
Unsure and Useless
Dreaming Endlessly, not Wanting to Wake Up
- Feb 7, 2023
- 384
For the record, I'm not officially considered hard of hearing by a medical professional. My family hates spending money too much for that. However, I've struggled with hearing issues enough for me to make the inference that I have a condition that makes it difficult for me to hear certain things despite being at a young age. I'm not completely hard of hearing. At worst, I'd say I have a mild version of it that makes it difficult for me to hear things from far away when other sounds are being made closer to me; plus, my natural volume is louder than most people's because of my hearing issue
This will probably not come as a shock to anyone who's hard of hearing and/or deaf, but living with it, even if it's just a mild version of it, is tough and not even because you don't hear things normally. Most of the time, it feels like it's how people treat you that make having it depressing. It's like they treat you as if you purposefully don't hear them and use it against you to spin whatever narrative they want
You didn't hear them when they called out to you in busy traffic? Oh, you must not think they have anything worth listening to
You didn't hear someone yell for you across the house three times to help with something? Then you must have intentionally ignored them so that they have to do all the work
You talk too loudly because you think you're speaking too quietly? You just like making a ruckus because you're self-centered
I've done some slight research, and to no one's surprise, there's not much you can do to undo the damage that has been done. Contrary to popular belief, hearing aids don't just... fix your hearing. Some people can't even use them because the sound they "make" is painful. As a result, I'm likely going to learn sign language sometime soon to make up for my hearing difficulties, but learning a new language doesn't happen in a day, no matter how much I wish that was how it worked. Until then, I'm going to have to deal with this; the only thing that makes me feel not as bad as I could be is knowing that there are people with significantly worse hearing issues that have it rougher than me. This is just the tip of the iceberg for them
I'm just generally shocked because a lot of this judgement comes from my own family. For context, my father is hard of hearing in one ear. My entire life, I was expected to be loud so that he could hear me. As a result, I thought that they'd be more understanding. I guess not, but that doesn't make their assumptions about me hurt any less
This will probably not come as a shock to anyone who's hard of hearing and/or deaf, but living with it, even if it's just a mild version of it, is tough and not even because you don't hear things normally. Most of the time, it feels like it's how people treat you that make having it depressing. It's like they treat you as if you purposefully don't hear them and use it against you to spin whatever narrative they want
You didn't hear them when they called out to you in busy traffic? Oh, you must not think they have anything worth listening to
You didn't hear someone yell for you across the house three times to help with something? Then you must have intentionally ignored them so that they have to do all the work
You talk too loudly because you think you're speaking too quietly? You just like making a ruckus because you're self-centered
I've done some slight research, and to no one's surprise, there's not much you can do to undo the damage that has been done. Contrary to popular belief, hearing aids don't just... fix your hearing. Some people can't even use them because the sound they "make" is painful. As a result, I'm likely going to learn sign language sometime soon to make up for my hearing difficulties, but learning a new language doesn't happen in a day, no matter how much I wish that was how it worked. Until then, I'm going to have to deal with this; the only thing that makes me feel not as bad as I could be is knowing that there are people with significantly worse hearing issues that have it rougher than me. This is just the tip of the iceberg for them
I'm just generally shocked because a lot of this judgement comes from my own family. For context, my father is hard of hearing in one ear. My entire life, I was expected to be loud so that he could hear me. As a result, I thought that they'd be more understanding. I guess not, but that doesn't make their assumptions about me hurt any less