Archive for January, 2012


It’s hard to find a hairstylist that “gets” you.  I put off going to the hairstylist for this reason.  When I lived in Atlanta, I finally found a lady I just loved, through a coworker.  I was sad to move from the area, mostly because I had to leave Addy behind!!!  You might think I’m kidding, but I assure you the thing I miss most about living in Atlanta is my hair stylist.
 
I’ve had the “hairstylist horror stories from hell” (the old triple “H”) since living in Minnesota.  Though I don’t think that the horror relates to my hearing loss so much.  The first few people I had cut my hair (went back to coloring myself) were just so so… they were nice enough, understood I wasn’t going to hear them, and promptly never spoke to me again the entire time they cut my hair.  
 
Next came my brilliant idea of embracing my natural gray — I love the white Bride-of-Frankenstein striping of my gray, but don’t love the all over salt & pepper look.  I had highlights put in my hair when I had it colored, so why not use my natural highlights and lowlight the rest?  Well, I’ve yet to find a stylist who says this is doable, but I have no clue why not?  
 
Four stylists later and I’ve been shown the “why not?”.  Cruella De Vil looked matronly compared to the worst version of trying to get this look!!!  I finally gave up and had my son’s girlfriend set up an appointment with her mother who lives in the cities… I just had her give me all over color and highlights.  Not bad, but not what I wanted.  
 
Here I am months and months later and I have 4 inches of natural that flows into an ugly, faded, and washed out reddish brown, which looks really ugly next to graying dark brown hair.  My hair has no reddish tones, and is very dark brown, almost black, but getting a natural looking color that is close to my own is tricky.  
 
As for what I do to handle the communication problems… from the get-go I say “You need to know that I’m deaf and read lips…  If I can’t see you, I can’t hear you, and without my glasses I’m blind, so am also really, really deaf.  I’d love to chat, but it’s difficult unless you get my attention first and you make it clear you are talking to me… otherwise, I’ll just assume you’re chatting with others around you.”  
 
Sometimes this makes a hairstylist jumpy and they are very noticeably self-conscious and ill-at-ease.  However, I’ve learned these types of people are ill-at-ease with any deviation from the norm, so it’s not me, it’s them.  Others aren’t that ill-at-ease, they just figure “…why talk to her when she can’t hear?” and I’m afforded a silent hour while they fiddle with my hair.  I don’t like either.
 
Other times, you get someone who takes in all that your little “I’m deaf…” speech means and then disregards it all and talks like there is no tomorrow, never looking at you or even caring that you can’t hear them.  These kinds of people are only interested in hearing the sound of their own voice, and I know many people like this in life.  They just drone on without a care, oblivious to the fact that the listeners around them aren’t really listening or interested in what they are saying.  At times like these, I’m glad I’m deaf.
 
And then you strike gold!!  You get someone who processes what your “I’m deaf…” speech means, they reason in their own mind what that might require from them, and then they do their best to put you at ease and accommodate you, while treating you like you are human.  Even more important, they treat you like your deafness isn’t really a big deal, which it isn’t, when you find people who are willing to communicate with you in a way that you need them to.  Addy was this kind of stylist.  I miss her.

I rarely walk around without my hearing aid on during the day, as I work full-time and am in constant conversation with my clients.  However, on this one day,  I decided to be deaf.  Not sure why, except that maybe the constant noise of phones ringing, peoples’ voices chatting away was beginning to overwhelm my senses that day.

I only wear one hearing aid and that’s because my other ear has no speech discrimination.  So without the aid, I hear very little. During the course of the first hour, I realized and I mean, fully became aware of how much I actually did not hear and though my colleagues knew I took off my hearing aid, initially, no one appeared to communicate any differently with me, knowing, I could not hear.  That’s when it hit me.  Hearing people have no understanding of what it means to “not hear.” They have no idea that I am watching their lips move and nothing they are saying is being heard or understood.

I admit to being a very poor lip reader but I do read people well. I can see the build up of their frustration in  “my” not hearing them. I can see their blood pressure rising as the coloring in their faces change and their mouths fly wide open, thinking, she’ll hear me if I just scream a bit louder, open my mouth a bit wider.  I want to yell STOP this madness.  Stop, listen, learn.  No matter how many times I tell these people, yelling does not make me “understand” the words being said, I continue to feel misunderstood or is it my hearing loss thats misunderstood.  NO, it’s just hearing loss that is not understood.  I refuse to take the blame for “their” frustration.

I put my hearing aid back into my ear and the world is turned back on.

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