I completely agree, and I am very aware as to how fortunate I am.
I stand by my point for exactly the reasons you mention - we are all different - and each of us need some, many, or no accommodations at all. Hearing loss is such a unique disability for all of us.
Iām glad to read what user184 said. That perspective had not occurred to me. I have the opposite problem, and wasnāt thinking broadly enough. Iām used to people assuming that, because I wear hearing aids, I can hear normally. It doesnāt work that way for me. But what I just learned in this post will enable me to be more aware of the range of hearing abilities in people who wear aids, and how to respect the broad range of differences. Thank you for sharing what you wrote.
When I first was approved for hearing aids to compensate for exposure to noise at work, when I visted the audiologist for setting changes my hearing always improved. It was magic.
That was 20 years ago.
Now my hearing is worse. Iām on my 3rd set of hearing aids. Itās obvious to me now that hearing aids donāt fix my hearing. Itās not obvious to my wife and other people that I know. The comment is, āyour hearing aids donāt work.ā
My best knowledge came from a book recommended here. Itās:
ā HEAR & BEYOND, Live Skillfully with Hearing Loss, by SHARI EBERTS and GAEL HANNANā
I recommend it too. However, people I referred to with normal hearing arenāt interested in reading it. Hearing loss is my problem.
āTen Commandmentsā is so simple. However, Iām about done with trying to educate the people around me. Work is the worst environment for harassments as a person who is hard of hearing.