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Don't Give In, Keiko
Literature别认输,惠子
(japan) Keiko Ogasawara
Can I still box if I can't hear? Japan's first female hearing-impaired professional boxer Keiko Ogasawara's parents are both hearing people, so they never thought that their daughter would be unable to hear. Until the age of three, Keiko was still unable to speak complete sentences, and her mother finally faced reality and took her for a close examination. Since then, Keiko has been confirmed to be a "hearing-impaired patient." In other words, since childhood, Keiko has lived in two worlds with the people closest to her. She has never known how to communicate fluently with others and how to interact appropriately with the world. She trudged alone through her manic adolescence with an afro, explored her place in school bullying and violent confrontations, and lived in the world as a weakling who was considered alien by others. Until that unexpected moment when I walked into the boxing gym. She is afraid of pain, being beaten, and being embarrassed. She has no extraordinary talents, but instead embraces flaws. No one could understand why she, who couldn't even hear the cheers, wanted to become a professional boxer. This book depicts how she spent the first thirty years of her life, like a hot-blooded comic, with sadness, excitement, and empathy for weakness and tears. This may not be a story about heroic success, but about daily failure and dignity, as she said: "I am always escaping. My timidity is still intact in boxing. But there are not only people with strong hearts in this world, there are also many weak people."
Can I still box if I can't hear? Japan's first female hearing-impaired professional boxer Keiko Ogasawara's parents are both hearing people, so they never thought that their daughter would be unable to hear. Until the age of three, Keiko was still unable to speak complete sentences, and her mother finally faced reality and took her for a close examination. Since then, Keiko has been confirmed to be a "hearing-impaired patient." In other words, since childhood, Keiko has lived in two worlds with the people closest to her. She has never known how to communicate fluently with others and how to interact appropriately with the world. She trudged alone through her manic adolescence with an afro, explored her place in school bullying and violent confrontations, and lived in the world as a weakling who was considered alien by others. Until that unexpected moment when I walked into the boxing gym. She is afraid of pain, being beaten, and being embarrassed. She has no extraordinary talents, but instead embraces flaws. No one could understand why she, who couldn't even hear the cheers, wanted to become a professional boxer. This book depicts how she spent the first thirty years of her life, like a hot-blooded comic, with sadness, excitement, and empathy for weakness and tears. This may not be a story about heroic success, but about daily failure and dignity, as she said: "I am always escaping. My timidity is still intact in boxing. But there are not only people with strong hearts in this world, there are also many weak people."