They feel blessed becaue babies are blessings when they are brought to earth but they can't express how much they love they child or understand they child when they are young and deaf and have not been expose to sign language. They feel blessed becaue babies are blessings when they are brought to earth but they can't express how much they love they child or understand they child when they are young and deaf and have not been expose to sign language.
They have to pay frequent attention. Also there are gadgets that can help. A baby monitor hooked up to a flashing-light helps a lot.
yes
That's a good plan, but life happens, babies happen. Once a baby is on the way, how you or the other parent feel about each other comes second, after how you both feel about the baby. That is the priority. How you and the other parent feel or what your relationship may be, the goal is that the baby's emotional needs be met and you must resolve the emotions of the relationship for the benefit of the child.
It is more of a feeling that you want your child to be like you: there is honesty in stating the fact. Many deaf people do not see an advantage to hearing; in fact there is quite a controversy over the collinear implant solution that would restore hearing for some deaf people. However, the child will have an advantage in learning sign language to communicate with her deaf parent. Having access to language as a toddler aids learning skills.
He was deaf.
Yeah :(My baby is deaf from his left ear :(
That is not always the case, because most mothers want their baby to hear. If they do want their baby to be deaf, it is because they want their baby to be just like them, suffer like them, or understand the way their mother is. It may also be because she wants to be able to communicate well with her child, in sign language, as opposed to having a hearing child, who would have to use sign language to talk to her, and it might seem to her that she would feel more comfortable if the child were also deaf and didn't have to use sign language just because of her.
The baby wouldn't here anything so no language would be herd
Yes you can; as a parent, you do what you feel is best for your child.
A deaf person can feel the vibrations of the music, therefore, hearing it in a sense.
Yes
Most people would claim that approximately 10% of Deaf people have Deaf parents Schein (1989). However, more recent surveys have found that approximately 4.4% of deaf and hard of hearing children and youth come from families with deaf parent (Mitchell & Karchmer, 2002).
Typically after birth, the doctor will perform tests to see how the baby responds to various noises. When no response is triggered by any noises made, the baby is presumed deaf until further tests are conducted.