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Re: Wife's implant

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Hi Mel,

I am 51 years old, late deaf.

I can use the phone with my Clarion BTE with tmic at 100%, I can hear

conversation and understand it without lipreading in quiet situations (but in

noise I have to lipread), and I can enjoy music as long as it's music I know. I

don't care for listening to music that is unfamiliar to me. Being a late-deaf

person, I find great joy in listening to the music of my generation (50's, 60's

and 70's music).

I used to play piano also, and I have a keyboard. She'll enjoy using it again,

I think! :-)

Cortland NY

CII 5/01

check out my hard of hearing/CI homepage:

http://www.angelfire.com/ny/tracilee/tracilee4.html

PS, once you have a surgery date, let me know, and I'll invite you and/or your

wife to the Clarion support group if you want me to!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

----- Original Message -----

From: melski823

My wife is in the process of getting an implant. She is 68 and

has had a gradual loss for 30 years and can no longer use the phone

or hear conversation, even with the strongest hearing aids. We are

planning on getting the clarion and wonder if anyone who has a

recent one could tell us of their experiences. Canyou use the phone?

Hear conversation? Listen to music? She used to play the piano and

keyboard, but now they always sound out of tune. Any information

will be greatly appreciated.

Mel

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In a message dated 2/8/2004 5:34:25 AM Pacific Standard Time, melb823@...

writes:

.. We are

planning on getting the clarion and wonder if anyone who has a

recent one could tell us of their experiences. Canyou use the phone?

Hear conversation? Listen to music?

Hi Mel....I have had my Clarion CII for just over 18 months now and am using

the new HiRes software. I spent over 30 years in total silence and had a

sudden loss at the age of 17. I am 50 now.

To answer your questions....yes, I talk on the phone all the time! I have my

own cell phone and I would say during the week use the phone 5-6 times a day.

I enjoy talking to telemarketers lol!! I help out at my husband's office

at times and answer the phone there too! Two weeks ago I participated in a

four way conference call that had to be a CI milestone for me!

Participating in group conversations is fun and music is bliss...I love the

oldies of course, but am branching into new wave music and artists I have never

heard before. I like going to and Nobles book store. In the music

section you can select a CD and listen to it with headphones before you buy it.

If you have not asked for the new Advanced Bionics HiRes video, send for it

at info@.... Ask for " Hearing Your Life " , and give them your

name and address and they will send you a free copy. I am one of the HiRes

users in the video : ) I feel very honored to have been asked to participate in

the filming.

Learning to hear with a CI takes time and effort and practice. It will take

months and months of mappings, work and listening exercises for your wife to

get the CI to work to her best potential. I could not recognize voices at

first...they sounded like quacking ducks! Now voices sound absolutely normal

and I couldn't be happier!

Deb H

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Hi Mel,

As her husband, you are very much a part of this CI process your wife is about

to undertake. You are going to be amazed at how much this decision will mean in

your relationship as some of the neatest stories I have heard have been from the

spouses. Congratulations to both of you.

There's no way to tell right now how well she will do with her CI but chances

are, she will hear on the phone and listen to music - perhaps even play. Many

former musicians have returned to their instuments after having the CI. I will

have to do some investigation, but there is a website (possibly listserv) of a

very professional musician who is implanted. I'll find that and get back to

you. Maybe someone else here will beat me to that.

As for conversation - the cochlear implant is a speech processor. Conversation

is it's very best feature. If she lipreads now, that will help her in

adjustment but it should only take a few visits to the audiologist for her to

enjoy a full life of conversation which you will truly enjoy as well. It will be

like reuniting the two of you and I am hoping to look forward to your messages

about that.

Please tell her we would love to hear from her. If she has questions for us -

we're always ready to answer.

Does she have an implant date?

Alice

From: melski823

My wife is in the process of getting an implant. She is 68 and

has had a gradual loss for 30 years and can no longer use the phone

or hear conversation, even with the strongest hearing aids.

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Hi,

I was implanted with the Clarion 90K processor in December last

year, and it was activated on 12/29/03. To date I've had the device

programmed (mapped) 4 times. I'm 38 and lost my hearing over 2.5

years so I remember really well what things are supposed to sound

like.

The implant is working wonderfully! I could understand some speech

almost immediately (depended on who was speaking and where they were)

and after using it for a month I generally can understand any voice

in any environment. Definitely works better in quiet places than in

really noisey ones, but it's all getting clearer and clearer.

Voices initially sounded very robotic and electronic, but that, too,

is improving. Some sounds are very natural, others are still somewhat

electronic. Along with clarity, sound quality is improving almost

every day. Although I still sit where I can see the interpreter at

church, this past Sunday I had no trouble understanding the pastor

and could understand most of what the music miniter was saying while

the music was playing (praise band- fairly loud). Talk radio is

generally easy for me to understand when I'm driving.

All things considered I'm very pleased with my implant. If it didn't

get any better I'd be quite satisfied with what I have right now

(only 6 weeks into using this), but from what I can see things should

continue to improve. The CI works so much better than my hearing aids

there's really no comparison.

The Auria processor and headpiece are very light and a no-brainer to

use. The rechargeable batteries last me 7 or 8 hours and take a few

seconds to change out.

Definitely a steep learning curve involved with adapting to

artificial hearing, but worth the time and trouble. Hope things work

out for you wife!

Yours,

Jeff

Clarion 90K & Auria & Hi-Res 12/03

> My wife is in the process of getting an implant. She is 68 and

> has had a gradual loss for 30 years and can no longer use the phone

> or hear conversation, even with the strongest hearing aids. We are

> planning on getting the clarion and wonder if anyone who has a

> recent one could tell us of their experiences. Canyou use the

phone?

> Hear conversation? Listen to music? She used to play the piano and

> keyboard, but now they always sound out of tune. Any information

> will be greatly appreciated.

> Mel

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