I met him online. We had been speaking for a few weeks in a chat-room before we decided to bring each other to life through the magic of webcam. The dial-up struggled as the choppy video player revealed him: Blue eyes, short blonde hair and a sprinkling of freckles on his cheeks,
“Nice earrings.” I said.
He paused and didn’t say a word, I heard him typing,
“That is my Hearing Implant – silly.”
And so went the start of our tale. He could hear reasonably well, phone calls were a battle and sweet-nothings weren’t worth whispering, but it wasn’t Profound Deafness. He liked Big Band, music that could shake the floorboards. As he signed to friends through bus windows and across party rooms I became so intrigued, watching his hands dance with expression and fluidity, I enrolled in a two year course in AusLan: Australian Sign Language. One of the most rewarding choices I’ve ever made.
Five months into our relationship I was invited to his house. He lived in a two-story apartment with his firefighting father in the suburbs. At all hours the phones would ring and reports would crackle on the in-house radio. It was a man’s house, a bloke’s house. They watched cricket together as mates; I don’t dislike cricket, I loathe it. And yes, I understand how it’s played, I know what a silly mid-off is but five days of it?! Needless to say it was not quite the environment for a limp-wristed ballerina like myself, as my boyfriend had texted me: