Pythias
Member
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2012
- Messages
- 71
- Reaction score
- 0
Hello All! I'm a newbie to the site, and quite enjoying it.
I am a grad student studying the molecular biology of the innate immune system, and am (what feels like) forever away from completing my PhD. I like martial arts, cooking, playing the piano and guitar (badly), taking pictures, playing with my dogs, crocheting, gardening, brewing mead, watching television, riding my bike, and learning.
Deafness-wise:
I'm hard of hearing. I had scarlet fever when I was 3 and again at 5, and ear infections most of my childhood, so my hearing loss occurred sometime when I was really young, but after I learned to speak.
I was raised entirely orally, with an FM system/HA's, after my hearing status was determined a few years down the road. When I went to college I got some 1st gen digital HA's, but they didn't really work for me (mostly I think my ear molds didn't fit right, causing the sound to be transmitted improperly). I went a few years wearing them off and on until I finally (I'm bad about going to doctors) went back to an audiologist and got some nice new earmolds (they're blue!) that allow the HA's to function much better.
I enjoy the benefits of being HOH (like reading people's expressions and body language very well) and manage the disadvantages (like missing important info every now and again), but I'm in my 20's, so at this point it's really just part of what makes me a whole me. Everybody has things they are good at and things that are challenges for them.
I always wanted to learn ASL and interact with the Deaf Community, but from what I had read, I thought that proper Deaf people wouldn't like that I used "assistive technology," so I didn't pursue it. Now that I'm older, though, I decided that I didn't care and started classes at the local Deaf School, and everyone is so nice! I had no need to worry. There are even students and teachers who wear HA's and CI's. I'm loving it and have quickly shifted to using it quite a bit at home (with my hearing husband who is picking it up rather well). It's so relaxing and more visually interesting to communicate by sign!
Anyway, I'm babbling a bit now, but I just wanted to say, "Hi!"
I am a grad student studying the molecular biology of the innate immune system, and am (what feels like) forever away from completing my PhD. I like martial arts, cooking, playing the piano and guitar (badly), taking pictures, playing with my dogs, crocheting, gardening, brewing mead, watching television, riding my bike, and learning.
Deafness-wise:
I'm hard of hearing. I had scarlet fever when I was 3 and again at 5, and ear infections most of my childhood, so my hearing loss occurred sometime when I was really young, but after I learned to speak.
I was raised entirely orally, with an FM system/HA's, after my hearing status was determined a few years down the road. When I went to college I got some 1st gen digital HA's, but they didn't really work for me (mostly I think my ear molds didn't fit right, causing the sound to be transmitted improperly). I went a few years wearing them off and on until I finally (I'm bad about going to doctors) went back to an audiologist and got some nice new earmolds (they're blue!) that allow the HA's to function much better.
I enjoy the benefits of being HOH (like reading people's expressions and body language very well) and manage the disadvantages (like missing important info every now and again), but I'm in my 20's, so at this point it's really just part of what makes me a whole me. Everybody has things they are good at and things that are challenges for them.
I always wanted to learn ASL and interact with the Deaf Community, but from what I had read, I thought that proper Deaf people wouldn't like that I used "assistive technology," so I didn't pursue it. Now that I'm older, though, I decided that I didn't care and started classes at the local Deaf School, and everyone is so nice! I had no need to worry. There are even students and teachers who wear HA's and CI's. I'm loving it and have quickly shifted to using it quite a bit at home (with my hearing husband who is picking it up rather well). It's so relaxing and more visually interesting to communicate by sign!
Anyway, I'm babbling a bit now, but I just wanted to say, "Hi!"
