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Entries categorized as ‘audiogram’

Deafaphobia? Is it them or us?

October 5, 2009 · 8 Comments

I have a bilateral sensorineural hearing loss.  We hear those words often but they mean different things to each individual.  I am only aided on my right ear because my left ear is totally unfriendly to any speech discrimination.  Or should I say, speech discrimination is unfriendly to my ear?

I once tried an aid on my left ear, many moons ago, with no affects.  I wear my aid on my “good” ear from the minute I wake up in the morning until I go to bed.  The only time I usually remove it during the day, is when I get jock itch in my ear.  Since last Thursday, I’ve developed extreme pain in my ear and on the crest of the helix.  You know, that part of the ear that has nada to do with hearing.  It’s where u would stick the earmold under that little sucker.

Today is the first day I could not wear my hearing aid due to extreme pain and let me tell you, it was a real eye opener for me and the people around me.  I have never gone this many waking hours out of the house without my aid.  First off, I found the people I work with not able to deal with me.  WOW! Now for the surprise, these are my teammates and we work with the hearing impaired and deaf population and their families.

I guess it’s true when we say, you don’t know what it feels like till you’ve been in my shoes.  Hearing people really do not understand deafness, let alone a hearing loss. Maybe it’s their fear of the unthinkable.  It immobilizes people when we discuss our unability to hear.  The very idea of not being able to hear a discussion, a disagreement or the hearing persons fear to communicate with us because WE cannot hear them.  So afraid to initiate a strategy to communicate with us for fear of catching what we have. 

Then, I encountered the people in the stores, on the streets and the dangers of walking in between cars to cross streets. Naturally, I can’t use my phone, which means, I can’t communicate and others can’t communicate with me, which means I’m going to be one pissed woman by the end of this week.  I’m very social and love to communicate.   The I’m in your face type of person I guess.

Lastly, there’s my family.  Everyones has their mouths wide open to over emphasize what they want to say to me.  It’s so weird and it’s also pretty scary to actually not hear the voices of the people I love.  I guess I’ve taken the assistance I get from my aid for granted.  And friends, co-workers and family around me, have taken my hearing loss and wearing an aid for granted.  I guess now they realize I am not hearing anything and that I am truly hearing impaired though one cannot officially call me deaf.

Don’t you just love when a hearing person says, wow, you have such great speech for a person with hearing loss?  It blows my mind.

Oh by the way, my Doctor really impressed me today. The man actually took out paper and wrote the questions he had for me and had me answer them (verbally of course).  He did not want me to put my hearing aid on because of the pain.  Oh and by the way, this was my Internist not my ENT. 

Here’s one of the reasons I dislike ENT Doctors.  Many years ago, during a phase where I refused to be aided, I went to an ENT Doctor because I was having terrible sinus problems.  As soon as I tell him I have a hearing loss he calls in his audiologist to do a hearing test.   I showed him my audiogram which was taken several months ago by my audiologist. But no, he wants one from his office.  I refused.

This ENT Doctor proceeds to look in my ears after I tell him about my hearing loss, show him my audiogram and explain that I have no speech discrim in my left ear.  The man looks into my ears, looks very seriously at me and says, I don’t see why u can’t hear out of that left ear, it looks perfectly fine.  With that remark said, I stood up, said thank you for your time and left (as fast as I could).  I decided from that moment on, that people, even many well meaning and not so well meaning professionals in the field, do not understand us.  It’s as if they have deafaphobia, the unimaginable! the unthinkable! 

So what is my point?  I raise my glass to all of us for holding our heads up high, for not allowing this to drag us to the grave and for continuing to educate those who hear.

Categories: Deaf · Hard of hearing culture · Hearing Loss · Hearing aids · Lip Reading · Relationships · aging · audiogram

Educating Cluelessness

July 20, 2009 · 10 Comments

I have just about had it with people who totally do not understand hearing loss.  Sitting around the picnic table on my deck with family, when suddenly my niece turns to me, taps me on the shoulder and says out loud,  “are your hearing aids on?” 

I looked at her with complete contempt and disgust.  Afterall, she knows I am hearing impaired, knows I wear a hearing aid…….ah! but she’s hearing and she’s clueless.  It doesn’t matter how many times I tell hearing people that wearing a hearing aid does not give us 20/20 hearing, they still don’t get it, can’t comprehend it, and in my opinion, so afraid to imagine what it’s like to be without it.

I’m getting to the point in my life where I am tired of educating the hearing on hearing loss and deafness.  I’m tired of being nice about it and most of all, I’m tired of hearing peoples lack of wanting to understand hearing loss.  I most recently discovered the only way to give hearing people a small taste of what it’s like to have even a mild to moderate hearing loss is to give them a taste of it.

I do workshops for school staff on early detection and understanding  hearing loss.  One day, while preparing my powerpoints, I was trying to figure out how to bring the audience into the life of hearing loss.  And it hit me, I need to allow my audience to get a sense of what hearing loss sounds like to us.  So, I searched the web and found several programs that I could set up to have the audience listen to a man, woman and childs voice and what it sounds like to hear those voices at different degrees of hearing loss.  I also purchased several hundred packaged earplugs online to have each person experience a 35 db. hearing loss (thats if the individual did not have an unknown additional loss) toward the end of the presentation. 

What I discovered by giving everyone the earplugs and moving along with my presentation was that everyone was so baffled by what they could or could not hear and the difficulty they were having with the speech discrimination.   Some people refused to put the earplugs in both ears, some pulled them out after a few minutes but everyone was totally thrown into a new light about hearing loss.  My experiment has been so successful that I now use the earplugs and what hearing loss sounds like for all my presentations to make my point.   I also always carry earplugs on me, just in case I need to do a quick lesson.

Getting back to my niece.  After several minutes of people joking around about my hearing loss, I pulled out packages of earplugs and handed them out.  I told everyone to put them on and continue with their conversations.  At first, no one took me seriously, but the look on my face told them, they best listen. They listened and listened they did.  There were lots of “what did u say?”  ”Did u say blue or hue?” “Look at my lips and try to read them.”

After ten minutes, I got a big apology from my niece as well as my nephew as well as lots of questions. I guess deep down inside I do care and can’t help but feel the need to educate the hearing.  I guess I also learned a lesson here and that is, I need to be patient, as patient as I expect the hearing person to be with me.

Categories: Cochlear Implants · Deaf · Hard of hearing culture · Hearing Loss · Hearing aids · Relationships · Tinnitus · audiogram · captions