Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Wow, not much compassion here. It’s also incredibly taxing and exhausting to be hearing impaired. Maybe try slight accommodations so your family member can participate and enjoy themselves.
I'll readily admit that my compassion is on a very low level after years, YEARS of trying to accommodate, trying to help, understanding the difficulties with hearing aids, understanding the mental challenges that go with this refusal, helping and going to doctors, trying different hearing aids, even trying different ways of communicating, and yet nothing but utter refusal to do anything. This person demands that we shout - and that's what we have to do in order for them to hear anything - to communicate. I've decided I'm tired of shouting. Now that person is pissed. Yeah, well, so be it. Their choice.
I have a deaf parent fwiw. It's possible that he's just obstinate and won't cooperate, but it's also possible he doesn't have enough residual hearing for a hearing aid to work. You have to be able to hear SOME in order to use a hearing aid. My parent doesn't have enough hearing, so all the hearing aids in the world won't do anything. They are not magical products. (A cochlear implant is kind of magical but it's also a big commitment).
You can look into table amplifiers that can work instead of shouting. Search "products for hard of hearing." And no more restaurants: that's #1.
Anonymous wrote:
Wow, not much compassion here. It’s also incredibly taxing and exhausting to be hearing impaired. Maybe try slight accommodations so your family member can participate and enjoy themselves.
I'll readily admit that my compassion is on a very low level after years, YEARS of trying to accommodate, trying to help, understanding the difficulties with hearing aids, understanding the mental challenges that go with this refusal, helping and going to doctors, trying different hearing aids, even trying different ways of communicating, and yet nothing but utter refusal to do anything. This person demands that we shout - and that's what we have to do in order for them to hear anything - to communicate. I've decided I'm tired of shouting. Now that person is pissed. Yeah, well, so be it. Their choice.
Anonymous wrote: You should text him LOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know what you mean.
It's incredibly taxing and exhausting to constantly have to raise your voice, do this or that just to have the most basic of conversations. Sure, you can just not talk to that person anymore but what kind of relationship is this.
I don't think you can do much but your father tending to get his phone out and disengage completely reminds that hearing aid refusal can aid in developing dementia. They're giving up. It sucks one way or the other.
Wow, not much compassion here. It’s also incredibly taxing and exhausting to be hearing impaired. Maybe try slight accommodations so your family member can participate and enjoy themselves.