I’m hard of hearing, and my best friend is completely deaf. While we were chatting in sign language at a café, an entitled mother stormed over and told us to
I’m hard of hearing, and my best friend is completely deaf. While we were chatting in sign language at a café, an entitled mother stormed over and told us to stop—claiming it was “disruptive” and “inappropriate.” The room went silent… until a waiter stepped in and delivered a powerful reminder about respect, dignity, and what true inclusion looks like.
My name is Lila, I’m 22, and I’ve been hard of hearing since birth. Life for me has always meant navigating two languages — one with my voice, the other with my hands. I don’t remember a time when sign language wasn’t part of my identity.
It’s how I express myself fully. And with my best friend Riley, who is completely deaf, it’s how we speak freely, openly, and joyfully. That Tuesday afternoon, I walked into Hazelwood Café, our regular spot.
The warm scent of espresso and cinnamon buns wrapped around me like a favorite blanket. I spotted Riley right away, her curly hair bouncing as she smiled at something on her phone. We’ve been best friends since high school.
Where some friendships fade with time, ours only got stronger. We’ve had silent conversations in crowded auditoriums and cracked up laughing over jokes no one else could hear. Our bond doesn’t rely on sound — it’s rooted in understanding.
I signed, “Sorry I’m late. Traffic was a disaster.”
She rolled her eyes dramatically. “I thought you’d bailed on me to avoid hearing about my sourdough fail.”
I laughed, fingers flying.
“You tried again?”
“Don’t judge me,” she signed with m.0.c.k offense. “It looked so easy on TikTok.”
Just as I was about to tease her, I noticed a little boy at a nearby table watching us intently. He looked about seven, full of curiosity.
He smiled when I waved and gave a little wiggle of his fingers in return. Riley glanced over. “He’s adorable.
Look at him trying to copy our signs.”
I nodded, smiling. Moments like this filled my heart — quiet connections with strangers, the possibility of someone learning something new. But his mother… she was less than thrilled.
At first, she seemed too engrossed in her phone to notice him watching us. But the second he tried signing back, she snapped. “Stop that!” she hissed, yanking his hands down.
“We don’t do that. That’s rude.”
Riley’s hands stilled. I felt my throat tighten.
We’ve encountered uncomfortable stares, awkward questions, even people treating sign language like an oddity. But outright hostility? That still stung.
The mother kept glancing our way, glaring like we were speaking in tongues just to provoke her. “Wanna leave?” Riley signed, smaller than usual. I shook my head.
“No way. We belong here as much as anyone else.”
But the tension in the air tightened around us. The mother stood abruptly, dragging her son by the wrist.
Her heels clacked as she marched to our table. “Excuse me,” she said through gritted teeth. “Could you please stop all that gesturing?”
I blinked.