Home Australia A woman shares her experience of hearing loud sex, loud farts and more as one of the only hearing students at a deaf college

A woman shares her experience of hearing loud sex, loud farts and more as one of the only hearing students at a deaf college

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In an episode of the Wrong Sauce podcast, content creator Caroline Blaike revealed the sights and sounds of being one of the only non-hearing students at Gallaudet University, a chartered university for the deaf in Washington.

A woman shared the uncensored truth about attending a deaf college as one of the only hearing students, forced to listen to loud sex and extra loud farts that others couldn’t hear.

In an episode of the Wrong Sauce Podcast, content creator Caroline Blaike revealed to the show’s hosts the sights and sounds of being one of the only non-hearing students at Gallaudet University, a chartered university for the deaf in Washington.

Blaike lived on campus for the first two years of school and said she did not speak while there. Deaf students were not afraid to make noises that would be considered rude or unpleasant in an able-bodied environment.

“Everyone is deaf, you can fuck as loud as you want because no one can hear you,” she said. “But I could hear, so I heard everyone.”

Sexual noises weren’t the only thing I heard. ‘You’d be at an assembly or some kind of presentation, everyone would be going crazy, farting.

In an episode of the Wrong Sauce podcast, content creator Caroline Blaike revealed the sights and sounds of being one of the only non-hearing students at Gallaudet University, a chartered university for the deaf in Washington.

Blaike lived on campus for the first two years of school and said she did not speak while there. Deaf students were not afraid to make noises that would be considered rude or unpleasant in an able-bodied environment.

Blaike lived on campus for the first two years of school and said she did not speak while there. Deaf students were not afraid to make noises that would be considered rude or unpleasant in an able-bodied environment.

Blaike said that when others found out she attended a predominantly deaf college, they often assumed “she must have been very quiet.”

But in reality, “it was the loudest place because it’s the only space where deaf people don’t have to adapt to a hearing world,” she said.

“They don’t have to be aware of the sounds they make, so they just don’t give a f**k.”

Pictured: The host of 'The Wrong Sauce' podcast reacts to Blaike's stories

Pictured: The host of ‘The Wrong Sauce’ podcast reacts to Blaike’s stories

Gallaudet University’s Hearing Undergraduate (HUG) program admits a select group of hearing applicants who are fluent in American Sign Language.

According to the university’s website, up to five percent of hearing students are admitted to the university each year.

These students learn alongside their deaf and hard of hearing peers and are committed to pursuing careers that promote the education of the deaf and hard of hearing community. Gallaudet University.

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