Communicating effectively with the hearing world.
What are your words of advice to communicate effectively in the hearing world? Basic things like going to the grocery store and communicating with the checker and not getting looks like you are crazy. Do you hold up signs? Do you try and explain that you have a hearing loss or that you are deaf? What are your communication methods?
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Joangela, the reality is that once we have hearing loss, we'll always have hearing loss. There is no cure so we have to be aware of all the tools necessary to live with the condition. Amplification is one tool but it only helps. There will be times when the hearing aid battery or hearing aid itself dies. Other methods are needed. Communication strategies, lip reading, aural rehabilitation, and other Hearing Assistive Technology (HAT) are other tools that people need to be aware of. We also need to advocate for ourselves to ensure we're doing everything possible to make it easier.
Tony in Michigan
reply to joangela
The Siletz Tribal Center IS a beautiful building, located among tall trees, with the ugliness of the parking lot across the road. This is a lightly-populated area where many of us live away from others, on acres forested with old growth spruce. (Yes, there is some old growth left in western Oregon, mostly on small bits of land where someone like us lives in a house that has grown from a one-room cabin.) There aren't many local meetings, except for town councils where there usually are pretty good tech systems, just not anything so advanced as loops. My town has no other "industry" except tourism, which means lots of minimum-wage jobs during summers and unemployment during winters. Our grade school has such a low average family income that ALL kids are provided free lunches. This town of 8,000 swells to 50,000 during the summer, so tax dollars are invested in the infrastructure to support those extra people rather than in extras. The lodge complex where our lecture group meets was a lovely facility when it was built over 50 years ago, but has been sold several times recently, each owner ignoring repairs or improvements in the hope for a big sale. Although it was originally a conference center, it provides nothing beyond a lectern with a mike and a pull-down big screen for each lecture hall...our group brings our own projector. New owners are investing in "adventure" activities, like a zip line, to attract people from the metro area two hours away.
I find the groups of 8-12 around a table very frustrating. Yesterday, I tried placing the mic I had just purchased on the table top, hoping to hear the three people closest to me on my left, but it didn't pick up much. Since it's new, I hope it was simply that I didn't set it up correctly. This was a lunch group, so it's not practical to ask each person to reach for the mic when they speak. There were probably 65 or 70 people in the room, all talking, always a challenge. I wound up sitting quietly, smiling from time to time when someone appeared to be speaking toward me. I find it difficult to hear everyone even when it's a meeting of a small group in a separate room. There just aren't enough people with rich voices full of overtones!
I like you approach for better communication. Something that is very challenging for us to do, but it appears we must do.
I am grateful to have happened on this discussion. While I do not have a hearing loss, my father did have a severe loss, which was very isolating for him. He suffered for years with poorly working hearing aids for his situation, and stopped being the social person he was because he didn't want to experience a mistake in groups. I learned some basic ASL that I also taught him, to help him in some settings. Thank you for allowing me to read all your comments, and I know that it was meant to be. I have been wondering about re-starting ASL lessons, and this has prompted me to do so.
Ginger
One thing is for sure everything is real when you have a severe and profound hearing loss and are deaf. Reality is right there in front of you. You are right, getting the best tools out there if you can, is a huge help. It is just not a replacement. I know this, as I come from the hearing world, where I too heard good enough to call myself a hearing person.
Some good ideas
Link to goodideas: https://www.healthyhearing.com/report/52641-Tips-for-navigating-your-workplace-with-hearing-loss
This is some of the best advice I have read. Thanks so much for posting it.
We should all be advocating and educating about hearing loops in large group settings where one is trying to hear a speaker. The personal remote mics work quite well in small conversation groups if people are willing to pass the microphone when speaking. It takes some education, even then. There is really no excuse in a large meeting to not have some type of assistive listening system. Besides hearing loops, there are FM systems and Infrared systems. Both FM and IR require the use of receivers, while loops simply require the individual to use the telecoil switch in their hearing aid to tune in. Sure, you can give a speaker your remote mic, but once you do that you won't hear the people near you. There's a lot to learn, but once you do, it's really not all that difficult to use the technology available to us. The Americans with Disabilities Act requires communication access, but we have to request it in advance. Regardless, it takes the effort to know what works and educate about it. Advocacy.
@ner, same same. Even though it' not politically correct, I also use the term "Hearing Impaired" so they take my requests to face me, say my name first, etc...seriously. If I say "Hard of hearing" they tend to not modify their behavior; and then get frustrated by my requests they repeat themselves. So, I self-identify as "hearing impaired."