My sister’s hearing impairment began at birth, when
obstetricians used forceps to deal with an irregular delivery. Penny always
knew how to make an entrance.
But it wasn’t discovered until she entered kindergarten,
which is when kids were checked for things like that. Today I’m sure they’d
probably catch it before the baby left the hospital, and be in touch with malpractice
lawyers before s/he got home.
She struggled with regular classes, took lip-reading
lessons and then starting in junior high was in a special-ed program. This did
not stop her from getting both undergraduate and graduate degrees and building
a long career teaching the hearing-impaired at Alhambra High School.
However, every cold and respiratory infection caused
further loss, to the point that when she came out for my graduation from
William & Mary, the plane was rerouted to somewhere in Tennessee because of
fog where we were, and she had no idea where she was until they got on the
ground, because she just couldn’t hear the announcements.
In recent years, it got worse—her fire-alarm telephone
ring was augmented by flashing lights, so she’d know someone was calling, and I’m
pretty sure she was guessing on what was being said around her at social
occasions. The worst was phone-call-via-captioning service.
But earlier this year (and after a whole lot of
investigation on her part), Penny had a cochlear implant. The first amazing
thing was when she heard birds, which she hadn’t for decades, probably. Then
being able to pick up on conversations going on around her, with some sorting
out of what sound levels to focus on and which ones to filter out.
On Friday, the day before her birthday, we had a long
call without need of intervening services. She told me about her party at a
local cooking school (made me laugh about ten people being there and the chef
having to accommodate just about ten different dietary requirements; apparently
the gluten-free focaccia was a deal breaker, so one person didn’t show up). She
described the amazing food and promised to send me recipes. And she talked
about fine-tuning the device (and getting proper speakers for her Mac) to be
able to hear John Denver sound like John Denver.
Also—she discovered that hummingbirds make a chattering
sound, which brought tears to me.
So today I am profoundly grateful for the technology that
has enabled my sister (and many others) to rediscover sounds around them and to
break out of the isolation of silence.
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