Your explaination to our curiosuity has explained well. I hope for your daugther all the best in the CI surgery.
Thank you.Welcome to AD
Thank you.Welcome to AD! I had been reading the thread about your daughter's upcoming surgery.
Welcome to AD...I admire your honesty. Not a lot of parents are willing to admit their inability to deal with their children's deafness.
Hope u enjoy this site!
better late than never.
as everybody else says...accept your daughter for who she is. please do not think cochlear implants will solve everything, and make her into a hearing person. consider learning american sign language and bringing your daughter into deaf community events. that would be a good start.
better late than never.
as everybody else says...accept your daughter for who she is. please do not think cochlear implants will solve everything, and make her into a hearing person. consider learning american sign language and bringing your daughter into deaf community events. that would be a good start.
Herzlich Willkommen
Paul, I admire your honestly... Your description is an exact what my parents did to me... They have no time to be patience with me but got my one year younger sister to interpret me for them because she was the one who use sign language.
It's good to know that you develop your relationship with her.
Hello, I wanted to share what I read of your posting. I am hard of hearing ... severely hearing loss. While I could understand why you felt that way, yet I could almost feel your daughter's pain while growing up. It is normal to feel "lost" on what to do when you found out the deafness in your child. That is because you never thought you would ever come across in dealing with it. Since that happens in your family life, believe me, it is not always easy for a lone hard of hearing to deal with entire hearing family members and constantly being left out. However, I am glad you make effort to accept and learn of your daughter's needs. I hope ALL of your family members use sign language to communicate ..... every day, every moment, and every where. You will see, your daughter will grow into a strong woman with every support she gets from her family.
Believe it or not, it took me almost all of my childhood to help me come to terms with the fact that I was "different" I was teased and pretty much tormented in high school as well as school in general.I hated the fact I had a child who had special needs
Paul, that's awesome that she chose on her own to opt for CI. I really do think when it's ambigious that the kid themselves should be the one to have the final say so on whether or not they should get it. And it's also good that she's got connections to the local dhh community. Is she fluent in ASL?
Believe it or not, it took me almost all of my childhood to help me come to terms with the fact that I was "different" I was teased and pretty much tormented in high school as well as school in general.
It took the failure of a surgery (I'm hoh and born without earcanals) to make me realize that physical "differences" aren't that big of a deal. I can't hear the way a hearing person can, but inside as a person I'm pretty much the same as anyone else. Growing up I loved to read, I loved riding my bike, skiing, cartoons, the New Kids on the Block, etc. I was a very typical 80's-90's kid. The only difference between me and the girl down the block was that I wore hearing aids and read lips and she didn't.
You may want to read something I wrote on Welcome to Holland : KASA - Kids As Self Advocates