Teach Me to Love Myself: Memoir of a Pioneering Deaf Therapist - Paperback
Teach Me to Love Myself: Memoir of a Pioneering Deaf Therapist - Paperback
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by Holly Elliott (Author)
Holly Elliott was familiar with forging new paths. As she describes in her memoir, Teach Me to Love Myself, she was probably the first professionally trained deaf counselor-therapist in the United States. In her initial position as intern and then staff member at the University of California Center on Deafness, she became an advocate of total communication-a combination of sign language, lip-reading and oral competency that was a new horizon for rehabilitation therapy for the deaf. She was one of the first individuals with inner-ear nerve degeneration to receive a prototype cochlear implant and, several years later, one of the first to have an implant upgraded. Finally, in a more general sense of pathbreaking, she made a courageous career shift at mid-life. After twenty-five years of marriage and child-rearing, she accepted her deafness and embarked on a retraining that eventually led to a distinguished professional career.Holly Elliott was an unusual role model for women of her time, and still speaks to our twenty-first-century experience.
Front Jacket
I. Teach Me to Love Myself II. What Script? III. Who Says I'm Deaf? IV. Was It Enough? V. A Necessary Turning Point VI. I Want to Go Home and Bake a Good Cheesecake VII. When I am Dead Sing No Sad Songs for Me VIII. Suicide or Crucifixion? IX. Don't Be Close X. How to Succeed in College without Really Hearing XI. In the Real Essence of Life We are Alone XII. Therapist Status--Not Coded XIII. Total Communication XIV. Try Listening to All That Rock When All You Can Hear Is the Bass XV. The Silent Message XVI. One Also Needs to Attain One's Goals XVII. I'm Doing It My Way Now XVIII. September 1988 Final Words Biographical Note