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I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sat Mar 31, 2018 9:51 pm
by Vandal
Over the past year, I've noticed my hearing was slowly regressing to the point where I was constantly asking others to repeat what they said, even though they were standing very close to me. I was having trouble making out what others were saying if there was another noise source nearby, like a radio or TV or even another conversation. I told my doctor about it and I got an appointment with a hearing specialist a few weeks ago.

I went into it expecting to be told that, maybe, I was borderline in one ear and to come back in two years for another test. Boy, was I wrong.

The audiologist put me in a soundproof booth and had me click a button whenever I heard a series of five tones, delivered at different frequencies and volumes. I couldn't hear many of the high notes, especially the ones at low volume. Uh oh!

Next came the word test. A voice would tell me to "say the word _____" which turned out to be single-syllable words like which, bridge, broke, miles, trust--words that ran the spectrum of highs and lows. Again, I did not do well, especially in high-end sounding words that started with th-, s- or ch- like thick, sink, chip, etc.

The third test sealed the deal. My wife of 29 years came along and was asked to say a list of 30 words printed on a card. I was now out of the booth and sitting five feet from her, so all I had to do was repeat the words. Easy.

I scored 76% on that one, which put me in the mid-moderate hearing loss for that test. To finish it off, the audiologist fitted me with hearing aids and had my wife repeat the test. I aced it!

Reality time:

I'm hearing impaired. There is no other way to say it. I'm 58 and can't hear like I use to. I've been wearing my new hearing aids for a little more than a week and the difference is absolutely amazing. I had no idea what I was missing. There are sounds around our house that now jump out at me. I can hear conversations across the room if I focus on it. There is an app on my iPhone that allows me to adjust the settings to the current situation, like normal conversation, outdoors, restaurant, or music. Hearing aids are Bluetooth compatible, so I can listen to music or podcasts through them and no one else can tell. I don't miss a thing.

I'm fortunate enough to be able to afford these hearing aids (by the way, I don't refer to them as "audio enhancers" or any other PC name--they are hearing aids) and lucky that my insurance covers a pretty good chunk of it.

Once they are in, I don't even realize I'm wearing them. I feel nothing, either inside the ear or above it. They're virtually invisible. I'm not self-conscious about having them and make a point to show others I'm wearing them.

Bottom line: I deserve to hear everything and so do you. I ask all of you to please get your hearing checked and take appropriate action. This is a major life decision!

Spoiler
I heard that!

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 1:27 am
by ghostjmf
I had my hearing tested over 10 years ago.

They said I was OK then. I used to be great!

What I had then & have even worse now is a problem medicine has only recently acknowledged: I hear the beginning consonant, but can't tell what it is some times. Some of my guesses are funny. This is a neurological problem that happens, they now say, at a level beyond what the ear is reporting.

But amping up the volume of what the ear is reporting could help.

Sadly, a test that I still have pretty-good general hearing is that I csn hear sounds rooms away that my sister can't.

Congrats on getting aids that work & using them. Both my parents needed them. Only my Mom even tried to use hers. My Dad learned to lipread well.

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 4:09 am
by silverscreenselect
I'm glad to hear that you can hear better now. Of course, it's not just our hearing we need to keep checking up on; there's all kinds of nasty surprises we can get as we age.

Although sometimes I wish I could only hear 76% of what Mrs. SSS says. (Turning around to make sure no one is watching me type....)

Hope you enjoy your new hearing aids; you seem to be off to a good start.

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 5:16 am
by Estonut
ghostjmf wrote:Sadly, a test that I still have pretty-good general hearing is that I csn hear sounds rooms away that my sister can't.
This says nothing about your general hearing. It only proves your hearing is better than your sister's.

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 8:24 am
by a1mamacat
Congrats. Glad to "hear" that you can now enjoy the full cacophony of life :)

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 9:10 am
by littlebeast13
Shameless plug for one of my blog's better posts....

https://evilsquirrelsnest.com/2015/05/0 ... -beltones/

lb13

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 9:38 am
by T_Bone0806
This obviously speaks to my music geekdom, but my first thought, right after "that's great!", was that the best part was being able to adjust the volume to tune out unpleasant sounds more easily, like Christina Aguilera singing. Win-Win.

But I apologize in advance if this is an inappropriate response. I am not making light of this seriously great news. I am indeed pleased for you.

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 11:06 am
by Spock
51 here. Wrecked my hearing around loud farm machinery.

Have a hard time hearing a person talking in a load room with a lot of other noises etc.

Yeah, your post is a reality check, but I am not going to go there yet. Just like I need bifocals, but I can make it work with prescription glasses for the computer, plus another set for far-seeing.

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 11:08 am
by wbtravis007
I told my doctor that I couldn't hear myself fart. She gave me a prescription. I was skeptical, of course, so I just went ahead and asked her if the pills would improve my hearing. She said "Of course not, but they'll make you fart louder."

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 11:51 am
by elwoodblues
wbtravis007 wrote:I told my doctor that I couldn't hear myself fart. She gave me a prescription. I was skeptical, of course, so I just went ahead and asked her if the pills would improve my hearing. She said "Of course not, but they'll make you fart louder."
A man goes to the doctor and says, "I have been having a lot of gas lately. Fortunately it is not very loud and does not smell that bad, but is there anything you can do about it?"

The doctor said, "Yes, but first I want to test your hearing and fix your nose."

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 12:28 pm
by T_Bone0806
They'll be here all week folks. Be sure to tip the wait staff. :lol:


All we're missing are the rimshots off a snare drum. Let me try..

Ba-dum-dum!

Nah, not the same...

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 1:58 pm
by Beebs52
I'M SO HAPPY FOR YOU. Oops, not right...congrats!

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 8:02 pm
by Vandal
There's one guy who starts lip syncing a conversation every time I see him, so I have no trouble with deaf humor.

What has nine arms and sucks:
Spoiler
Def Leppard


I went for a long hike this weekend and had no trouble with outdoor sounds. I went to an Easter service and had no trouble hearing the very old priest (and the swarms of screaming kids behind us).

So far, so good.

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 8:29 pm
by Vandal
Also, I may have exaggerated slightly when I said they are barely visible. Judge for yourselves:


Spoiler
Image

Re: I can hear you...now.

Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2018 7:12 pm
by kayrharris
I really think late 50's to early 60's is about the average age for needing hearing aids. My daughter's degree is in Speech Pathology/Audiology and she tested my husband 15 years ago when he was in that age range. Worked around heavy equipment for years, which ruins your hearing. He basically flunked the test then but did nothing about it. Natalie says the high pitched sounds are the first to go as far as hearing them. His hearing is terrible, he has expensive, non visible, iPhone app enabled hearing aids, but he hates them. We can have a whole conversation with him right there and he really has no idea what we are talking about. My girls and I kinda like it that way! LOL. I'm glad you love yours and actually wear them!


kay