When “I’m sorry” follows a hearing screen, Deaf is framed as bad news.

Micro-Stories series

A baby is born.

A screen is done.

And the words that follow are often:

“I’m sorry.”

That apology lands before language.

Before the community.

Before identity.

It quietly teaches parents that Deaf is something to grieve.

That difference means loss.

The first message often becomes the first belief.

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When “hearing impaired” is used instead of Deaf, identity is reduced.

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When access is treated like a favour, equity disappears.