123456
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Or those with Auditory Processing Disorder referring to themselves as Hard of Hearing, when there's nothing actually wrong with their physical ability to hear? (The ones I'm referring to, who DON'T also have hearing loss.)
I ask as someone who is sometimes completely unable to understand spoken words. If the room is busy, if there's any background noise, if there's more than one conversation going on, or if I get stressed out, my ability to comprehend speech takes a nose-dive. Sometimes it hits completely randomly, even in situations that really shouldn't be a problem, like if a TV is on in an otherwise mostly quiet room. It doesn't matter how many times they repeat themselves (it's as if they're speaking another language, sounds garbled), and I cannot read lips, so I either require people to act it out, write it down, or move with me to a quieter area. Even if the space we were in wasn't all that 'loud' to a normal person, my brain has no ability to 'filter' out unimportant noises or sounds at all, and I hear absolutely everything, all at once, all the time.
That said, there are many struggles those that are Deaf/HoH go through that I will never experience. Such as absolutely needing to be tapped or having the lights flashed when someone wants to get my attention (so long as the other sounds around me aren't COMPLETELY drowning other sounds out), or needing lights to flash when someone knocks on the door. Requiring an alarm clock that vibrates my bed. Requiring TTY devices or video/text messaging to communicate (though, granted, it's 3x as hard for me to understand people over electronic devices even when it's completely silent).
Thoughts?
P.S. I should like to add that I've gotten very adept at being able to comprehend what I DO hear (I.E. what my brain processes), but I used to be absolutely terrible. I listened to music and transcribed lyrics over and over again to train myself to differentiate between sounds to better identify words when I was a kid. Had I not thought to do that (and I don't know why I even thought to), I would struggle on a daily basis following even basic conversations.
I ask as someone who is sometimes completely unable to understand spoken words. If the room is busy, if there's any background noise, if there's more than one conversation going on, or if I get stressed out, my ability to comprehend speech takes a nose-dive. Sometimes it hits completely randomly, even in situations that really shouldn't be a problem, like if a TV is on in an otherwise mostly quiet room. It doesn't matter how many times they repeat themselves (it's as if they're speaking another language, sounds garbled), and I cannot read lips, so I either require people to act it out, write it down, or move with me to a quieter area. Even if the space we were in wasn't all that 'loud' to a normal person, my brain has no ability to 'filter' out unimportant noises or sounds at all, and I hear absolutely everything, all at once, all the time.
That said, there are many struggles those that are Deaf/HoH go through that I will never experience. Such as absolutely needing to be tapped or having the lights flashed when someone wants to get my attention (so long as the other sounds around me aren't COMPLETELY drowning other sounds out), or needing lights to flash when someone knocks on the door. Requiring an alarm clock that vibrates my bed. Requiring TTY devices or video/text messaging to communicate (though, granted, it's 3x as hard for me to understand people over electronic devices even when it's completely silent).
Thoughts?
P.S. I should like to add that I've gotten very adept at being able to comprehend what I DO hear (I.E. what my brain processes), but I used to be absolutely terrible. I listened to music and transcribed lyrics over and over again to train myself to differentiate between sounds to better identify words when I was a kid. Had I not thought to do that (and I don't know why I even thought to), I would struggle on a daily basis following even basic conversations.
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