Lissa, FJ, Grendel, Daredeveil, and Cloggy,
All very good posts and show that not only with our children/selves but based on the observations of others there is a range at which people with cis function.
For others, it is time to stop projecting your experiences onto our kids. You may not want to hear this but as so many of you are apt to claim we parents are in denial so too are you if you are seeking to project your experiences 20-40 years ago without cis onto the ci kids of today.
My daughter can talk on the phone and it does not have to be in "perfect" situations, she can carry on conversations with others from different rooms and on different floors of our house.
What bothers me is that she and so many others when we relate these stories are dismissed as "superstars" or that they are only a small minority. That is nothing more than an attempt to marginalize our/their experiences in order to avoid the reality that they are more the norm then many of you are afraid to admit. Was my daughter one of the earliest kids implanted, yes, is she a "superstar" by no means no. I have observed, witnessed, personally known 100's of kids over the past 20 years and not all of course (but that is another discussion) but the overwhelming majority of these kids are doing very well. I am totally blown away by some of the bi-lat kids.
No the ci is not a miracle, it is not a cure for deafness, it does not make a deaf child hearing (but they can hear) but it is, for those who do not get benefits from HAs, still the best choice that currently exists to give deaf children and adults access to sound. We parents are always being told how we do not "listen" well some of you should not only "listen" to the ci kids but to those ci adults who have consistently told you how it has made thier lives easier and how they wish they had had it at a younger age.
Finally, to those who keep claiming that cochlear implant decision is done for the convenience of hearing parents, if you truly believe that, then you do not know very many parents of children with cochlear implants. If, as I suspect, it is your argument de jour, then it is a very weak one and time for you to come up with a new cliche.
Rick