DeafCaroline
New Member
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2007
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TXGolfer - I guess you missed all those stories of us having migraines as kids when we were mainstreamed from the concerted effort to lipread in class at the same time we were learning to speak.
It takes far more energy and effort to lipread people than it does for a hearing person to hear what someone else said. If I spent all day around hearing people and trying to lipread them and they are not enunciating clearly, or mumbling, or have food in their mouth or turning around, or if i'm in a group, figuring out who's speaking turning to look at them, missing half of what they said then figuring out whose voice is responding, turn to look then miss what they said, etc etc etc, then it takes even more labourious effort to understand and mentally piece together all the "heard" words to fill in the blanks where we didn't catch the words. After a day like that, I'm exhausted and not very sociable by night time and prefer to be left alone so I can relax for a change.
TXGolfer, what's your hearing levels again?
It takes far more energy and effort to lipread people than it does for a hearing person to hear what someone else said. If I spent all day around hearing people and trying to lipread them and they are not enunciating clearly, or mumbling, or have food in their mouth or turning around, or if i'm in a group, figuring out who's speaking turning to look at them, missing half of what they said then figuring out whose voice is responding, turn to look then miss what they said, etc etc etc, then it takes even more labourious effort to understand and mentally piece together all the "heard" words to fill in the blanks where we didn't catch the words. After a day like that, I'm exhausted and not very sociable by night time and prefer to be left alone so I can relax for a change.
TXGolfer, what's your hearing levels again?