Guest guest Posted August 22, 2004 Report Share Posted August 22, 2004 Ian was about 7 ... he found out when we did. At the time he did not know that he couldn't hear, he thought everyone heard like he did. He asked us if if was his fault, if he did something to make it happen. We said: no, of course not. Nothing was his fault, but it was his problem. He was going to have to learn to deal with it. We said that we were all going to learn about it. Everybody has something that they learn to deal with, some problem that makes them different from other people. This was his. For Ian it was a defining moment because we presented it as one. We defined our family's attitude towards his hearing loss for him and for ourselves. Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2004 Report Share Posted August 22, 2004 Ian was about 7 ... he found out when we did. At the time he did not know that he couldn't hear, he thought everyone heard like he did. He asked us if if was his fault, if he did something to make it happen. We said: no, of course not. Nothing was his fault, but it was his problem. He was going to have to learn to deal with it. We said that we were all going to learn about it. Everybody has something that they learn to deal with, some problem that makes them different from other people. This was his. For Ian it was a defining moment because we presented it as one. We defined our family's attitude towards his hearing loss for him and for ourselves. Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2004 Report Share Posted August 22, 2004 Ian was about 7 ... he found out when we did. At the time he did not know that he couldn't hear, he thought everyone heard like he did. He asked us if if was his fault, if he did something to make it happen. We said: no, of course not. Nothing was his fault, but it was his problem. He was going to have to learn to deal with it. We said that we were all going to learn about it. Everybody has something that they learn to deal with, some problem that makes them different from other people. This was his. For Ian it was a defining moment because we presented it as one. We defined our family's attitude towards his hearing loss for him and for ourselves. Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2004 Report Share Posted August 22, 2004 I have a son who is physically disabled and I have been talking to him about how he is different since he was 4 but he didn't get it until about a year ago. We talk about how he can't go to the bathroom on his own and needs to be catheterized and he seems to think he will outgrow this. I tell him that he won't but he really doesn't understand. He isn't upset by it at this point, but it's just awkward telling him he won't outgrow it. This is how it is. He seems to be taking it rather well though. At what age did your kids realize they were deaf? Maybe this sounds like a strange question, but Neal is just now seeming to realize that he is deaf. He asked me a week or so ago if he would still need this (his ci) when he is a grown up. Then a couple of nights ago he again asked me if he would need it when he is sixteen (an age that he seems to think will change everything since he knows that is the age at which you start driving). I told him he would always need it to hear because he was born deaf which means his ears don't work like other people's. I said that people are born with all different kinds of problems and that this was his, but that it was lucky he could still hear with his implant. He was dissapointed to hear that this was a lifelong thing. I felt so horrible. It felt like learning he was deaf all over again, only worse because it was my kids' heart that seemed to be hurting from it. Have others gone through this? Or is it not usually such a defining moment but rather just a gradual realization? What makes it even harder is that, while his language is pretty good at this point, I'm sure he still doesn't understand everything as I'm explaining it, plus even if he was a hearing almost 5 year old, he would be too young to truly " understand " everything. Any advice on what else to say to him if he asks more about it? ~Rhonda~ Mom to Audrey, 7, hearing & Neal, almost 5, CII 6-11-02 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2004 Report Share Posted August 22, 2004 I have a son who is physically disabled and I have been talking to him about how he is different since he was 4 but he didn't get it until about a year ago. We talk about how he can't go to the bathroom on his own and needs to be catheterized and he seems to think he will outgrow this. I tell him that he won't but he really doesn't understand. He isn't upset by it at this point, but it's just awkward telling him he won't outgrow it. This is how it is. He seems to be taking it rather well though. At what age did your kids realize they were deaf? Maybe this sounds like a strange question, but Neal is just now seeming to realize that he is deaf. He asked me a week or so ago if he would still need this (his ci) when he is a grown up. Then a couple of nights ago he again asked me if he would need it when he is sixteen (an age that he seems to think will change everything since he knows that is the age at which you start driving). I told him he would always need it to hear because he was born deaf which means his ears don't work like other people's. I said that people are born with all different kinds of problems and that this was his, but that it was lucky he could still hear with his implant. He was dissapointed to hear that this was a lifelong thing. I felt so horrible. It felt like learning he was deaf all over again, only worse because it was my kids' heart that seemed to be hurting from it. Have others gone through this? Or is it not usually such a defining moment but rather just a gradual realization? What makes it even harder is that, while his language is pretty good at this point, I'm sure he still doesn't understand everything as I'm explaining it, plus even if he was a hearing almost 5 year old, he would be too young to truly " understand " everything. Any advice on what else to say to him if he asks more about it? ~Rhonda~ Mom to Audrey, 7, hearing & Neal, almost 5, CII 6-11-02 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2004 Report Share Posted August 22, 2004 I have a son who is physically disabled and I have been talking to him about how he is different since he was 4 but he didn't get it until about a year ago. We talk about how he can't go to the bathroom on his own and needs to be catheterized and he seems to think he will outgrow this. I tell him that he won't but he really doesn't understand. He isn't upset by it at this point, but it's just awkward telling him he won't outgrow it. This is how it is. He seems to be taking it rather well though. At what age did your kids realize they were deaf? Maybe this sounds like a strange question, but Neal is just now seeming to realize that he is deaf. He asked me a week or so ago if he would still need this (his ci) when he is a grown up. Then a couple of nights ago he again asked me if he would need it when he is sixteen (an age that he seems to think will change everything since he knows that is the age at which you start driving). I told him he would always need it to hear because he was born deaf which means his ears don't work like other people's. I said that people are born with all different kinds of problems and that this was his, but that it was lucky he could still hear with his implant. He was dissapointed to hear that this was a lifelong thing. I felt so horrible. It felt like learning he was deaf all over again, only worse because it was my kids' heart that seemed to be hurting from it. Have others gone through this? Or is it not usually such a defining moment but rather just a gradual realization? What makes it even harder is that, while his language is pretty good at this point, I'm sure he still doesn't understand everything as I'm explaining it, plus even if he was a hearing almost 5 year old, he would be too young to truly " understand " everything. Any advice on what else to say to him if he asks more about it? ~Rhonda~ Mom to Audrey, 7, hearing & Neal, almost 5, CII 6-11-02 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2004 Report Share Posted August 22, 2004 Rhonda, I remember all too well when Jake figured ot he was deaf. We tried to never treat him any different from his brother and he was allowed to do anything and everything they did like riding his bike in the subdivision, skateboarding, playing in the creek. Funny, he is about the safest kid on a scooter and bike in the neighborhood and the only one that REALLY looks out for cars. We never came out and said you are deaf, he was just a little kid to us and we wanted him to have as normal a childhood as possible. Anyway, he was in the second grade and for each childs birthday the teacher did this brainstorming thing where the kids gave words or phrases to describe the child. All the kids wrote a paragraph about him and drew a picture and the teacher made a book. On his birthday he was sick and absent from class. The words they used for him was born deaf, speaks very well, funny, runs fast, likes basketball, 8 years old, and brown hair. Well, when he came back to school she gave him his book and he started reading it in his HI resource time. He never said a word to the HI teacher but when he got in the car he pulled it out and started sobbing hysterically. I had no idea of course what it was about and he finally said to look at the book and cried worse than ever. I looked at it and didn't know what was wrong and asked so he tells me THEY SAID I WAS BORN DEAF! I tell him well you were born deaf and he got furious.....then out of his little mouth were his famous words....WHAT IS DEAF? Oh, I felt like poop then and always wondered if I should have told him more about being deaf, but he had such limited language we just told him that his ears didn't work right and he had to wear hearing aids. It took him a long time to get over that he was deaf and he would say he wasn't because he had an implant by then.. " I am not deaf I have my implant, see. " (haha) He has gotten over that, he still has his issues with being different from his friends but now he is able to joke about it. Just this morning i thought he had his implant on already and was telling him to do something. He saw that I was getting irritated because he didn't do it and he said, " You know Mom, I AM deaf! " Then I realized his CI was not on. I still wish I had at least tried to explain more about deafness to him when he was smaller though. Elaine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2004 Report Share Posted August 23, 2004 This is an interesting thread, as my son Ben, who turns 6 on Thursday, has been asking about this for the past year. Questions like " will I always wear hearing aids? " and " did you and daddy wear hearing aids when you were little? " We were sitting on the beach this summer and he said to me " I'm the only one on the beach wearing hearing aids. Usually I'm the only one wearing hearing aids. " Now the interesting thing is, he's in a class with 5 other HI kids, so ALL of his close friends have HAs or CIs. And he spends all day with these kids, has for the past 3 years. But he really notices when he's out in the rest of the world. Last summer, on our first full day at Cued Speech camp, he turned to my husband and said in awe " Daddy, everyone here wears hearing aids! " As for the word " deaf " , I did tell him about it, but he still doesn't use it to describe himself. Yet he knows that, without his aids, he can't hear... Stefanie mom to Ben, almost 6, severe to profound HOH, and Isabella, 9, mild loss, unaided Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2004 Report Share Posted August 23, 2004 This is an interesting thread, as my son Ben, who turns 6 on Thursday, has been asking about this for the past year. Questions like " will I always wear hearing aids? " and " did you and daddy wear hearing aids when you were little? " We were sitting on the beach this summer and he said to me " I'm the only one on the beach wearing hearing aids. Usually I'm the only one wearing hearing aids. " Now the interesting thing is, he's in a class with 5 other HI kids, so ALL of his close friends have HAs or CIs. And he spends all day with these kids, has for the past 3 years. But he really notices when he's out in the rest of the world. Last summer, on our first full day at Cued Speech camp, he turned to my husband and said in awe " Daddy, everyone here wears hearing aids! " As for the word " deaf " , I did tell him about it, but he still doesn't use it to describe himself. Yet he knows that, without his aids, he can't hear... Stefanie mom to Ben, almost 6, severe to profound HOH, and Isabella, 9, mild loss, unaided Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2004 Report Share Posted August 24, 2004 In a message dated 8/23/2004 6:45:31 PM Pacific Standard Time, stefanieac@... writes: <<This is an interesting thread, as my son Ben, who turns 6 on Thursday, has been asking about this for the past year. Questions like " will I always wear hearing aids? " and " did you and daddy wear hearing aids when you were little? " >> Interesting that the thought process seems to be similar for alot of the kids. I had another troublesome conversation with Neal yesterday. I guess this is not something that popped into his mind for a minute, but rather something that is really weighing on him. I would not have expected this at his age. Yesterday he had his headpiece off and was messing with it. I motioned to him to put it back on. He did and I told him that was not a toy; he shouldn't play with it or it might break and then he wouldn't be able to hear. He responded, " I don't like my implant. " I said, " Why? " He said, " Because I want my ears to work. " and then his eyes got all teary. It was very hard not to break down. I just told him, " I know. I want his ears to work too. It's not fair, but we are lucky that we can talk to each other about it. " Then he started saying that he wouldn't have friends because of his implant. I don't know where in the world that came from. I pointed out all of the people who are his friends, some who have implants and some who don't, etc. On the one hand, a little over two years ago this kid had no spoken language at all, so WOW! But on the other hand, this conversation seems like it may be getting deeper than it should for his age. I'm trying to do what I did with my daughter when she would ask things like, " How does a baby get into the mommy's tummy? " when she was his age...just give the amount of information necessary to get them through that moment, but not more than someone their age can handle. But it can be so hard to figure out what the right amount of info is, especially when at the same time, you want to break down crying because your child is obviously in some turmoil. ~Rhonda~ Mom to Audrey, 7, hearing & Neal, 4 1/2, CII 6-11-02 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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