 5 lety +31

      Mary-ann Pinchin that’s cuz they’re normal people like me and you

    • @sunrise5710
      @sunrise5710 Před 4 lety +1

      WickedMoonWitch it’s harder for them though because Molly can’t see facial expressions and Riley can’t hear
      *Rikki
      Autocorrect smh

    • @socanyousew3127
      @socanyousew3127 Před 4 lety

      Ya they do

    • @void.null.1987
      @void.null.1987 Před 4 lety +21

      People with disabilities sit and talk just the same fam

  • @BabvBlues
    @BabvBlues Před 6 lety +1595

    Haha I love how real you are!

    • @samantaguogis4666
      @samantaguogis4666 Před 6 lety +4

      Howsenselessdeath Howpreciouslife what do you mean? Do you not believe them or something?

    • @exh-hm2sm
      @exh-hm2sm Před 6 lety +7

      Howsenselessdeath Howpreciouslife love you Ana!

    • @oliviah6010
      @oliviah6010 Před 6 lety +4

      Howsenselessdeath Howpreciouslife what the heck is wrong with you? You should feel bad for them

    • @exh-hm2sm
      @exh-hm2sm Před 6 lety +19

      Olivia Haddad That’s the last thing these girls want you to do.

    • @oliviah6010
      @oliviah6010 Před 6 lety +4

      Mia I understand. Sorry but its just that I don't get why she has to say that.

  • @madisengreene
    @madisengreene Před 6 lety +11

    I used to have a really close friend whose parents were both deaf and she could read lips and do sign language and she was pretty cool and her parents were really nice. I hate it when people hate on and make fun of the disabled community because we are all people and we should be treated equally. Love you Molly 💕❤️💕

  • @anonymousone9699
    @anonymousone9699 Před 5 lety

    OMG you two are so right. I’ve never thought about it in this way. Thank you for correcting me in how I approach life, keeping in mind others different who are different from me in some ways.

  • @mariskamuller803
    @mariskamuller803 Před 5 lety +2

    Her lip reading is AMAZING, since Molly is talking REALLY fast. So for het to catch everything she is saying is like a superpower ❤

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 Před 7 lety +7

    I am not blind or deaf, but I am an amputee. I lost my leg when I was 3 years old. I couldn't run as fast as my friends growing up, but I could run and play and do everything they did.
    When I was 19 I discovered hiking and freaking LOVED it. I'd hiked a little when I was younger, but when I was 19 (this was 1989) I got a MUCH better leg that really made hiking possible for me.
    when I was 23 or 24 I hiked from the South rim of the Grand Canon to Phantom Ranch (right on the river) and back in one day. This is a 20 mile hike with a decent from 7000 to 2000 feet then back to 7000 feet. This hike is so hard, so many people have tried and failed, needing to be rescued, this hike is no longer even legal (it was legal; when I did it). But I didn't fail. I walked the entire hike on my own.
    I feel the main reason I was able to do this is because nobody ever told me I couldn't.

    • @n.a7848
      @n.a7848 Před 6 lety

      Eric Taylor
      Wow, holy shit. Well done for having the courage and determination as a hiker and an amputee to hike across from the Grand Canon to Phantom Ranch.
      I’m pretty sure a lot of people (including me) wouldn’t have ever dared to go on that journey, so well done!

  • @azurablue6595
    @azurablue6595 Před 6 lety +5

    When I was younger my best friend was deaf and she was so amazing. When we went to preschool together her translator taught me some sign language. I love you Seneritty and you taught me to respect deaf and heading impaired people and how they feel. We sealed lives one time and I learned what it was like to depend on hearing aids, reading, and lip reading to communicate.

  • @DraconisPhoenixSong
    @DraconisPhoenixSong Před 5 lety

    Inspiring!! I was born deaf but was lucky as my scaring healed, and I was able to hear by four. Accessibility is something that is slowly moving. You both are inspirational

  • @Samamy-bk6lt
    @Samamy-bk6lt Před 4 lety +2

    I can’t even express how intensely I related when she talked about how people get annoyed at someone not being able to hear and walking away. I’m severely HOH and hearing aids only do so much and I’m sick and tired of people being disrespectful about it or mocking my accent or the way I pronounce certain words because I can’t hear them right. Like we all just need to be a little more accepting of each other and if someone can’t hear you, speak up. Don’t just say never mind and walk away or get annoyed at them.

  • @reaganhearn8438
    @reaganhearn8438 Před 6 lety +18

    One of my family members are blind and acts the same exact as Molly! He can look forward!! And do stuff that people that aren’t bling do

  • @TheSkycielito
    @TheSkycielito Před 8 lety +12

    i am really mad that rikki parents didn't even care, if your son or daughter is having a problem you should notice and find a way that they have every tool that they need to conquer that problem, or to help them with that.

  • @lewgreen1250
    @lewgreen1250 Před 5 lety +1

    First of all, I adore you. And I genuinely love your informative & entertaining videos

  • @jademcculloch7639
    @jademcculloch7639 Před 5 lety

    I'm a level 3 ASL student right now and my teacher is deaf and it's amazing and feels more real when she talks about the deaf experiences and culture and it extremely interests me and I'm glad that you two are educating each other, both communities and hearing people 💗💗

  • @austinhernandez2716
    @austinhernandez2716 Před 7 lety +512

    Although being blind is definitely worse, but going deaf would be hell for me because I am a music major, music is my life!

    • @eloisegarland2440
      @eloisegarland2440 Před 7 lety +25

      I have a degree in music and I'm deaf :)

    • @austinhernandez2716
      @austinhernandez2716 Před 7 lety +1

      Eloise Garland How??? That's like a blind person having degree in visual arts. How can you understand something you've never experienced before?

    • @eloisegarland2440
      @eloisegarland2440 Před 7 lety +42

      I have experienced it before... as have most other deaf people. It is very rare that a deaf person can't hear with the help of hearing aids or cochlear implants. Saying that, I know of people who do have degrees in sound and they have never heard anything, but that's because there are different ways of understanding sound outside of just using your ears. There are blind artists and photographers out there, too. It is possible... these things aren't all just down to the ears and eyes, but the brain and other senses too. :)

    • @austinhernandez2716
      @austinhernandez2716 Před 7 lety

      Eloise Garland So you have heard music before, now it makes sense.

    • @hayleyscomet3447
      @hayleyscomet3447 Před 7 lety

      Eloise Garland this is amazing

  • @hyperactivegaming4085
    @hyperactivegaming4085 Před 6 lety +334

    It’s like when you tell someone you’re bisexual and they ask “Do you date other bisexual people?”

    • @sunkissedbriana9674
      @sunkissedbriana9674 Před 6 lety +9

      TripleDiamond34 RIGHT

    • @amanekabbaj
      @amanekabbaj Před 5 lety +13

      I was thinking the same thing like if a straight guy for example dated a bisexual girl or a gay guy dated a bisexual guy or girl. Opposites apply.
      Also applies to trans

    • @dakotabell8673
      @dakotabell8673 Před 5 lety +12

      Ikr I had a boyfriend and I’m bisexual and everyone was asking “oh is he bisexual too?” Like no why because I’m bisexual means I must be dating another bisexual person 😤

    • @annabelledeery497
      @annabelledeery497 Před 5 lety +9

      TripleDiamond34 I also hate when people assume that if you’re a bi girl and dating a guy you’re straight, or that if you’re a bi girl and dating a girl you’re gay. NO. I’M STILL BI.

    • @elleuzzell2266
      @elleuzzell2266 Před 5 lety +1

      Yes! I know right! I'm gay and everyone asks 'so you only date girls who are gay right?' it's so FRUSTRATING

  • @teiamingus5640
    @teiamingus5640 Před 5 lety

    I cant believe I am just now seeing this since I have been watching Molly for over a year now. I have been partially deaf my entire life and when she said how people saying “never mind” was like a slap in the face, I was practically screaming. I constantly feel like Im annoying people because I cant understand them or not hearing them at all because they are talking on my bad side. It still makes me laugh when people dont believe that I cant really hear them because I sound “normal” and dont know or need to use ASL(yet.) You are both wonderful and I love you soo much already Rikki!!

  • @karacamp5265
    @karacamp5265 Před 4 lety

    This is such an important video. Thank you for making this and bringing awareness... 💜💜

  • @autumnishappy
    @autumnishappy Před 7 lety +295

    You both are incredible!!

  • @UniverseReniverse
    @UniverseReniverse Před 6 lety +208

    I was born deaf soo and I read lips and do asl soooo 🤗🤗🤗 I love my self and I love your youtube channel ❤❤❤

  • @staz9873
    @staz9873 Před 5 lety +16

    Her lip reading made me think she wasn't deaf for a sec

    • @pobodysnerfect607
      @pobodysnerfect607 Před 4 lety +2

      She isnt lip reading she CLEARLY said that she cant read lips she has a hearing aid and shes not fully deaf in one ear.

  • @tedcombs3046
    @tedcombs3046 Před 3 lety

    As someone who is steadily losing my hearing, THANK YOU for captioning your videos!!!! I also greatly enjoy your content on growing up and living as a blind woman. My vision is also bad, but still correctable. However, if I don't have my glasses I can't see worth shit and need to rely on my spouse to help (dropped glasses are the worst because I can only feel around for them and hope I don't break them getting onto my knees to search). It is helpful to hear how things are when someone is blind full time because my best friend is both blind and deaf.

  • @Pelnied
    @Pelnied Před 8 lety +8

    The reason they wear headphones with music is because ear plugs don't work good enough to block out sound. I tried it and even when the music got quiet I could still hear so it even needs to be really loud music.

  • @fangirlingfailure
    @fangirlingfailure Před 7 lety +30

    My best friend is hard of hearing, and on the topic of education, half the time they won't even let her sit closer to try to hear, and she needs closed captioning for most things anyway. Her parents also don't care, so she learned ASL by herself in middle school, I think. There needs to be more accommodations for deaf and blind students.

    • @jamescurfman3284
      @jamescurfman3284 Před 6 lety +2

      I have three WONDERFUL, BEAUTIFUL children. I do not understand how any parent could decide not to care about the needs of their child, no matter what those needs may be. That just makes no sense at all to me.

    • @jules3853
      @jules3853 Před 6 lety +3

      I am deaf and I have hearing parents. They refuse to learn sign language so it’s hard for me to learn sign language. So I continue to rely on reading lips with a cochlear implant. 🤷🏽‍♀️

    • @jamescurfman3284
      @jamescurfman3284 Před 6 lety +1

      Damn. Best of luck to you, Red!

  • @nicoleeparvier2
    @nicoleeparvier2 Před 5 lety +42

    I can hear and see and I’m still afraid of dating 😂

  • @dontworrymyhomosexualityis9502

    This really helps me understand. My stepdad is deaf, but he has a koclear (I didn’t spell it right) implant witch allows him to hear when he has it on. I appreciate you guys for talking about how you deal with your disabilities. Stay strong girls. ✊🏼

  • @deaflepuff-abby6430
    @deaflepuff-abby6430 Před 8 lety +174

    Funny, being DeafBlind myself I am in both worlds here. I had EA, mainstream school, front desk seating, CC, Sign Language Interpreters, FM System, Hearing Aids, large print things/enlarged things, magnification, ToD (Teacher of the Deaf) and ToVI/B (Teacher of the Visually Impaired/Blind). Oh the diversity. Great to be apart of the both worlds!

    • @BlindNewfie
      @BlindNewfie Před 7 lety +5

      Deaflepuff - Abby I am totally blind and slowly losing my hearing. I have an ea, tvi, front row seaing, and usually the person beside me or my EA or tvi will tell me what I didn't hear, also use braille

    • @layla.magdalis6485
      @layla.magdalis6485 Před 6 lety +60

      Can I ask a question how can u listen or see this vid if ur blind and deaf

    • @hannahmccord578
      @hannahmccord578 Před 6 lety +1

      Layla Alvarez good question

    • @acapellarequests5801
      @acapellarequests5801 Před 6 lety +1

      Ummm, I’m so sorry, how do you actually live? Sorry I can’t word this to not sound rude

    • @acapellarequests5801
      @acapellarequests5801 Před 6 lety +1

      I’m not blind but voice over and voice regonititon

  • @SoyoyoS
    @SoyoyoS Před 7 lety +4

    Great i found your channel Molly, thanks to Rikki!! Deaf and Blind power!!
    Greetings from Chile, im trying to share your videos to the deaf community here in Chile, i guess they may be very helpful for us here.

  • @kailapolite
    @kailapolite Před 5 lety

    And there’s me over here complaining about being legally blind. Without my glasses I ligit and I’m not making this up, all I see is blurs. You know how when a Camera isn’t focused and you can’t see or make out the picture that’s me in real life. I ligit will stumble to the ground and trip over things without my glasses. I am not blind and I am not death. You guys inspire me so much. You guys make me look back at my life and make me feel how grateful I am. It also makes me so happy that you guys can turn something that is supposed to be bad into something good. You guys turned a disability into an ability . It’s so amazing how you guys communicate with each other and the world. Love you guys so much

  • @sabahnaurin4760
    @sabahnaurin4760 Před 5 lety

    Two very strong women. You inspire me so much! Thank you!

  • @kittykatgaming8296
    @kittykatgaming8296 Před 7 lety +5

    I love you guys.... I too have an invisible illness and the looks and comments I get with my service dog ..... so bloody annoying!! Just because I'm not blind doesn't mean I don't need one! I have a dog that will warn me to lay down when I'm about to faint, also with the meds I'm on I'll sleep through fire alarms and I sleep walk (among other very fun things!!). She's saved my life several times.

  • @skylinnwilliams5286
    @skylinnwilliams5286 Před 6 lety +56

    Molly talks so fast when she’s talking to her friend

    • @emilybueckert108
      @emilybueckert108 Před 6 lety +2

      Skylinn Williams ikr! I was having a really hard time following the conversation. Btw I was reading the captions and I am not a very fast reader

    • @lvleylazy
      @lvleylazy Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah and Rikki had to lip read, I actually read a boom about a mute and a deaf boy and he had struggles at the start of the book when he had to try to lip read the teacher but he kept moving his head and the girl was like "CAN YOU JUST KEEP YOUR HEAD STILL?" molly was moving her head and kinda talking fads but their friends so maybe they started off slow and went into fast?

  • @DanielAndreis
    @DanielAndreis Před 5 lety +1

    Hi Molly!!!! My name is Daniel and I’m a Brazilian fan of yours!! I think the voice you give to blind and, as this video shows, to disabled people is AMAZING!!!!! The only thing I wanted to say is if you could make a deal or whatever with CZcams, because I think this videos really need to get to people all over the world!! So my suggestion is for you to try to place subtitles in most languages in your videos!!! It would be amazing for disabled people to know there’s someone just like them in this area and, mostly, for able-people to know the best way to approach to disabled people, not being the jerks they normally are.... LOVE UUUUU

  • @biancamonteirotavares5538

    Your channel is really good too give hope to people, I am not blind or deaf but my vision isn't the best neither is my hearing so you guys are passing an really good message saying yes, being blind or deaf is really bad, but it's not the end of the world, you can still have an normal and happy life being that way