Hey all,
Bottesini was nice enough to recommend this forum for me after reading my "intro" from yesterday. What a huge relief to find others who are late deafened! In all honesty, I didn't even know the term existed, so to find a whole room full of you is a bit overwhelming (and nice). I see most people start off with a little intro to their situation, so I hope you don't mind if I copy and paste some of mine from the other forum:
I was born hearing and lived a hearing life until age 19. In March Break of that year, my Mom complained that I never seem to listen. I told her I couldn't really hear her, so we went to get my hearing tested. Turned out I had severe hearing loss and had been getting by (subconsciously) by lip-reading. I got my first pair of hearing aids a couple of months later.
At the time, I played in a (loud) band and so I attributed the hearing loss to playing in and attending concerts (and one plane ride a few years earlier when I had a bad head cold). A bit scared by the hearing loss, I tried to get my act together: quit the band, attended far fewer concerts, and for the ones I did attend, I would wear ear plugs. That seemed to do the trick until about six months to a year later, when the hearing aids didn't seem to be doing their job anymore. So I got newer, more powerful aids. A year or so later, same thing. My hearing continued to deteriorate, until my loss (ski slope loss for anyone who knows what I mean) had trickled down into the "profound" category, where it remains (fingers crossed) today.
Audiologists who had been happy with the "played his music too loud" theory before, were now chalking it up to the loss being hereditary, despite no one in my family past or present ever having worn hearing aids. They said I've probably been losing my hearing for my whole life and just never really noticed. And on top of that, they said I should assume I'm just going to eventually lose it all some day.
So here I am, 27, and waking up every day wondering if this is the best I'll ever hear again...Good times.
That said, it has been unbeliveably refreshing (and occasionally emotional) for me to read a number of your stories on here. Something as simple as knowing that other deafened people leave the water running too was enough to make my day!
I look forward to getting to know you guys over the coming weeks and months!