Posts Tagged hearing
Follow-up: Deaf Helping Deaf
Posted by Versa Dave in Versa Life on November 12, 2010
You may recall my recent post Deaf Helping Deaf where I spoke of an amazing opportunity I experienced in volunteering with the St. Louis United Way at the St. Joseph’s Institute for the Deaf. Shortly after that publishing that post, my employer heard the good news and wanted to share it with the rest of the company.
It’s not part of my normal duties to engage in public speaking, so when the Manager of Community Affairs reached out to me and asked that I speak in front of the entire St. Louis based company, needless to say, I was a little nervous. When I asked, “What should I say?”, she simply replied with “Speak from your heart and talk about what you wrote.”
So I did.
I can tell you that throughout the 10 minute long speech, I continued to be nervous, but the outpouring of positive comments afterward made me feel so wonderful. Many people that were not able to hear the speech had hoped it was recorded so they could see what everyone was talking about. After jumping through some corporate compliance hoops, I was finally able to get a copy of the speech to be made public. Below is the video.
Allow me to preface your viewing by saying that my speech should not be your focus, but rather let the message be your catalyst for diving into your community’s needs and helping where you can.
It’s A Hearing Aid. No Wait..It IS Bluetooth.
Posted by Versa Dave in Geekdom on January 15, 2010
When I was barely a year old, my mom realized that there was something not quite right about me. Sure, laugh it up chuckles…I know there’s something not quite right with me. She however, could see something else, a pattern, a deficiency in my learning and speech. It wasn’t until I was nearly 3 that she got an ENT to finally see me, and then all was brought to the surface. I had a hearing impairment. 30 years ago though, things were different. My eustachian tubes didn’t grow right when I was born; they grew flat and narrow, not round and open. For years the doctors just threw sets of tubes in my ears. Eventually, it turned into more complex surgeries, prosthesis and implants, reconstructions, and just about any other procedure you can throw at broken ears.
At the age of 8, the doctors wanted me to start using hearing aids. I adamantly refused; by 14 I said yes. And as my Mom drove me home that afternoon, with ears filled with miracles of audiology, I stuck my head out the car window like a golden retriever; my eyes, closed, but my ears, open…to a brand new world.
Over the years, I’ve gone through many hearing aids. For about 10 years though, I went without a hearing aid in my right ear because of an extreme case of cholesteatoma. It completely disintegrated all the bones and my ear drum was nothing but a lifeless flab of flesh. Fortunately, an awesome doctor in St. Louis at Washington University named Dr. Joel Goebel, was able to bring new life back to that ear; and now coupled with the experience and talent of audiologist Jennifer Listenberger (again, of Washington University), I can now hear in my right ear with the assistance of a hearing aid.
When I first got the new hearing aid for my right ear, I had the option of picking a color for it. A color? Hearing aids are flesh color aren’t they? Jennifer asked me if I was going to grow my hair out. I said “Hell no!”. “Gimme the blue one” I said. And since then, I’ve been asked, no less than twice a month, by someone, if whether or not my blue hearing aid was some kind of a new bluetooth headset.
The day has come however, where I can answer that misguided person, “Why yes…it is bluetooth…but it’s a hearing aid too”. As of today, I’m now the proud owner of a Phonak Versáta SP for my left ear; along with the iCom communication accessory. In short, I can talk on my iPhone, via bluetooth, without ever picking up the phone, putting on a headset, or plugging in an ear piece…it all goes right through my hearing aid. I can even listen to the iPod on the iPhone through the iCom. As I sat in front of the TV tonight, with Rhyen leaning over my shoulder and Dylen laying against me, I was able to pair my bluetooth hearing aid and iCom with the MacBook Pro and listen to videos…yep…right through the hearing aid. I’ve already paired up with my Cisco phone at work too…worked flawlessly. In short, I’m happier than a puppy with two peters that I can hear.







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