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So, I am not sure how to ask, but has anyone that was hearing and in college, or a full career ever find themselves out of a job due to hearing loss?..
That would be partially the case for me. My work was mainly telephone related for a small office of a 501c3 not for profit agency. Since there were only 9 employees ADA did not come into play. I am unalbe to work now, even after moving to first a different city, then to a different state, due to hearing loss and neuralgia. (total numbness on the right side of body. I can't stand or sit for periods for longer than 5-10 minutes. I have to move constantly or I fall or slide off whatever I am sitting on. I do all my typing one handedly and it's not even my dominate had. I am able to do some sign, and will do more as I learn and the numbness does not affect that since I do not have to touch or hold anything. When typing I can't feel the keys with the numb hand and I have broken too many keyboards just by typing too hard. (Cooking is a riot!
)So I lost the last job I had due to hearing loss, but can't find a new job due to the neuralgia and hearing loss combined.
FXAvatar - like you am VERY visual learner, visual-tactile. But I was diagnosed w/LD til college, and continually failing remedial college math, still having difficulty reading clocks, etc. 

I don't know, I run into people signing fairly often.
I just got back from my first meetup with the hearing/HoH/deaf social in my local area. I can’t express in words right now how I am feeling.. It was so wonderful to meet and to see so many people signing! I just wish I could have stayed longer. Even though I was barely able to keep up with most of the signing (and some even less, I was only getting maybe one or two words at the rate some of them are going at it). My friend and I went and were surprised at the amount of people that showed up! The organizer of the social was really nice and came over to our table and was able to hear and sign, so he acted as a tutor and corrected me as I stumbled along with attempting to sign to the other person at our table. The gentleman that was at our table was born deaf, had a deaf father, and was raised with ASL. Everyone was nice and did not mind as I watched and tried to pickup what they signed. The organizer even gave me his email address so that if I wanted to practice, we could video-chat.