Author Topic: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"  (Read 16619 times)

Boppie

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Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« on: September 11, 2007, 09:56:22 pm »
I am becoming better and better at lip reading.  So, occasionally, I go without my hearing aid.  But I always wear a small ear shaped charm on my good ear side.  After many months of wearing the one earring, friends and family are beginning to look for it.  My husband told me the earring helps him remember.  People walk around to get around on my good side to talk to me!  If I go out without this earring people ask where it is.

Maybe in ten years folks will even know what the letters SSD mean! ;D

It should really be SSDD meaning Single Side Direction Deaf   :-\

Soundy

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #1 on: September 12, 2007, 09:03:28 am »
I have felt like making a sign and stick to my self with an arrow pointing at good ear a time or two...
at our PTO officer meeting this morning everyone let me pick my seat so that I would be positoned
to hear better... what I find funny is my kids or husband whispering stuff in my deaf ear if I am on
the phone  :D ... you would think they would get it by now
3mm AN discovered Aug 2004
Translab July 2 ,2007
3.2cm x 2.75cm x 3.3cm @ time of surgery

Chaya

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #2 on: September 12, 2007, 09:41:27 am »
Hello, my name is Heidi and I am brand new to the forum.  I have read many of the posts and find them extremely interesting and most relevant to my situation.  It is so good to know I am not alone in this AN thing. 
I just have to laugh that sometimes my family and friends do not remember which is my hearing ear and that I am deaf on my "bad side".  I love it when my husband comes up behind me to whisper something!  Couldn't hear whispers before my surgery, certainly can't hear them now!!
Thank you to all who post their experiences.  So comforting!!

HeadCase2

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #3 on: September 12, 2007, 09:51:42 am »
Boppie,
  Great idea on the ear ring on one side.  I'm still amazed when my my family members don't remember that I can't hear on one side.  Maybe I could try the football-personality thing and wear a 4 carat diamond in one ear :)
Regards,
 Rob
1.5 X 1.0 cm AN- left side
Retrosigmoid 2/9/06
Duke Univ. Hospital

GrogMeister of the PBW

Boppie

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #4 on: September 12, 2007, 04:18:13 pm »
I have always enjoyed getting silly and over the top to grab attention.  How about wearing a hat with one of those springy flowers sprouting out on the deaf side.  Tell your family you are gonna wear the stupid thing until they remember.

I made a strong point one time this week.  I called my bad side "my dead side".    My friend tried to correct the word, but I replied that's what it is, 'Dead'.  This sounds a little profane, but I  makes my point... the hearing there is NEVER going to grow back.

Rob, I like your  'Carpe Grog'.
« Last Edit: September 12, 2007, 04:21:27 pm by Boppie »

cookiesecond

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #5 on: September 12, 2007, 07:33:51 pm »
Not much irritates me more than my family trying to talk to me while I am on the phone!!!!! They know I can't hear! Most of my family have learned to position themselves so I can hear them when we are out. One daughter says even when she is shopping with someone else she puts them on her right side or it drives her crazy.
However, people at church are always trying to whisper something in my right ear. My new brother-in-law came and sat by me on my AN side in church and told me something??? I just smiled. He told my sister, I told Lynn I am really feeling bad and she just nodded and smiled! Oh well....
Enjoy the rest of your week ALL,
Lynn

TP

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #6 on: September 12, 2007, 08:30:41 pm »
Lynn I totally understand where you are coming from. In church if someone sits next to your deaf side you have to totally turn your body to hear anything or just sit and smile like you know what people are saying. I am finding that I am not as interested in hearing detailed conversations anymore. It is a bigger deal than people realize. The one that bugs me the most is when I am emptying my grocery cart and my back is towards the bag boy and he is constantly asking, "do you want paper or plastic?" I can't hear anything they say but faint words. Of course I know what they are saying but it just bugs the stew out of me and I will turn and sometimes say I am deaf I am sorry I can't hear you, then the other day I asked, does anyone ever request paper? Here in Florida most people use plastic and recycle. I suggested to them they put a sign up and say we "assume you will use plastic unless you tell us otherwise!" I guess I am getting snippy about this irritating disability....
4+cmm left retromastoid of cerebellopontine angle tumor removed 6/5/06; Dr. Eric Gabriel, St. Vincents, Jacksonville, FL
Left ear hearing loss, left eye gold weight, facial paralysis; 48 year old female. Dr. Khuddas - my hero - corrected my double vision

Crystal

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #7 on: November 02, 2007, 06:19:57 pm »
I forgot the other day and tried to answer the phone with my bad ear.  I thought my cell phone was bouncing service and then remembered . . . It has 11 months ago I had surgery so you think it would be second nature by now.  :P

I would like to find a little more attractive pin. Maybe I'll get my daughter to play with polymer clay and come up with something.  I wish there was a universal attractive pin for "hearing courtesy" like the pink ribbon for breast cancer awareness.  That way anybody with hearing issues could wear it without having to ask people to speak louder or clearer after initial contact.
Dr. Chang - Stanford U - April 2004 Cyberknife 15mm X 12mm
Dr. Schwartz and Doctor Luxford - House Ear Clinic - Dec 2006 Translab 19.1mm X 15mm

4cm in Pacific Northwest

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #8 on: November 02, 2007, 08:27:20 pm »


RE Pins

I ordered 2 of these and wear then everyday. One on my coat and the other on my clothing.

AN10: Pin for Single-Sided Deafness

Designed to be worn on the side of your non-hearing ear.
Helps direct the speaker to your hearing ear.
The pin is approximately 1 ¾" wide by 2 ¾" high.

https://secure.baxinternet.com/~anausa/for_sale.html

I love the hat with the flower idea

Have any of you ever read
Daisy-Head Mayzie by Dr Seuss

http://www.amazon.com/Daisy-Head-Mayzie-Classic-Seuss-Dr/dp/0679867120/ref=pd_bbs_2/104-6575588-4925539?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1194056474&sr=8-2

   
I have to crack up… here I am 10 weeks  since surgery and SSD and I TOO picked up the phone with the wrong ear today. LOL Not only does my family forget what side I am deaf on … but so did I…

We got to keep laughing to stay sane...

Keep moving forward.

4


4cm Left, 08/22/07 R/S 11+ hr surgery Stanford U, Dr. Robert Jackler, Dr. Griffith Harsh, Canadian fellow Assist. Dr. Sumit Agrawal. SSD, 3/6 on HB facial scale, stick-on-eyeweight worked, 95% eye function@ 6 months. In neuromuscular facial retraining. Balance regained! Recent MRI -tumor receded!

Catflower

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #9 on: November 03, 2007, 03:43:40 pm »
I share everyone's frustration with SSD.  I'm 6 months post op (had perfect hearing in my affected ear before the surgery) and my husband still yells at me from other rooms.  This week I just told him if you have something that you want me to hear you're going to have to tell me face to face.  In the past I've been running all over the place asking him what he said, but now I have developed either Lupus or Rheumatoid arthritis and my joints have been extremely painful and I don't feel like running around all over the house.

I also still put the phone to my deaf ear (did it twice just this week).

Linda in WV

Nancy T

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #10 on: November 03, 2007, 10:30:24 pm »
So glad it's not just MY family that can't remember which side is deaf! After 8 years!!!

Most of the time, friends are better at remembering and getting on my good side when out walking than family members are. Still, I always dance a lot of the "one-ear do-si-do." :)

I also hate it when family members try to talk to me when I'm on the phone. They just can't seem to comprehend that I can't hear them!

Even worse is when my husband is in the kitchen, water is running, fan is on, he's trying to say something on my bad side. I say "I can't hear you." So he goes around to my other side and starts SHOUTING toward my perfectly good ear! Aaargh!!

Wasn't there some (proposed or actual) pin or earring that says "Out of order; please use other ear"? :)

In restaurants, I always insist on picking my spot at the table, even making someone move when necessary. I always choose the end seat of a square table so that everyone is on my good side except the person directly across from me. Round tables are no fun. I end up more or less subconsciously ignoring the person on my left, because it's just so much darn effort to carry on a conversation with them.

I can't relate to accidentally putting the phone on the wrong ear. I NEVER do that, and don't think I ever did from day one of my hearing loss. It's like my body knows instinctively that the phone goes on the right ear.

Nancy T.
(no AN, but deaf in left ear; BAHA-hopeful)
« Last Edit: November 03, 2007, 10:34:58 pm by Nancy T »
Sudden sensorineural hearing loss, left side, 1999 (no acoustic neuroma)
Baha Intenso, 2008

Jim Scott

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #11 on: November 04, 2007, 05:13:44 pm »
SSD experiences are anywhere from funny to frustrating, and more often, the latter.  The one's posted here are things we can all relate to.  However, I'm not wearing an earring or pin!  ;)

My wife is very astute about walking on my 'hearing' side and generally adjusting to the fact that I am deaf on one side (after 30+ years together when I heard just fine on either side).  Even so, she occasionally makes the mistake of trying to talk to me when I'm on the phone or talking to me from two rooms away.  I simply remind her "I can't hear you" and she quickly comes closer or writes down her comment if I'm on the phone.  Others forget and I simply adjust by asking them to repeat what they said or moving to a position where they're on my 'good' (hearing) side.  At church or in a large gathering, I often tell the person on my deaf side that I'm deaf in that ear and if they speak to me I probably won't hear them.  I ask them to tap me on the arm to get my attention and I'll turn my 'good ear' to them so we can converse. No one objects.  In fact, most folks (needlessly) apologize for not knowing (or remembering) that I'm deaf on my left side. 

I'm resigned to the fact that I'm going to miss some conversation, occasionally.  That is an immutable fact of SSD.  I can live with it.  I have to.

Jim
4.5 cm AN diagnosed 5/06.  Retrosigmoid surgery 6/06.  Follow-up FSR completed 10/06.  Tumor shrinkage & necrosis noted on last MRI.  Life is good. 

Life is not the way it's supposed to be. It's the way it is.  The way we cope with it is what makes the difference.

Soundy

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #12 on: November 05, 2007, 04:45:23 am »
We live out in the sticks and have been having problems with phone lately...alot
of static and clicking... the other day my husband was trying to make a call... I was
washing dishes and he had told me the phone didn't sound right... I asked what did it
sound like... he came up behind me and put phone to deaf ear... I told him it sounded
clear to me ...

I turned to watch him return to desk listening to phone and frowning  ...he hung it up
and said it still sounded bad to him...I guess I could have told him I heard clear line simply
because I heard nothing ... but thought naaaaaaaaaaaaa... gotta get giggles in when I can  :)
3mm AN discovered Aug 2004
Translab July 2 ,2007
3.2cm x 2.75cm x 3.3cm @ time of surgery

lori67

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #13 on: November 14, 2007, 10:34:54 am »
I just ordered the "Deaf Right" pin from the ANA - I didn't realize it was going to be so big!!  Guess I could have read the dimensions on the website, but, of course, I didn't.  Does anyone know if there is a smaller version of the pin available anywhere?  I'm not a big person to begin with, and that thing would look like I had a billboard pinned to my clothes.  I realize the idea is for people to see it, I just don't think they need to see it from across town!  Any suggestions?

I do have my family pretty well trained to talk to me on the side with the watch.  That works well for people who know me, but I'm having more of a problem when I'm out and about, so the watch thing doesn't work for that.

Thanks.
Lori
Right 3cm AN diagnosed 1/2007.  Translab resection 2/20/07 by Dr. David Kaylie and Dr. Karl Hampf at Baptist Hospital in Nashville.  R side deafness, facial nerve paralysis.  Tarsorraphy and tear duct cauterization 5/2007.  BAHA implant 11/8/07. 7-12 nerve jump 9/26/08.

Boppie

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Re: Ear marker gets them on your "Good Side"
« Reply #14 on: November 14, 2007, 12:30:48 pm »
I ordered two of these pins a few weeks ago.  It is suppposed to measure 1½" high.  I sure hope it isn't bigger!