- Joined
- Nov 20, 2006
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Jesse,
First of all...welcome to AllDeaf and I am so glad that you came in here for information. While I agree that not every deaf person is the same but I do know this...every one of us needs language. Since your son is so young, there are a lot of decisions to be made that's for sure. I would never know what it is like cuz I am deaf myself and have two hearing kids.
I grew up orally without sign language despite having a profound bilateral hearing loss of 120 dB. I was trained to make good use of my hearing aids. I can even make out a few words without lipreading but that has to be in an extremely quiet setting and requires my full concentration which isnt realistic at all time. I grew up relying on lipreading more than my hearing but my HAs did help with my lipreading. When they are off, lipreading became much more difficult.
My brother was born with the same hearing loss as I was. However, he didnt benefit from his HAs at all despite hours of speech therapy at the same oral deaf school I went to. After 5 years of struggling, my mom finally sent him to the Deaf school where he learned ASL and just took off.
I remained in mainstreamed without any exposure to ASL. It was very very difficult cuz I missed out on a lot. People assumed because I could speak so well, I could hear well. Some people with severe hearing loss can learn to speak well. The downside to that is that we miss out on a lot.
I learned ASL as an adult and because of how easy communication became for me with ASL, I wish I had both growing up.
With my HAs, I can hear voices, tell whether it is a man, woman, or child speaking, can hear alarms, sirens, engines, knocking, music and so much more. What I cant do is understand speech without lipreading and localize the sounds. I cant tell where the sounds come from.
My deafness was diagnosed at 7 months and I was fitted with hearing aids since then. I cant live without them. My brother quit wearing them when he was a child cuz they gave him headaches and the sounds were too annoying for him.
I agree with many others, learn ASL asap so your baby can have linguistic input for language development.
Hope that helps!
Congrats on your baby. They are precious, arent they?
Same with me too!