floridadude
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2018
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 6
Getting a CI is a big deal. If you want one you really have to make a commitment (time and money) to work with it. If you are willing to do all the work that it requires then it would be worth it in the long run if it helps you. A month of waiting or even a year isn't long compared to a life of deafness. There are many pros and cons to getting one. How much residential hearing do you have left? First step if you are serious is to be evaluated and then you can actually decide.
Yeah, dating concerns me too. What kind of work do you do? Do you need hearing to do your job or can your job be modified?
My right ear (good ear) now has a 80-100 decibel loss but it used to be 50-80 decibels, virtually unchanged since I was first tested at age 3 twenty-two years ago. With my hearing aid in, I could understand about 90% of spoken words in a quiet room. Now I can't understand speech at all unless I am reading the person's lips. I can "hear" voices but it all sounds like a garbled vibration. Recent hearing tests I had this last week showed word discrimination in my right ear has shot down to 0 percent from around 60 percent.
My left ear has always been severe to profound in loss and couldn't ever hear speech out of that ear so I never bothered with wearing an aid in that ear. I have considered getting cochlear implants in both ears. My right ear has gotten almost as bad as my left ear.
I work as a bagger at a grocery store but also do other stuff around the store like cleaning, directing customers, taking out groceries to their car, etc. There's a lot of verbal communication going on and small talk with my co workers.