🗣👂🏼 ⁉️ Ehhh? What!? I Can't Hear You!‼️⁉️

The Pennifer

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🗣👂🏼 ⁉️ Ehhh? What!? I Can't Hear You!‼️⁉️

So lately my old ear affliction is giving me grief and I am basically deaf in my left ear! :(
It makes hearing very difficult when people are soft spoken or mumbler's!
What Do You Do When You Just Cannot Hear Someone?
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There were supposed to be poll questions but I am having iPad issues and my thread posted before I could add them :mad: Not sure how to fix it ... My earache probably causing brain fog!

These lol
1) Just simply say "I didn't hear you."
2) Get in closer so you can hear.
3) Keep saying "ehhh?" "what?" Or "Say again"
4) Fake it and smile and nod, hoping it's the appropriate response.
5) Something else entirely.
 
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I'm terrible at hearing and understanding what people say so I just end up saying "What?" over and over again because I really can't hear them. It does seem to annoy people when they have to repeat themselves constantly though so sometimes I just pretend I understood and smile. c:
 
i'm 3 and 4 interchangeably , sometimes i just say what but sometimes i just nod and fake laugh and say yeah
 
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if it doesnt sound like theyre asking a question, i just nod. if its a question i just make them repeat it until i can understand
 
i usually ask them to repeat themself if it's important/i think it might be important. sometimes i just pretend that i hear them even though i don't
 
At the third time of asking them to repeat themselves, I normally just shrug and mumble "I don't know."
That answer works for most things lmao

Then I'll just casually walk away xD

If it's someone I'm close to though, I'll just laugh and be like "lmao wtf I can't hear you".
 
3... I usually can't hear people on the phone, but it also happens a lot when I'm talking to people face to face. After the 3rd "what?" they usually start getting annoyed...
 
1,3,4,5! i legit can't hear that well and that's what i say to people i dont understand..i always say "what" to my friends and they get mad, telling me to go get my ears checked LOOL
when it comes to lecturers im just like doing a fake laugh..and say yeah..

my ears probs full of wax. idk
 
I usually do 1 and 2. My job is listening to people so I have to try to hear them as well as possible, which might mean leaning in a little bit with my ear toward them. Not in an overly obvious way, since I still have to be professional, but it does help to do that. If I still don't hear or understand what someone said, I won't hesitate to tell them I missed something and they'll usually repeat themselves without me specifically asking them to.
 
I'm horrible at reading lips

But normally I'd do 3 and 4. More likely 3. I feel embarrassed when I have to ask more than once to hear what a person says but at least I'm trying to listen to them. :)
if i say what like 3 or more times i usually just nod and agree the next time, or the person gives up XD
 
It depends on the person and situation. Most of the time I just say "what?". However, my mother doesn't understand that "what?" means repeat yourself, so I need to specifically say "I didn't hear you, repeat yourself?". Most of the time, even this doesn't work, and she'll say something completely different, or add on to the thought so that it makes no sense contextually.
 
I always have my headphones in so I can never hear people, I say "What?" because it gives the response that "Don't talk to me unless it's important".
But other then that just say "I didn't hear you".
 
Ask them to repeat. Thanks to sensory processing disorder, I usually have to ask somebody to repeat themself multiple times. They tend to think I'm hard of hearing, but in actualality I'm hearing all the background noise that normal people naturally filter out just as loud as the person's voice. I can undersrand the frustration.
 
I have had trouble with my ears all my life recurring inner and middle ear infections in both ears, and had grommets once as a toddler and again in my teens. Both eardrums are scarred from the repeated perforations of the eardrum. My right is significantly worse than my left, and never fails to draw comment from any new Dr checking my ears (which happens routinely due to other health concerns). Thankfully the "permanent perforation" to the very edge of my right eardrum, tucked in against a bone and supported by scar tissue so it didn't heal itself (but was inoperable due to location) has closed. I had that for almost 10 years, and it was not pleasant!

Due to the scarring, I have some minor hearing loss, though nowhere near as much as the scars would indicate. I'm very lucky. My biggest problem is being able to hear someone talking with noise - even background tv or music. I can't process the different sounds properly, and rely on lip reading and guesswork to fill in the blanks or work out what was really said vs what I heard. The hearing loss itself is very minor, and my lip reading is a skill I've extended from my training to work with children. I haven't had any special lessons on how to lip read, though I'd be very interested in taking some.

Most people are willing to repeat what they just said when I ask, as I frequently do. For random comments from strangers on the street I'll often just smile and walk on. If I'm with someone I'll ask them what was said after we've moved away, as it's very frustrating for me to hear partial words and not know what was said. With people I know, I persist in trying to understand what was said that I missed and/or misunderstood. I say "can you please repeat that?" when I literally need the exact words repeated so I can untangle the sounds I heard. After several attempts if I still haven't gotten it, I say "what did you mean?"or "did you mean ____?" if I have been able to guess the key words. It's amazing how often people just rephrase when asked to repeat something..

My partner is the worst for this. In his work (IT), wording like that almost always means "rephrase so I can understand" so he defaults to doing exactly that. Which just gives me another set of sounds to untangle, the opposite of helpful. Even when I've worked out what was meant, I still need to know what the actual words said were, to have a better chance at recognising them next time. That, and it just drives me batty to have those partial words with gaps that I can't fill in!

Enunciation is very important to me, as I literally can't hear words that aren't enunciated properly. So I speak very clearly, which is perfect for my profession. I'm also excellent at comprehending young children, even those with significant speech issues. We think that's largely because I'm physically closer to them at the time, and by crouching or sittin down I'm naturally reducing the background noise that gets in my way normally when at the level of adults (standing or sitting). That's the best answer the Dr's had, anyway.

Bodies are weird lol! And we don't know how much we take ours for granted until something goes wrong..

I hope your hearing issue and any pain clears up asap OP.

:)
 
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