SYLVA, N.C. — (WLOS) – The 2025 Deaflympics in Tokyo, Japan in November will have a WNC native as a member of its USA deaf volleyball team.
“As you can tell, I can talk completely normal, I can interact completely normal. Growing up, a lot of people didn’t know I was deaf unless I told them, or they saw the implant,” said Ella Gamble.
Gamble, who attends Gallaudet University in Washington D.C. is home in Sylva for just a little bit as she prepares for another season, teaching, playing, and studying.
“We are in the middle of the city, on campus it’s nice because it’s kind of secluded. It’s fenced in so you kind of have your own world. But then you go out and have so many people and so many things, it’s definitely different. But I’m getting used to it, when I come back home, it’s definitely a breath of fresh air.”
First attending Carson-Newman out of high school, Gamble transferred to Gallaudet, a school that specializes in deaf and hard-of-hearing. Before her time in D.C., sign language wasn’t an essential part of her daily life. Though being born deaf, her life was most predicated by her implants, as the sign language community in Western North Carolina isn’t too large of a community.
“Whenever I transferred to Gallaudet, they had all signed there. So when I got there, I didn’t really know anything except the absolute basics. I’ve become fluent in sign since being there. Obviously I don’t really use it here because there’s nobody to talk to. I will with my sister every once in awhile, she knows a little bit. When I go back up there, sometimes I won’t even wear my implants just because that’s the language, and that’s what I feel more natural doing, even though spoken English is my first language.”
Volleyball has been Ella’s whole life, something she saw her mom doing and coaching, and a path she seeks to follow.
“I’ve thankfully had a lot of opportunities because I want to coach in the future. That’s my dream job right now, my goal. I’ve been helping my mom for years, her club team, and now she’s coaching the middle school District team here. I’ve been helping her out with practices and stuff. This past year, Gallaudet started men’s volleyball, I coached their club team the year before that through an internship as an assistant. This past year, I’ve been able to be a student assistant, and that’s been a lot of fun. It’s weird because all the guys are my age, or older and younger you know. It’s a little bit weird because we’re the same age, because I’m friends with some of them.”
Teaching, coach, learning, clearly a passion of hers. Ella is the eldest of four in her family, with two brothers between her and the youngest, her sister.
“She’s been in the gym since she was four. Her experience is very different from mine. I started playing in maybe fifth grade and I wasn’t really good until my sophomore year of school. While she’s been in the gym and she’s been going at it for awhile. The stuff I was doing when I was older, seeing her doing it now, and seeing her be as good as she is, it’s really cool.”
Volleyball has already taken Ella to one Deaflympics, and world championship, and to-be another Deaflympics this fall. Seeing the world because of her lack of ability to hear, something she never could have foreseen.
“It’s been really cool to see where I started here, in little Cullowhee, Sylva. And playing for Smoky Mountain, to going to do this. I never would have imagined, my little high school self would never imagined – ,my little high school self would never have thought I’d be doing this one day.”