“Each one of us is destined to become the hero in at least one story – our own.”

~ Joseph Campbell


While Joseph Campbell explained and popularized “the hero’s journey” in his book, The Hero With 1,000 Faces, the concept of the hero’s journey is an ancient one. Like the mythical Phoenix who sets itself on fire and then rises from its own ashes, born anew, the hero’s story is one of birth, death and resurrection. Each of us receives a call to adventure sometime in our lives.

As Late-Deafened individuals, losing our hearing has been one such call. In fact, everything that comes our way in life now, our everyday occurrences, can be seen as a call to adventure. We are all heroes in our own story of losing our hearing. We are all searching to find our way through and beyond…

Losing our hearing is the kind of adventure that offers us the possibility of significant transformation and personal growth. All of our interactions with other people can be seen as opportunities to help or be helped by them, or to thwart them or be threatened by them. Though we may not have a choice about the silent path that we must now travel, we do have the choice of how we travel. We can journey with courage and acceptance, or we can journey with resistance and fear.

“Life is either a daring adventure, or nothing.”
~ Helen Keller

The hero’s journey can be physical or emotional, tangible or intangible. The cycle of the hero’s journey usually encompasses the following:

The hero

  • begins an ordinary life
  • encounters separation or departure
  • is called to adventure
  • encounters a helper
  • crosses the threshold of adventure and enters another world
  • undergoes tests and meets obstacles
  • meets more helpers
  • realizes peak experiences and has a breakthrough
  • returns from the ordinary life as a hero with boon (wisdom) to share

Beginning our Ordinary Lives: Each of us Late-Deafened adults were born into an ordinary “hearing” existence. We grew up in a world of sound.

Separation and Departure: Somewhere along the line, we experienced a separation or departure from the ordinary. There was a death, a loss of something dear. A change had occurred — through illness, injury, aging or unknowns — that caused us to lose our hearing suddenly or gradually.

The Call to Adventure: Suddenly, there were opportunities or unexpected experiences that presented themselves in our lives. These were invitations to other realms. We were called to adventure. We were invited or required to transform.

Helpers:
Along our journey, we find guides who help us meet the obstacles along the way – allies, mentors, parents, relatives, friends, teachers, authors, coaches, religious leaders, famous people, pets, anyone who is on our side. We meet the angels in our corner who help us cross the threshold of this adventure and enter a new world or way of being.

Trials and Tests: On our journey in this new world, we are tested or challenged (mentally, physically, psychologically, emotionally, spiritually). We feel different, alienated, left out, or out of step with others. We feel neither here nor there, perpetually stuck in between our hearing and deafened selves. We may find ourselves in the belly of the whale experiencing dark nights of the soul. At times our hearing loss feels like the worst thing that has happened to us. We have trials and tests and dragons to slay. We wonder how we can survive. At this point we may meet more guides and helpers. Or we may encounter a breakthrough on our own.

Transformation: There is a breakthrough. We begin having peak experiences that awakens us or changes us significantly. It may be sudden or gradual. We begin to ask ourselves what we have learned and how this experience has transformed us. We eventually overcome our fears and grow more comfortable in our new skin. We begin mastering new skills that enable us to meet our daily challenges with confidence and empowerment.

Achieving the Boon:
The spiritual qualities and personal skills we develop as a result of our journey and transformation provides us with new wisdom and insight about ourselves. We have learned how to be comfortable with ourselves and with our everyday world. We recognize that we have new wisdom to share with others and we can foresee making contributions to the world. Perhaps we will now become a helper, guide or friend in someone else’s journey. Perhaps we will tell them our tale as a way to offer healing and hope.

Sometimes the best guidance, wisdom or gift we can give to someone else is our own story, truly told.

I personally invite you to answer a call to another adventure!

Writing your own story about losing your hearing is a journey of deep, personal discovery, a spiritual quest. With the ear of our heart, we probe the inner cochlea of our soul. It is an act of self-knowing, a way to understand and come to terms with our deepest experiences, see the mystery of ourselves, and make sense of our place in the world.

On that infamous day on 9/11,
from a deep need to seek spiritual connection and give meaning to my life, I first began crafting my own hero’s tale of losing my hearing and finding my way. Writing my story became a daily ritual that nourished my spirit. I was surprised with glimpses of truths I had not realized or known until I wrote them down. Writing my story became a revelation. My computer screen became a window to my soul, and I often found God looking back at me in its reflection.

Deciding when and how to articulate and share our stories is the ultimate call. I have drawn upon metaphors, images, symbols, quotations and song lyrics to express my personal experiences along my own heroic journey. I have used journals, e-mail, newsletters, newspapers, stages, websites and blogs as forums to tell of my life adventures and transformations. From these tales, I am now crafting a book. I have narrated rhythmical stories of my past, scribed extraordinary tales of separation from the ordinary, recorded my calls to adventure, and I am now sharing insights and wisdom I have learned along the way.

Writing my story has allowed me to embrace my new identity — my deaf self — and to honor the person I have become. The self-awareness I have gained from telling my story has been in and of itself, healing and transforming.

Perhaps to find ourselves, we must first lose ourselves. Like the Phoenix, we must die in order to be born anew. We all share the universal experience of loss, the same joys and tragedies, the same ambiguities and struggles. The tale of birth, death and resurrection/rebirth is a common theme in many spiritual and cultural traditions that repeats itself in everyone, everywhere, everyday. We are all heroes searching for meaning, purpose, identity and truth. We are all leaving, seeking, finding and longing to return home.

We need stories and heroes like we need water and air. They quench our thirst for adventure and sustain us in our times of need. They give us the breath of hope.

In the end, we are all one story.

“We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.”

T. S. Eliot’s “Four Quartets”

4 Responses to “Hearing Loss: A Hero’s Journey ~ Ch. 71”

    “Thank you LaRonda.

    I have spent the past part of an hour reading your blog.

    Given my review, I believe you have achieved an ambitious, personable goal. Your writings provide insight for the family as to your challenges as a daughter, mother, educator within your world of deafness. You have identified those having provided you with encouraging support that has allowed for your writing of compassionate, adventurous, entertaining and inspiring events.

    Your blog provides a sharing of your life experiences with your family, and friends. Truly a successful, sensitive, sentimental sharing with your readers.

    Finally, your blog provides the encouragement needed by those with hearing challenges, hearing disabilities, deafness, and other health conditions. I encourage you to continue to direct future writings toward that group.

    We send our love to all,

    Uncle Ed & Aunt Norma”

    I am so grateful to my family and friends for their comments and interest in my stories. Your encouragement and support motivate me to continue writing and sharing my adventures. thank you for your comments.

    My heart is full.

    ~ LaRonda :)

    Hello LaRonda,

    I was fortunate to be at your presentation in San Leandro last Saturday. Your description and analogies to a hero’s journey were timely and insightful. I thank you. I particularly liked your description of “guardians of the gates” — People who help, hinder, encourage and discourage us on our paths. I may not even have understood it all the way you meant it! But now I look at naysayers in the light of people who are present to test my mettle, to see if I am ready for the next step. I may fail and sometimes the naysayers may have indeed been correct. But it is I who gets to decide when to change course, not others. Thank you for your passions.

    Sincerely, Kirk

    Hi Kirk.

    I’m very touched that my presentation sat well with you. When people are open to change, the teachers come.

    Enjoy your journey!

    LaRonda

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Copyright 2006-2008 by LaRonda Zupp