My own path
This question is for those with CI who were hearing before.
After receiving the CI and having it activated, did things sound the same or different, like someones voice? Music? I am just curious as I am seriously considering the option to have it done. Ive heard various stories but Id like to know first hand from someone who actually had it done. Thank you.
First, apologies for the length of this. I was a tech writer among other roles. It's what I do.
I can't tell where we all fall in terms of when our implants were done, so there are many factors that cause us all to experience this thing is some similar ways and different. Mine is mentioned with my hearing loss.
1. My doctor first told me (he typed) get 2 implants. Then immediately went to 1 because he did not know how I'd react to hearing the sound produced by the CI. I believe my age and hearing longevity played into his retraction. So, you will need to think about this (pending insurance or whatever you will use).
2. I am 59. I've been hearing with BTEs since @1963/64. My guess is I had a mild to moderate loss but I was born with one but no one knew it. It spiraled down maybe 6 years ago bilaterally - both ears are/were pretty equal.
3. I likely have not heard high frequencies in either ear for many moons. I remember many "cross over" moments in audiograms - couldn't hear the sound at say 90 or 100 dB in one ear, so it literally crossed to my other ear. Bleeding Purist suggested and I concur that is causing me to hear the world not in a robotic sound but like ducks.
4. I believe the resident experts here say (and I would recommend you follow their advice as well as your audiologist's) WEAR THE CI as much as possible.
4a. My partner read that (that was her area of prep for surgery) new synapses (brain pathways) are created to send and receive sound since you are now processing sounds you haven't heard. I loathe the world of ducks but wearing the CI is "likely" the only way to get past it.
5. There are no assurances in any surgery as to what the results will be. Just be prepared for a process not an overnight resulting in, "OMG, I can hear!" Patience (and more than I have).
6. Music: I dorked around with a player while friends were doing other things. I put on diff. CD music I can hum in my head. I listened for similarities to catch on. There were really none. Had a friend come over and mouth the words to, "The River is Wide," as it played to try to connect her words to the CD. I'm not sure that really happened. Maybe the 2nd or 3rd time I played it I processed a couple of syllables but I'm not sure. With orchestral instrumental only, there was absolutely no recognition. That is to be expected certainly for a while. Don't freak.
6a. Having written all that (in 6), you may develop the ability to discern it in time as the pathways are created. But, you may or may not get it.
7. Hearing on the phone is also similar to 6. I don't know that I might not hear on one. That took me aback because in all the reading I did before, no one said it. BUT some people here were able to achieve it.
8. You will process more - there are more "sounds" that exist. Learn where volume control is
. My audiologist did not tell me this but it was an expectation that would likely make me nuts.
Last, and this was my recent realization that will be confirmed by people here and I will bring this to the attention of my audiologist. There is no question CI processing isn't the same as hearing. That's fine. My guess is that even after I am mapped to death, there will never be the fullness of sound that exists normally (but what's normal when you have a lifetime loss
). But you better believe that so long as mapping and remapping occur, I will push to achieve that while not holding my breath.
Sincere best of luck to you on this journey.
-- Sheri