Dancing Through the Tears 

I have always preserved music in my memory, especially the music I loved before hearing loss made it impossible to learn new songs. Lately I have been playing more music from the early years when I still had most of my hearing. One of those songs has been stuck in my head for the last few days. I haven’t been able to shut it off. The song is, “When Will I See You Again?” by the Three Degrees. 

It’s Christmas time, and I have been prepping for a house full of family on Christmas Eve. Along with the music that keeps playing in my head while I clean, I have been missing my husband, Paul. He died on January 10, 2022. Like the words in the song, I’ve been wondering when will I see him again. The song plays over and over in my head. 

While working in the kitchen, with that song playing in my head, and remembering Paul, a memory of my wonderful husband of 44 years bubbled to the surface of my thoughts. I remember it was Christmastime and earlier that month I had seen my hearing doctor. At the time I had been wearing hearing aids for a few years. At the appointment with my doctor, it was determined that I needed stronger hearing aids, and the deterioration of my hearing did not appear to be slowing down. 

On an evening when I was getting ready for Christmas celebrations doing chores in the kitchen, Paul and his brother started bringing big boxes into the house. Paul wanted to surprise me with a top-of-the-line Bose stereo system. He wanted to give me the gift of music for however much longer I had to hear it. We were raising three daughters, and my first thought was, “Can we afford this?” But that, the budget, isn’t what mattered to Paul. It was a beautiful gift of love. 

That stereo provided great surround sound for many years. When I could, I played it loud and danced through my household chores. Eventually, the lack of hearing made it impossible for me to understand the words of a song. Finally, before I received my first cochlear implant, the only music I enjoyed from the stereo was “Mannheim Steamroller Christmas.” For some reason that style of sound reached me through my deafness, and I’m sure stirred my memory bank of songs enough for me to enjoy it. 

I have had bilateral cochlear implants now for many years. When I got my first implant, the goal was to learn to hear speech and relieve the work of lip reading. I did rehabilitation exercises to learn to hear again and to be able to hear on the phone. After I mastered the phone, I wanted music again. Listening to songs from my good hearing days, sometimes over and over, brought the enjoyment of music back to me. Paul was there for me, every step of the way, always supportive. He would be so happy for me and the hearing system I have now. My latest cochlear implant processors have Bluetooth. When I play music on my phone, it goes directly to my hearing system, and I hear it like I did before deafness. When I’m missing ‘Paul my own’ and remembering us through the years, I’ll put on some music and find myself dancing through the tears.

Hearing Better

A few years ago when my family was coming to understand the true extent of the success of my hearing with cochlear implants, my daughter shared a realization with me. She said, “Mom, my sisters and I were talking and we came to realize that as you get older, your hearing will keep getting better and dad’s will get worse.” We laughed.

Unfortunately age-related hearing loss is a pretty common issue. I remember when I got my first pair of hearing aids I did not want to be lumped in with old people. I was 28. When you want to hear better, you get over feelings like that, or bury them somewhere and then cover the hearing aids with your hair.

My first pair of hearing aids helped some – but not in a life changing way. I relied greatly on lip reading to understand speech. My family felt they helped. Many times when trying to converse with me, I heard (or saw) my child say to me, “Mom – do you have your hearing aids in?” Usually I did – but with the extent of the progressiveness of my loss, we did not know exactly when that prescription stopped helping. With each new pair of hearing aids, approximately every three years, the prescription was stronger.

Hearing aids can be life changing for some. They help many people with moderate hearing loss hear sounds they have forgotten or may never have heard. Not too long ago I met a young woman whose experience with getting hearing aids was like that. It was inspiring to listen to her share her joy in hearing. Hearing aids gave to her what cochlear implants accomplished for me – the delivery of sound needed to comprehend speech and recognize environmental noises.

Me and My DadRecently I watched my dad recover sound with hearing aids. With age-related hearing loss, he graciously accepted that it is time for some assistance. He admitted to hearing some things he had been missing. Gradual hearing loss, from whatever cause and at any stage in life, fades a person into a quieter world. Hearing aids and cochlear implants give back sounds long forgotten and sometimes surprising to hear again. It is a noisy world and it can be hard to rejoin it.

Yes – my daughters are right. As cochlear implant technology continues to evolve and my brain can still figure out how to use the technology, my hearing keeps getting better. For age-related hearing loss, technology offers a lot for those willing to use it. For most, at all levels of hearing loss, there is hope.