Guest guest Posted July 13, 2007 Report Share Posted July 13, 2007 DJ: Here are the truthful facts of my bilateral experience of almost 4 years. My ability to localize in tests in a sound proof room is outstanding - as good as I can get for the tests with 16 speakers in an arc. In real life, it is a vast improvement over just one CI, particularly in traffic situations. I also have better hearing in noise (headshadow effect) and it is much easier to hear soft sounds with two ears. I find that only in EXTREME situations will I have a need to change my settings to allow for the conditions. For the first year or more I was continually adjusting the maps of my first CI down as we brought the second CI UP to finally achieve a nice balance. I had seven years of single side CI use, so I think it was a matter of getting the one ear to " give up " doing all the work. I am not sure what you are trying to get to with your question about how things sound relative to the descriptions. Things sounded very normal to me, but I would describe hearing with two ears as more full and rich sounding as opposed to a more flat sound of one ear. I might also add my personal experience was that receiving the second CI was almost anticlimactic compared to going from no hearing to hearing with one CI. I remember commenting to my husband as we dined in a noisy restaurant the first night my second CI was activated - that it seemed to be hardly making a difference. Well, I turned OFF the new CI and already in a few hours the sound in my first CI sounded different and less pleasant. You see, my brain was already adapting to binaural sound! What a surprise! DJ - I truly appreciate your concerns about giving up residual hearing. I can only share MY experience - and that is that I have never for one tiny minute regretted my decision to be bilateral. I had no residual hearing to give up, but I do remember with my first CI concern for giving up what little hearing I had. It was all I knew........so of course, it was frightening to consider losing it. I am so happy I took the leap of faith! When I think about the things that are better for me now, things that comes to mind: It is easier to have conversations with people on any side, and to know where the person is speaking from. Music - with two ears, it is truly three dimensional and awesome compared to one CI. Hearing in noise - much easier now and rarely do I need to change processor settings to hear. Soft sounds, such as my soft spoken granddaughter - much easier for me to hear her. One of the first things I noticed after receiving my second CI is that I did not have to work so hard to hear in some situations. Also, distance hearing seems to be improved. I particularly get a kick out of pulling over for emergency vehicles now long before other drivers give their attention to them! Lastly - and one that I didn't think about before becoming bilateral - if one battery goes out, you still have the other ear while you are changing batteries, so you don't miss a thing! Warmly, Carol Considering Bilateral, Need Feedback From Bi users please! Posted by: " DJ " soutthpaw@... soutthpaw Date: Thu Jul 12, 2007 9:29 am ((PDT)) Hi, Did your ability to localize sound change when you when bilateral? How did it change? Did your ability to hear in noisy situations change? how? Did you get the benefit of Binaural (sp) amplification using 2 CI's together? (this means where the sum of the 2 is greater than one alone) Did the way (more robotic, natural, garbled etc.) things sound actually change or stay the same? how? These are the key issues for me in deciding to go ahead with the Bilateral surgery. Thanks in advance for your responses DJ Wooldridge Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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