I've been busy talking! Book talking, that is. I had three interesting book talks scheduled in the past few weeks - presentations to groups with hearing loss and beyond!
Let's start with the National Court Reporters Assn convention, held in Philadelphia last month. I was asked to present on "The Basics of Hearing Loss and the Need for CART and Captioning Services." I was really looking forward to doing this one, as court reporters are the wonderful folks who do realtime captioning (CART), something I desperately needed to function prior to getting my cochlear implants - and that I still use depending on the event and environment. I had intended to speak and answer questions for an hour and then do a booksigning with the remaining 30 minutes. But the discussions got so intense and meaningful, we overflowed to 90 minutes - and then continued with the booksigning in the hallway! A few days later, I was delighted to see an
NCRA member review of my session posted on the NCRA website - calling my session "beyond inspiring." Made my day!
And then a few days later, I learned that one of the court reporters, who had attended my session, lent a copy of my book Listening Closely to one of her neighbors, whose daughters have Usher's Syndrome (deaf/blind). Again, I was delighted to learn that the mother had written a blog about my books entitled "A special book and author"! I wrote those books to help others, so it was such an incredible feeling to know that goal was being met once again.
The second book talk was at my temple's Book Club. They had chosen my book, Listening Closely , to discuss. I was looking forward to this discussion too - new territory for me - as I wanted to delve into the spiritual aspects of my book, not just cochlear implants as miracles, but the interesting circumstances that surrounded the events and writing of this book. We began with the title - that it refers to more than just hearing. Two hours later, we were still going strong, with many opinions and perspectives - but had to stop then because they had to close the building. I'm looking forward to addressing other groups on this topic. After all, a device that allows the deaf to hear is a miracle - with much to discuss if you listen closely.
And the third book talk occurred yesterday, when I addressed the Morris County (NJ) chapter of the Hearing Loss Assn of America. Since this group included people with hearing aids, cochlear implants, as well as spouses, I made sure to cover the entire landscape. And that is what is so incredible about my 40 years' experience with hearing loss - it encompasses:
- normal hearing
- a slow degenerative hearing loss that provided experience with all degrees of hearing loss - mild, moderate, severe, profound
- using a cochlear implant in one ear - vintage 1997
- enduring a device failure after 10 years
- understanding what sudden deafness is like - as a device failure plunged me from hearing into silence
- being reimplanted, and comparing and contrasting new technology to old
- using one CI was like having single-sided deafness
- the benefits of bilateral hearing with two CIs - particularly from the user's point of view, not just booth testing
With that as background, I mentioned why my blog is called ASK ARLENE, and why my Walk4Hearing team is also called ASK ARLENE ! And ask they did! And I also did a booksigning - and I know those books will help others understand hearing loss and cochlear implants.
That's what's been keeping me busy - speaking and connecting with others - on hearing loss, cochlear implants, and beyond.
That's what's been keeping me busy - speaking and connecting with others - on hearing loss, cochlear implants, and beyond.
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