Most important first: There's a guy in our neighborhood who has a Ducati 1000 . I watched him rip/speed to a wide corner and spin on his bike and whip back to his house. He's in his 60s. Another slightly younger guy has a Suzuki 1300 racing bike (he also has a Corvette used as a pace car in one of the races) that better resembles the Ninjas. No way am I getting on either of them. I like the speed and I typically drive my car at the speed limit or just under. I don't want a ticket. But put me on my bike and let me rip. I love riding corners and moving the bike more on its side. I had fun hitting footpegs and not crashing (I wasn't even remotely worried because the bike was under control). I've never gotten a speeding ticket on the bike.I was actually laughing when i read the list he gave me. Not because these things don't work, they do but because these practices are rarely available in real world situations. Friends and family like to go to bars, restaurants and parties where there is often live music and I cannot understand anything. Hospitals and schools are not much better. And none of it helps with phones. I knew there wouldn't be any magic jellybeans when I made the appointment but I thougt there might be some help.
Thanks about the bike. Bars start off low so it's real nice to ride. Not like my cafe racer
Onward to unmagic beans. When I worked, my number one rule was to go to lunch in decent acoustic restaurants. People always worked with me with that. But with the CI, bars are out of the question. Nothing helps with the phone. But pre-implant, my magic beans worked well for me.
I have a quote from a source I've been advised not to trust - Wikipedia - but, "... In terms of acoustics, the prosodics of oral languages involve variation in syllable weight, loudness, and pitch. In sign languages, prosody involves the rhythm, length, and tension of gestures, along with mouthing and facial expressions. Prosody is typically absent in writing, which can occasionally result in reader misunderstanding. Orthographic conventions to mark or substitute for prosody include punctuation (commas, exclamation marks, question marks, scare quotes, and ellipses), and typographic styling for emphasis (italic, bold, and underlined text)."
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