Signing with us

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promote early language development for Deaf children, empower families with practical inclusion tools, and make sign language accessible across homes, schools, and communities in Africa.🤟👨‍👩‍👦‍👦🏘

06/05/2026

And cones.

When his teammates showed up, they found him already on the court, drawing symbols on the ground arrows, circles, lines.

Confused, they gathered around. Aden didn’t speak.

He showed them.

He pointed. Moved. Demonstrated. Then he used simple hand signals clear, fast, intentional.

One tap on the chest: Pass to me.

Two fingers pointing left: Screen coming.

A raised fist: Hold.

At first, they laughed.

Then he played.

Something changed.

Without relying on shouted calls, the game became sharper. Cleaner. Faster.

Aden moved like he was reading the future. He signaled, cut through defenders, and suddenly—he wasn’t being ignored.

He was leading.

A teammate hesitated, unsure.

Aden locked eyes with him. Tapped his chest. Then pointed to the open space.

The pass came.

Aden jumped.

The ball hit his hands.

For a split second, everything froze.

Then—

Swish.

Silence.

Then eruption.

This time, Aden didn’t need to hear the cheers to feel them.

He saw it—in the wide eyes, the raised hands, the respect that hadn’t been there before.

From that day on, the team changed.

They learned his signals. They watched more. They communicated differently.

And Aden?

He stopped being the Deaf kid who got ignored.

He became the player everyone watched.

Because on that court, where others depended on noise, Aden had mastered something greater.

Vision.

21/04/2026

The court was always busy.
Sneakers screeching. Teammates shouting. The sharp echo of the ball against the concrete. For everyone else, it was chaos. For Aden, it was silence.
He stood at the edge of the court, eyes sharp, breathing steady, watching everything.
“Pass! Pass!” someone yelled. he could tell by the movement of their mouths, the urgency in their faces. But by the time he reacted, it was too late. The ball had already been taken, the opportunity gone.
Again.
Aden clenched his fists.
It wasn’t that he didn’t understand the game. In fact, he understood it better than most. He saw angles others missed. He anticipated movement before it happened. But basketball, as his teammates played it, depended on sound calls, warnings, quick instructions shouted across the court.
And Aden couldn’t hear any of it.
So they stopped passing to him.
At first, it was subtle. A missed opportunity here, a hesitation there. Then it became obvious. He would run into position, wide open, hands ready and the ball would go somewhere else.
Not because he wasn’t good.
Because he was invisible.
One afternoon, the game got intense. It was a close match, last few minutes, everyone sweating, pushing hard.
Aden was on the court, but barely part of the game.
He watched as his teammate dribbled straight into trouble two defenders closing in. Aden saw the gap forming behind them, a perfect opening. He moved fast, cutting through space, waving his hand.
Nothing.
The ball was stolen.
Game over.
His team lost.
Frustration exploded across the court. Players arguing, blaming each other. Aden stood still, chest rising and falling, anger burning quietly inside him.
Then one teammate turned to him and said something.
Aden couldn’t hear the words but he didn’t need to.
The shrug. The dismissive look.
You didn’t help.
Something inside Aden snapped.
That night, he didn’t sleep.
Instead, he replayed the game in his mind. Every movement. Every missed chance. Every moment he had been ignored.
If they wouldn’t adapt to him, he would change the game.
The next day, Aden arrived early.
He brought a marker....

What happened next? Story Continues on next post

14/04/2026

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09/04/2026

“Teller 13: Where Silence Found a Voice”

Kamau returned.

Not because he wanted to—but because he had to.

The paper he had fought so hard to get the previous week was incomplete. A missing detail. A small error. To the system, it was routine. To Kamau, it was a return to the same battlefield.

He stood outside the building for a moment, staring at the sign: *Birth Certificates.*
His jaw tightened.

Not again.

Inside, the queue was just as long. The murmurs, the impatience, the hurried instructions—it was all the same. But Kamau was different this time. In his pocket was his phone, and on it, a simple note he had prepared:

“I am Deaf. Please write clearly or allow me to type responses. Thank you.”

When his turn came, he stepped forward and placed the phone gently on the counter before the officer could speak.

The officer paused.

Read.

Looked up.

Something shifted.

Instead of raising his voice, the officer reached for a pen and wrote—slowly this time.

“Welcome. What do you need help with?”

Kamau blinked in surprise. Then, cautiously, he smiled.

His hands moved, then stopped—he remembered. He picked up the phone and typed quickly, sliding it back.

“Correction on my birth certificate. Missing detail.”

The exchange continued—back and forth, screen to paper, paper to screen. It wasn’t perfect. It wasn’t fast. But it worked.

And then something unexpected happened.

The officer stood up and gestured to a colleague across the room. A few minutes later, a young woman approached, smiling warmly. She tapped Kamau lightly on the shoulder to get his attention.

Then she signed.

Fluently.

Kamau’s eyes widened.

Relief flooded his face so quickly it was almost visible. His shoulders dropped. For the first time in that building, he didn’t have to translate himself.

Her name was Amina—an intern who had recently learned sign language.

Through her hands, the system finally spoke Kamau’s language.

The process that had taken hours before now took minutes. Clarifications were clear. Instructions made sense. The tension that had once filled the space around him dissolved into something lighter—something human.

Even the people in line seemed to notice. The impatience softened into curiosity. Some watched closely. Others leaned in, quietly learning.

Communication, once a barrier, had become a bridge.

As Kamau left the building, corrected document in hand, he paused at the door.

He turned back.

Inside, nothing had physically changed. The same desks. The same queues. The same signs.

But something had shifted.

Not in the system—but in the approach.

09/04/2026

Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard! Wilson Nyabera, Don Otina

08/04/2026

The room was loud, but to him, it was silent chaos.

Kamau stood at the counter clutching his documents, eyes fixed on the officer behind the desk. The sign above read “Birth Certificates – Teller 12.” He had been directed here after hours of waiting, moving from one line to another with only gestures and guesses to guide him.

The officer spoke quickly, pointing at a paper.
“Go to teller 12.”

Kamau blinked. His face tightened. He hadn’t understood.

He tried to respond, using sign language, his hands moving with urgency. The officer frowned, repeating himself louder as if volume could bridge the gap. People in the queue shifted impatiently. A woman behind him muttered, “C’mon, we are tired of standing.”

Kamau felt the familiar weight of frustration rise in his chest. Not because the process was difficult but because it wasn’t built for him.

He pointed to his ear, then shook his head gently, signaling that he was Deaf. The officer hesitated, then scribbled something unclear on a piece of paper and pushed it toward him. Kamau tried to read it, but the handwriting was rushed and incomplete. Another barrier.

Minutes turned into more confusion. Directions were missed. Papers were returned. The line grew restless. Kamau’s simple task of getting a birth certificate had become an exhausting maze.

25/03/2026

Inclusion is making sure that your Deaf child has access to the right visual learning materials to boost their learning and language acquisition.....

Address

35578
Nairobi
00100

Opening Hours

Monday 08:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 08:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 08:00 - 17:00
Thursday 08:00 - 17:00
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