|
Edited on Sat Jun-23-07 12:02 AM by recoveringrepublican
how long a person has had the loss, what frequency they can't hear, and how long the person has had the use of aids.
I had perfect hearing until I was 17. I played piano, violin, and clarinet. Music was one of my complete enjoyments.
As I started to lose my hearing it was so subtle I didn't miss out on anything. When I got my first aids I bought digital. I didn't really see a difference, as my loss involves high frequency sounds, which is mostly conversational.
My loss progressed, but I couldn't afford new hearing aids. I stopped listening to recent music as I couldn't hear the lyrics, and to be quite honest, the actual music really wasn't all that impressive. So I just listened to music that I considered my staple. My mind would matrix the words I wasn't hearing, so in my head I was hearing what I had always heard before.
I got a job after 5 years of being a SAHM. Vocational rehab bought me new hearing aids, but these were lesser quality analog ones. I CANNOT listen to ANYTHING over the radio/cd player/speaker with these, as it sounds like listening to music over a radio which is the played over another radio (does that make sense?). My RATM and lovely Doors just do not sound the same. Any music I'm unfamiliar with just sounds like noise and hurts my brain.
Now when I play the piano it is lovely.
It really depends on so many factors for each individual.
Some hearing aids are I guess what you would say "tuned for speech", as they can filter out background noises. Analog hearing aids just make everything louder, which doesn't really help me much.
|