My Cochlear Implant - a journal
I’ve been loosing my hearing for around 25 years. It started after my first kidney transplant - or that’s when it got bad enough to go see an audiologist to see why I was saying “What?” “Pardon?” “Could you restate that?” I would get home from work seeing clients and would be utterly exhausted, for no apparent reason. The audiologist I met with, Dr. Robert Sweetlow, advised a hearing aid for my right ear. I can’t even tell you how many aids I’ve had since then - about enough to buy a nice new car I’d guess, since they run about $2000 each.
I work and play for an RV Caravan tour company, we are wagon masters and tail gunners depending on the trip. We usually travel with 16 to 25 RVs and go all over North America, Europe, Africa and Australia. It’s super fun! And it is super stressful for me with my hearing loss. I’m with groups of people in all kinds of challenging hearing/understanding situations. As a retired psychotherapist, you have to know that I love connecting with people and being in the middle of things. Challenging? Oh my, yes.
In 2015 my discrimination was at R-46, L-32. In 2017, Resound 3D Linx hearing aides offered a lot of help to my declining understanding. So, I struggled along for those years. Then this year (2019), after a particularly challenging caravan, I decided to make an appointment for another hearing test and adjustment. In Albuquerque, NM I met with Dr. Terry Sankovitz. I just wasn’t understanding people and was cranky and exhausted all the time. After the exam, Dr. Terry showed me the audio gram... R- 14, L-12. Whaaat? Seeing it on paper my whole insides went cold and still, I was stunned. Barb, my best friend and wife, was just as shocked when Dr. Terry shared the test with her. The test measured how my ears understood speech without any visual cues. Dr. Terry said that there is no point adjusting my hearing aids further, louder wasn’t working. She talked about my options, one of which is cochlear implant. I had to let that sink in...
With a cochlear implant, there is no going back. You’re implanted period. But wait... with my ‘discrim’ I couldn’t go back anyway. The other option would be to withdraw from the world. Understanding .4 in one ear and .1 in the other is deaf. I am highly functional because I speech read; read bodies, context and situations - in the right situation I do okay. In groups, in noise, in a car, in low light... well you know.
It just happened that Cochlear Americas was hosting a panel discussion the next day, for people interested in CI (cochlear implant) and for those with CIs. Did we jump on that opportunity!!! WOW. What an eye opening. The group moderator was a woman who had been deafened as a child and as an adult had chosen bilateral cochlear implants. She was dynamic and compassionate. Her mother was a member of the panel discussion that included a couple, sisters and a single person. Here’s the best part. They hired a court XXX to transcribe speech to captions on a screen for all to see. I am not sure anyone in the room needed them as badly as did I. When I walked in the door, I felt afraid and when I left I felt elated. Arms full of booklets and information, Barb and I talked about the meeting and agreed that both of us felt a sense of hope, at last.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Hearing Loss Support Group.
The 2021 National HLAA Convention is going to be in San Diego if it's held. The conventions are always outstanding. All the CI manufacturers attend and give presentations and have exhibits. A great learning experience. There are several HLAA chapters in southern CA. I've attended a couple Zoom meetings they have opened up to everyone. I live in Wisconsin so it's kind of fun to attend other chapter's meetings. Check it out.
I woke up the day I became deaf with extreme vertigo and nystagmus. I could not get out of bed, or even roll over in bed, without vomiting. The extreme vertigo lasted for about 4 days but I felt "off" and "uneasy" for about a week (mostly because I was on a sailboat race down to Mexico for 8 days). But I have never had any vertigo or balance issues prior to this or sense then, for which I am incredibly thankful of.
You may find this of interest. Dr. Chad Ruffin MD podcast. Dr. Ruffin uses cochlear implants himself.
https://www.hearingtracker.com/podcast/cochlear-implants-with-chad-ruffin-md?utm_source=Hearing+Tracker+Updates&utm_campaign=3c85a2d065-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2020_05_07_02_42_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_790a5b8263-3c85a2d065-184861593
@lizzy102 Thank you for all your posts about your continuing experiences with your CI. I've loved reading them AND loved hearing about RV options for women. You're a terrific writer. I'm not considering getting a CI; but reading about your experiences over time was valuable for me and would be even more so for people considering this amazing technology. Thanks to all of the information I've found from reading posts on these threads, I'm a reformed luddite and will be exploring all the new technologies Julie, golden? and others have written about that will help me hear better when it's safe to venture out. Thanks again.Nancy
Time for an update. My Cochlear Journey continues in a positive vein, still love it! One of the difficulties I’ve found is the very size of the processor. It takes up a lot of ear geography, especially considering double masks pulling my ears into oddly shaped flaps. Yes, I double mask, it’s time for that what with the variants. I even bought glasses frames with thinner temples, to give more room to my processor. Nope, there’s not much space left, the processor is the most precarious though. I have it on a tether, a piece of fish line on the processor tied to a weave clip I put in my hair, so it doesn’t dive to the ground. One solution I came up with is to wear a hat and tuck the processor above the band, a head band works well too. We have a couple feet of snow on the ground now - warm hats. Another issue was music - it all sounded the same. My Cochlear Audiology team at UAB worked with me in virtual training sessions - it was super fun and really helped me discern a piano from a cello from a guitar. And the app “Bring Back the Beat” from cochlear is terrific, lots of listening games that really help drive home individual instruments. Be safe out there, my imaginary friends. See ya next time.
@julieo4 I have a question and am not sure where to raise it and how but I know starting with you even if this post of yours was about a year ago, couldn't be too bad! Although I was involved with music most of my life, when my hearing went down, gradually, I ultimately stopped listening because I couldn't tolerate the distortions of the music I was hearing - with my hearing aid. (One ear became deaf.) Now I can hear much better with my C.I. and I want to restore music to my life - which means getting myself a radio! My question: with a cochlear implant, does it make sense to use an earbud? Anything else to learn re equipment to help listen to music?
I was playing in an orchestra and ensembles when I lost hearing in my right ear over 30 years ago. I had to stop participating, both because I couldn't hear what others were playing and because recruitment made some sounds physically painful. I stopped going to concerts or listening to music at home. After about 30 years, I started listening to music again and learned that I'm only comfortable hearing music I know relatively well: I am able to imagine the sounds I can't hear to fill the spaces. It's still uncomfortable to listen to music I don't know, as lots of instruments are simply missing, and I'm unable to imagine what I should be hearing. Now, I can go to a concert of "old" music and enjoy it, thinking I'm hearing what's missing. I still don't listen to music nearly as much as I used to at home; recordings are more difficult to hear than live concerts. It's that loss that happens with electronic sound: radio, TV, phone, etc. where some tone ranges just are lost--which is why it's harder to understand the same person via phone than it is in the same room, albeit being in the same room means that you have all those wonderful visual clues. I am pleased that I can enjoy some music now.
You have a CI and also use a hearing aid, right? If so, you are bimodal just as I am. I enjoy listening to music especially when driving alone so I can manage the volume and the sound. A little more bass works well for me. The music I enjoy most is the music I've known for a long time; that which is familiar to me. (Also that which has words that make sense.) At home if I want to listen to music I plug a neckloop into the portable device it's playing on and use the telecoils in my HA and in my CI processor. It works great.
I will say that when music is playing in the background, anywhere, it makes it difficult to carry on a conversation. Yes, I can enjoy the music that way as long as there is no conversation. My hearing loss has been a part of my life and spousal relationship for so long that we've adjusted to NOT having music on at home very often. The TV is another thing. 🙂 As long as I can reach and capture the remote control, I can turn it to mute when conversation starts. I have granddaughters who are vocalists. No matter what they sing I enjoy it!
@barbb If you have a smart cell phone there are so many all music sources and apps you can subscribe to or many good ones are free.. of course you will want WI-FI access too... I listen to mostly classical music on Pandora, Minnesota Public Radio and such .. free.. The frequency limits of your hearing devices and your cell phone ... my remote mic (Bluetooth) has a Music option... It was provided by my Starkey Hearing Aids I received through the VA hospital..
@ken82 Thanks Ken. I don't quite get what you are saying here: "The frequency limits of your hearing devices and your cell phone". I guess the 2 words most problematic for my understanding are "frequency limits"....? Can you help me out here?