Chronicle of a deaf audiologist

Are you getting new hearing aids?

In Star Wars, Luke Skywalker hesitantly says he will ‘try’ to complete a task. Yoda, the warrior mystic, replies:  ‘No!  Try not.  Do, or do not. There is no try.’

Anytime you say that you will ‘try’ something, your words imply a lack of commitment. They suggest that you feel that you won’t be able to keep your commitment. Do it or don’t do it, but don’t just try.

If Yoda decided to get hearing aids, he’d give it his best shot.

Here is what Yoda would suggest:

Find the right hearing healthcare professional. Ask your friends, co-workers, and acquaintances about their hearing healthcare professionals. Favourable word-of-mouth referrals are golden, and the professionals who work for them deserve your business.

Bring your significant other to your appointments. You’ll need support. It’s also important for your significant other to have realistic expectations about your new hearing aids.

Get two hearing aids. If two hearing aids are recommended, follow that recommendation.

Wear your hearing aids consistently. Wear your hearing aids full-time during your trial period (and beyond).

Make and keep follow-up appointments. Adjusting to hearing aids is a process, and your follow-up appointments are a crucial part of the process.

Start an auditory training program. There are some key changes in our brain as we get older that affect our ability to hear in challenging listening environments—even for people with normal hearing.   Even older adults with normal hearing have difficulty in challenging listening environments, so hearing aids are not the whole solution. Auditory training helps to address these brain changes and make it easier to communicate.

Chances are that the reason you wanted hearing aids in the first place is that you’re having difficulty communicating. Getting new hearing aids is a big step. Are you ready to give it your best efforts?

 

Related post: Auditory processing speed is not fixed!

  • Photo credit:  © Alan Fortune

    Sandra Vandenhoff

    Dr. Sandra Vandenhoff is an audiologist with hearing loss, founder of HEARa, Hearing Rehabilitation teacher, and Canadian author, who does not remember saying on her first day of wearing hearing aids: "Mom, I can hear my shoelaces!"

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