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Hello, welcome. Both me and my 3 1/2 year old daughter Clara have a

unilateral loss. Ours is not a progressive loss though, we've had it

from birth. When I was in school I wish I would have said " I can't

hear on that side " much more often. I would often just pretend I knew

what was going on :-) I'm glad Mikey is more assertive. Have you heard

about the new transear device for people with unilateral loss?

http://www.transear.com/index.html

I'm looking into it for both Clara and myself. There's not many

people who seem to know about it, it's relatively new, but I got a

hold of an audi who is going to be some kind of training about it in

June so I will follow up with her next month. Anyway, thought I'd

pass that on as a possible option for Mikey.

Cheryl

-- In Listen-Up , " nell92662 " wrote:

>

> Hi,

>

> After some thought and much encouragement from Barbara Mellert, I'm

> joining in.

>

> My son, Mikey, is 13 and has unilateral hearing loss that was

> discovered about 3 years ago and has progressed since on the one

> side. He is also ADHD. After reading some things I wonder which came

> first hearing loss or ADHD... chicken or egg...

>

> He is adjusting well. It's his mom that is taking a bit longer. I

> worry and fret some.

>

> He isn't wearing a hearing aid. The Dr and audiologist don't believe

> it would help at this point - just increase noise level and not

> understanding. He is also VERY resistant at this age about

> being " different " . He needed glasses and that was a struggle alone

> without introducing anything else.

>

> He is now in the 7th grade and is doing well in school with an IEP

> plus some wonderful teachers. The fact that he isn't shy and

> says, " I can't hear on this side. " helps, I'm sure. :-)

>

> It helps to know there are other parents in the same boat and to

> realize it ISN'T the Titanic.

>

> Thanks for listening.

>

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Guest guest

Hello, welcome. Both me and my 3 1/2 year old daughter Clara have a

unilateral loss. Ours is not a progressive loss though, we've had it

from birth. When I was in school I wish I would have said " I can't

hear on that side " much more often. I would often just pretend I knew

what was going on :-) I'm glad Mikey is more assertive. Have you heard

about the new transear device for people with unilateral loss?

http://www.transear.com/index.html

I'm looking into it for both Clara and myself. There's not many

people who seem to know about it, it's relatively new, but I got a

hold of an audi who is going to be some kind of training about it in

June so I will follow up with her next month. Anyway, thought I'd

pass that on as a possible option for Mikey.

Cheryl

-- In Listen-Up , " nell92662 " wrote:

>

> Hi,

>

> After some thought and much encouragement from Barbara Mellert, I'm

> joining in.

>

> My son, Mikey, is 13 and has unilateral hearing loss that was

> discovered about 3 years ago and has progressed since on the one

> side. He is also ADHD. After reading some things I wonder which came

> first hearing loss or ADHD... chicken or egg...

>

> He is adjusting well. It's his mom that is taking a bit longer. I

> worry and fret some.

>

> He isn't wearing a hearing aid. The Dr and audiologist don't believe

> it would help at this point - just increase noise level and not

> understanding. He is also VERY resistant at this age about

> being " different " . He needed glasses and that was a struggle alone

> without introducing anything else.

>

> He is now in the 7th grade and is doing well in school with an IEP

> plus some wonderful teachers. The fact that he isn't shy and

> says, " I can't hear on this side. " helps, I'm sure. :-)

>

> It helps to know there are other parents in the same boat and to

> realize it ISN'T the Titanic.

>

> Thanks for listening.

>

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Guest guest

Welcome to the group!

My name is Kris, and my son has a complete unilateral loss (SNL, Left

Ear). I wish would remember to tell people that he isn't hearing them

- instead, he just happily goes on his merry way!

Looking forward to getting to know you,

Kris

Mom to (7 y.o., Profound/Complete SNL, Left Ear) and Ethan (6 y.o.,

hearing)

_____

From: Listen-Up [mailto:Listen-Up ] On Behalf

Of nell92662

Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2006 2:25 PM

To: Listen-Up

Subject: Intro

Hi,

After some thought and much encouragement from Barbara Mellert, I'm

joining in.

My son, Mikey, is 13 and has unilateral hearing loss that was

discovered about 3 years ago and has progressed since on the one

side. He is also ADHD. After reading some things I wonder which came

first hearing loss or ADHD... chicken or egg...

He is adjusting well. It's his mom that is taking a bit longer. I

worry and fret some.

He isn't wearing a hearing aid. The Dr and audiologist don't believe

it would help at this point - just increase noise level and not

understanding. He is also VERY resistant at this age about

being " different " . He needed glasses and that was a struggle alone

without introducing anything else.

He is now in the 7th grade and is doing well in school with an IEP

plus some wonderful teachers. The fact that he isn't shy and

says, " I can't hear on this side. " helps, I'm sure. :-)

It helps to know there are other parents in the same boat and to

realize it ISN'T the Titanic.

Thanks for listening.

All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is

the intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright

restrictions.

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Guest guest

Welcome to the group!

My name is Kris, and my son has a complete unilateral loss (SNL, Left

Ear). I wish would remember to tell people that he isn't hearing them

- instead, he just happily goes on his merry way!

Looking forward to getting to know you,

Kris

Mom to (7 y.o., Profound/Complete SNL, Left Ear) and Ethan (6 y.o.,

hearing)

_____

From: Listen-Up [mailto:Listen-Up ] On Behalf

Of nell92662

Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2006 2:25 PM

To: Listen-Up

Subject: Intro

Hi,

After some thought and much encouragement from Barbara Mellert, I'm

joining in.

My son, Mikey, is 13 and has unilateral hearing loss that was

discovered about 3 years ago and has progressed since on the one

side. He is also ADHD. After reading some things I wonder which came

first hearing loss or ADHD... chicken or egg...

He is adjusting well. It's his mom that is taking a bit longer. I

worry and fret some.

He isn't wearing a hearing aid. The Dr and audiologist don't believe

it would help at this point - just increase noise level and not

understanding. He is also VERY resistant at this age about

being " different " . He needed glasses and that was a struggle alone

without introducing anything else.

He is now in the 7th grade and is doing well in school with an IEP

plus some wonderful teachers. The fact that he isn't shy and

says, " I can't hear on this side. " helps, I'm sure. :-)

It helps to know there are other parents in the same boat and to

realize it ISN'T the Titanic.

Thanks for listening.

All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is

the intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright

restrictions.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Welcome to the group!

My name is Kris, and my son has a complete unilateral loss (SNL, Left

Ear). I wish would remember to tell people that he isn't hearing them

- instead, he just happily goes on his merry way!

Looking forward to getting to know you,

Kris

Mom to (7 y.o., Profound/Complete SNL, Left Ear) and Ethan (6 y.o.,

hearing)

_____

From: Listen-Up [mailto:Listen-Up ] On Behalf

Of nell92662

Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2006 2:25 PM

To: Listen-Up

Subject: Intro

Hi,

After some thought and much encouragement from Barbara Mellert, I'm

joining in.

My son, Mikey, is 13 and has unilateral hearing loss that was

discovered about 3 years ago and has progressed since on the one

side. He is also ADHD. After reading some things I wonder which came

first hearing loss or ADHD... chicken or egg...

He is adjusting well. It's his mom that is taking a bit longer. I

worry and fret some.

He isn't wearing a hearing aid. The Dr and audiologist don't believe

it would help at this point - just increase noise level and not

understanding. He is also VERY resistant at this age about

being " different " . He needed glasses and that was a struggle alone

without introducing anything else.

He is now in the 7th grade and is doing well in school with an IEP

plus some wonderful teachers. The fact that he isn't shy and

says, " I can't hear on this side. " helps, I'm sure. :-)

It helps to know there are other parents in the same boat and to

realize it ISN'T the Titanic.

Thanks for listening.

All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is

the intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright

restrictions.

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Guest guest

In a message dated 5/9/2006 5:45:15 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,

Parentsofdeafhoh@... writes:

High five, Barbara, you reeled another one in!

:)

Welcome to the list. I also have a seventh grader who is about to turn 13.

has a profound hearing loss and uses hearing aids. Last year, he

went

from colorful earmolds to plain ones that disappear. Gotta love this age.

The aids are the same here, it's the hair that's different. Ian has gone

from the buzz-cut look to the mass of floppy messy hair look that occasionally

stands up in a thousand different directions. Now you can't see his aids, much

less his ears. I am wondering how the aids could possibly be working under

that mop, but he says they're fine. According to him, the trouble is he gets

hair under his ear molds in the morning if he's not careful. (shrug)

I think somehow I didn't get this original introduction email so I think I

missed saying " welcome " to our new list-mate. I'm Jill, mom of Ian who is 15, a

high school sophomore with a progressive bilateral loss currently in the

moderate range. He started out with a unilateral loss, but things change and we

just adapt as they do. (grin)

We also have , a hearing 12-year-old. So there are days when my house

is Hormone Central and I am considering moving out and getting my own

apartment, not waiting for the kids to do it first. LOL

Again, welcome to the list -- Jill

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  • 4 weeks later...
Guest guest

Hi Zanna, welcome! Poor little Kylie—lot’s

of us here just hate it that no doctor figured out what was wrong with our

child after years and years of symptoms. Me included. Good for you for

insisting. Good luck with the rest of the testing. Sounds like you’re

finally on the right track. You might consider testing for other food

intolerances as well. Though lots of Celiac are also lactose intolerant, many

of us have other food intolerances also. If you don’t already, insist on

using a GI doctor with a real specialty in celiac disease. Ask that doc for a

referral to a nutritionist who specializes in celiac. There has to be one in

your area. If she’s been mal-absorbing all these years, she’ll

probably need some extra supplements to help her build back up. I’m

finding my naturopath to be really helpful, more than anyone else.

Definitely tell Kylie not to panic yet

about the negative consequences of being celiac. So many of the symptoms

completely reverse. She has lots of years before having a baby (I hope) for her

body to heal and be ready for pregnancy. Don’t panic about the diet

either. It’s so much easier to restrict the diet than to be deadly sick! One

of our members posted a lot of So. Cal

restaurants that are helpful for us some time back. I’m sure we can

recover that.

Laurie

lbilyeu@...

From: SillyYaks [mailto:SillyYaks ] On Behalf Of xanadu

Sent: Monday, June 05, 2006 3:50

PM

To: SillyYaks

Subject: INTRO

Hi! My name is

Zanna. I live in So. Cal.

My daughter, Kylie, age

16 is undergoing testing for celiacs.

A little of her medical history:

She has had problems digesting food/dairy products all her life. As

an infant they put her on isomil and said that she just may have a

problem digesting dairy. As she grew-very slowly, I might add, there

were numerous trips the the ER for severe stomach pains. Mostly they

just said it was gas/bloating and sent her home with pills. She has

taken Gas-X since she was small. Around the age of 6 she starting

breaking bones all over the place! Finally at age 8 after 6 broken

bones in 2 years, I demanded a bone scan. She had the bone density

of a 90 year old. This is what the bone specialist told us.

They couldn't figure out what was causing her osteoporosis. They

finally said it was from osteogenisis imperfected, of which she had

no outward symptoms besides the the brittle bones. She was put on

fosomax and by the time she hit puberty her bone scan was in the low

normal.

She has always been very tiny. I am 5'7 " , my husband is 5'10 and our

7 year old son is already 4'8 " . Kylie hit the 5' mark four years ago

and hasn't grown since.

She got to the point where she wanted to figure out what was making

her sick as bad as we did so she cut out shell fish, that wasn't it,

then dairy and for a few months was doing really good, then she

started on a new diet, or eating plan of whole grains, natural

foods. She lost her baby fat and we thought was doing very well.

She complained to me a few weeks ago that she could hardly last

through her ballet classes anymore-this never had been a problem

before. She said her muscles all hurt, she was week, had tingling in

her hands, just all over not doing well. And after her recent weight

loss, her periods are very irregular, this time, it has not come at

all. No, she is not pregnant. We talked about that too.

I have been dx with three autoimmune diseases myself. I know that if

AI diseases run in your family, your children have a higher chance of

getting them.

When we were researching we came accross the possible infertility and

she freaked out. She was crying 'I want to have babies'. We did

some more research and found that with the right diet, this will not

be a problem.

She is scared and I know thats normal but she is very much a stickler

for rules and I know she can adhere to this diet. We all just have

to try hard to do the same thing.

Any of this sound familiar to anyone? I look forward to some

advice/answers!

Thank you so much,

Zanna

mom to Kylie age 16

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  • 4 months later...

Hello Jill,

Welcome as there are many new members all the time. I find this site great

and was and is very helpful for my journey. I was diagnosed a year ago. Oct. 27

will be my 1 year anniversary. I have learned so much from these women and I am

sure they appreciate all of our support and " been there " information.

Sharon C Los Angeles

10-27-06

1.5 cm. tumor- lumpectomy

30 radiation treatments

On Arimidex 5 years

carpediemdaisy@... wrote:

Hi everyone,

I thought I would introduce myself. I was diagnosed with breast cancer 3-1/2

years ago. I had a lumpectomy, underwent radiation and chemo. I'm here because I

would like to be of encouragement to others, as well as to find a group of women

who have also " been there. " I feel that it is important to be in a support

group. I look forward to " meeting " you all.

Jill, in Central California

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