Thursday 28 November 2013

I did it!! I have a second cochlear implant!

Yes, it's true, I have a second cochlear implanted in my right ear. While I did experience a bit of pain after this operation (unlike the first one), 24 hours after the surgery I was fine. The bandage around my head was very tight and this meant I couldn't wear my first cochlear so I had to spend my time in the hospital deaf. The skill of lipreading never goes out of style! The bandage came off the morning after sugery and the relief was instant, it was so tight it caused me to have a headache. The wound site is a bit itchy and I'm a little light headed but otherwise I'm doing well. The important thing is to rest at this point (something I'm not good at) and let the wound heal and my body recover from the surgery.

An hour before surgery, standing outside ESIA.
About to walk into surgery.


Four hours after surgery, feeling OK.

Bandage has come off my head, wound behind my ear.


Tuesday 26 November 2013

The night before my second cochlear surgery

Tomorrow I have my second cochlear implanted in the right ear. I'm half excited and half nervous as I don't know if I will have any success with the second implant. The right ear hasn't heard a single thing for 37 years. I don't know what stereo sound is like, I don't know what it's like to know what direction sound is coming from, I don't know what it's like to have two hearing ears. I really can't imagine what having sound from both sides of my head is like!
Wish me luck, I shall report back in after the surgery :)

Friday 22 November 2013

Thursday 7 November 2013

Deaf Identity

I'm thinking about identity at the moment. Some of my cochlear friends see themselves as hearing, I see myself as deaf, but I'm not part of the Deaf community.

Some friends who were born hearing and have suddenly lost it, and now have a cochlear implant, see themselves as hearing depite the fact that they are technically deaf. I've always been singled-sided deaf so that deaf identity has always been there in a small way. Having lost my hearing in the other ear just made that deaf identity stronger.

Having a cochlear implant doesn't make me hearing. It's a tool that I use to hear I agree, but I can't hear without it. The same as a blind person isn't suddenly seeing when they put glasses on, they are still blind, they just use an assistive tool.

The following article is a beautifully written account of a deaf woman's decision to have a cochlear implant and shows the importance of identity, either way.


Familyshare.com: Deaf identity crisis





Saturday 2 November 2013

A little bit of inspiration via a party

I know how hard parties are for deaf people, cochlear or not. But sometimes you just have to dress up and go out. This is my minion costume for a 50th birthday party I attended last night. And these are my strategies for surviving a party:



- Distract yourself with the food. Take small portions so you can go back many times. This gives you    an excuse to leave a conversation if you can't hear it. 
- Do the same with the drinks, only fill your cup up half way so you can go back for a refill often.
- Offer to get other people drinks as well, this has the added bonus of making you look considerate.
- Try to talk about topics you know well so you can follow the conversation on guess work. I use movies and travel.
- Obvious but don't stand next to the music speakers!
- Smile, laugh and be really friendly, move around a lot, dance. This makes you look like the life of the party even if you have no idea what's going on.

If I can do it, you can too, good luck!


Minion image copyright Universal Studios