Hi Xan, I think all people with hearing loss struggle more in noisy situations - that is very common. I saw someone mentioning the Pocket Talker, which i also recommend. I wear hearing aids but if in a noisy situation, I will still use the Pocket Talker. It is a small, low cost handheld device with REALLY good audio quality, and it has a microphone that you can point towards person speaking, thereby reducing input from surrounding noise. You can buy different models of microphones for different situations. I also recommend hearing aids from Costco. I recently bought my second pair of Resounds from them. I could buy 3 pairs from Costco for the price that local private offices were selling one pair. The one I like the best, for sound quality and helping in noise is a MIH custom model, MIH = Microphone in helix. The mic is located in the ear pinna, pointing forward, which is where most of the sound you want, is coming from. Most BTE/RIC hearing aids have the microphones behind the ear, pointing up and or backwards, and then they try to do all sorts of sound processing to amplify the sound coming from the front, more that the sounds from behind and sides. So those mics inherently pick up all the surrounding sound. I also recommend HLAA as a resource as another person did. Lots of information on their websites, and many people adapting to much more severe hearing loss than you currently have, with lots of information on tools and assist devices. One person said many of HLAA members are late-deafened adults and maybe that is true, but I don't see why that matters - the information and support they give is very helpful. But i think it helps you to have courage, when you hear about other people forging ahead with hearing loss, and finding their own way to live their lives fully, and using tools such as hearing aids, telecoils, loop systems, captioning phones, etc. One other thing - captioning phones - if your hearing loss progresses, you can get a captioning phone from a couple different companies and the captioning service is free. ........ For those of us that were late deafened, post lingual development, we are neither fully part of the hearing world, nor the deaf culture. It can be very isolating as you say. It is extremely difficult to learn ASL -- I tried. If you go to deaf events, (I tried that too) you will need to learn ASL before you can really participate. And even if you learn that, you still have to deal with the hearing world at work, etc and need to learn how to adapt and use whatever assistive tools helps the most. Please protect your remaining hearing also. Good luck! There are lots of us HOH out there, and there are ways to cope and be happy.