My father had hearing loss but never discussed it. His mother had hearing loss but pretended she did not. I spent 10 years in denial about my own hearing loss, and then another 10 years hiding it.
So how did I become this new person, a hearing health advocate, the Board Chair of Hearing Health Foundation and the writer of a blog entitled Living With Hearing Loss? Here is my story.
I grew up the child of someone with hearing loss. I knew it in a peripheral way – my father wore hearing aids, but they were never seen – always hidden by sideburns grown long for that purpose.
He never discussed his hearing loss and went out of his way to hide it. I remember social gatherings where he would disappear only to be found sitting at a table in the corner by himself. I always wondered why, but now I know. He probably couldn’t hear and was embarrassed, or exhausted and just couldn’t bring himself to bother.
Looking back on it, I see that my family was not supportive of him. My mother would often whisper things to my sister and I behind his back saying, “Don’t worry, he can’t hear us.” Even as a child, I knew that wasn’t nice.
But most of the time I was just unaware of the hardship he faced. I sensed his embarrassment and the taboo nature of the subject, but didn’t dwell on it, being focused on myself as most children are. He never asked anyone to speak up or to face him when they spoke.
He would never, as far as I could tell, position himself within the family group so that he could hear better. He never asked for a quiet seat at a restaurant or did anything to draw attention to his hearing loss. In fact, he would often fake it, pretending to hear what others said rather than admit that he couldn’t. It makes me sad to think of it.
So when I first started having problems hearing in my mid-twenties at business school, I hid it, following his example. And when I got my first pair of hearing aids, I refused to wear them, afraid someone might see them. I was embarrassed. I am not sure why. Was it a learned response from watching my father, or was it something larger — the stigma associated with hearing loss in this country that I wanted to avoid? In any event, my mother’s reaction was not encouraging. “Do you really need to wear them?” she asked me.
Eventually, the answer became yes, I really did need to wear them, but still, I avoided them as much as possible. I remember surreptitiously putting them in on the way to work, wearing them all day hidden behind my long hair (easier for a woman) and whipping them out as soon as the elevator door closed behind me on my way out of the office.
And when I traveled, I would sneak them in and out right before and after important client meetings. I got pretty good at it, but always worried if the telltale whistle would give me away. I hated my hearing aids and only wore them when I absolutely needed to, and never socially or with my family.
But then I had two children of my own, and this forced me to come to terms with my hearing loss. Since my loss was genetic, I worried that I might have passed it onto them. Given the adult onset nature of my loss, we won’t know for another 15 years, but I wasn’t going to sit idly by and wait to see. And if they did have an issue, I didn’t want them to feel embarrassed and ashamed of it. I needed to come out of my hearing loss closet.
So I did. Around this time, I left my work on Wall Street and started looking for some way to get more involved in the hearing loss space. I was lucky enough to become involved with Hearing Health Foundation (HHF) and found my way onto the Board of Directors. Before long, I was the Chair of the Board.
My work with the foundation has been a good excuse to be more vocal about my hearing loss. My friends asked me why I was devoting my time to HHF and I would tell them about my hearing loss. Most of my friends had no idea, and none of them cared. And when I meet new people, they don’t care either. What had I been so worried about? In fact, most of the time I talk about it, the person tells me about his or her own issue with hearing loss or tinnitus, or that someone in his or her family or a close friend has hearing loss. This isn’t really that surprising given that there are nearly 50 million of us with hearing loss in the US alone.
As time goes on, I have grown bolder. I now regularly advocate for myself — asking for quiet tables at restaurants, using caption readers at the movies, and rearranging the seating at family dinners to make sure I can hear and participate. I even started this blog, where I discuss my hearing loss and what I do to cope.
My hope is that my story will inspire others to come out of their hearing loss closets. There is nothing to be embarrassed about. Nobody will care, and in fact, they probably already know. Plus, being open about your hearing loss sure takes the pressure off having to hear everything perfectly all the time! And what a relief that is.
Readers, do you tell others about your hearing loss?
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Carrie1970
July 21, 2015
This is a good article & I completely agree. I have mild/moderate hearing loss but understand that letting others know about it helps me to seem less foolish/inattentive, esp. in public & groups. I long for hearing aides but can’t afford them so I don’t even have that small “tell” to signal to others I can’t hear well. Often my husband orders for me in restaurants because I can rarely understand what the server is saying.
I substitute teach & when working I introduce myself by name then follow with *& I have some hearing loss.” Then I explain to the students (like I would an adult but in simpler language for younger students) what my needs are: face me, slow down, speak clearly, etc. I occasionally pepper my speaking gestures with ASL so I’ve incorporated that into my teaching style. Having the children learn the sign for “wait” or turning off the lights sure beats trying to talk over them!! They learn to become more visually aware for the day when I’m teaching in their room. I may not be a licensed teacher but I’m introducing them to an experience & a small slice of a culture they may not have been exposed to before. If even one student learns to approach someone with more understanding about the differences everyone has, I consider that a win! I couldn’t do this as well if I were to hide my hearing issues.
Living With Hearing Loss
July 22, 2015
Good for you! Sounds like good strategies you are using.
LH
July 22, 2015
This article has appealed to me because I am exactly the same with my hearing loss. I hide it. I have a mild/moderate loss and have worn hearing aids on and off since the age of 5; mostly off from the age of 11 until about 4 years ago when I realised that I couldn’t hear certain alarms at work- I am a critical care nurse- so alarms are obviously very important! I felt embarrassed to tell others about my hearing loss and very few of my colleagues are aware of it. I have at times had to state that I don’t hear well, mainly in situations when I’ve not understood someone for the 3rd time!! I have started to wear hearing aids more frequently out of work situations and the help and liberation of understanding and hearing more is immense! I hope that I become braver in the future and tackle my hearing loss but probably only if I need to. I think more could be done from audiology departments in helping people to embrace their hearing problems and practical ways to cope with it.
Living With Hearing Loss
July 25, 2015
Thank you for sharing your story. I hope you continue to be brave. It is not easy, but it has made a world of difference for me.
Forth Cormorant
August 3, 2015
I really liked this article and comment – they really describe my own situation very well, always pulling hearing aids in and out on the way to/ from work and meetings. I still feel uneasy about wearing and showing my aids although I need them more, and am trying to move to showing them openly and wearing them all the time. I have a mild to moderate loss but this has been getting worse and my last hearing test showed my hearing is deteriorating fairly quickly, and I now have quite a severe high frequency loss. My position is also complicated by poor eyesight due to high myopia so I am concerned I will be quite deaf and blind before very long.
Hartmut
July 25, 2015
“Hearing loss” … hmm, did you search for the hearing? Since you seem to have stopped doing so, you may as well stop using this idiotic and audistic term. You have had diminished hearing ability all the time. You did not lose your hearing. If you have only 10 pounds to begin with in comparison to 100 Pounds most of the people have, you don’t search for the additional 90 pounds that people say you are supposed to have, and say, “I have a loss of 90 pounds.”
A true coming out is to proclaim yourself as deaf and later as Deaf for one thing, irrespective some partial hearing ability.
Hartmut
I am deaf, but not my ears.
Hartmut
July 25, 2015
One more thing, I consider the term “hearing health” equally idiotic. This is another audistic term. Is deafness a hearing disease? “Preservation of hearing” (that you have) is most appropriate and accurate term. Nothing wrong about doing so with the advice of not going to 100 dB noisy environments, like the discos and rock concerts.
You see, the language that hearing people use is not only sexist, ableist, homophobic, etc., but also audistic – most, if not all, of them.