Thats great. Please let us know how it goes.
Just a little advice. Keep your expectations realistic. The first week or so you'll hear "Sounds" but they won't sound like what they are. you probably won't be able to tell the difference between the sound of a car horn and a dog bark. Or a tap and a ring. They might all sound the same to you at first. Don't let that discourage you. It'll get clearer and clearer over time.
Celebrate the small mile stones. Don't worry about them not sounding right at first. Just think about the fact that you can hear them at all.
I spent my fist week making just about every object I could see or touch make a "Noise". I'd grab to objects and tap them together. Then I'd switch one of the objects and see if I could hear the difference. Some I could tell, some I couldn't, still some I couldn't hear at all. But now, a year later, I can tell.
I cried at my first phone call. So did the person I called. It wasn't a conversation for at that time I still couldn't hear all that well. But it was a huge step. I remember the fist word I could actually distinguish. My audi did a test where she covered her mouth and said words and I was to see if I could tell how many syllables the word had. A month before this I only got 4 right out of 10. This time I got them all right and was even able to identify one of the words. She said a word and I said "Two syllables... Did you just say airplane"!!!?
That was a huge moment for me.
So many little sounds got to me. I had already experienced, and celebrated the moment I heard my own foot steps. But one day I was walking down a street and heard a sound I couldn't identify. A few steps later I realized the sound was little pebbles skipping away from my feet as I walk.
I got an app on my iphone with bird sounds to help me identify the sound of the birds I hear outside.
So celebrate those little moments. Work toward improving your ability to identify sounds. There are programs that help with this and they'll probably give you some. Mine came with a software for my computer. But there are many other ways to "practice" hearing and some of them are fun. Very fun when you realize you've made an advance such as not being able to identify a sound last week but then all of the sudden you can this week. You can always come here for help on this because I know I and many others in here would have some advice and suggestions for the practicing.
So good luck. Let us know how it goes.
Ron Jaxon