For some reason, my excellent hearing aids were beginning to
screech at me (and bystanders). So off I went to my local hospital’s audio
clinic where they kindly diagnose and rectify trouble.
I was told
that an excess of ear wax was the cause. A nurse told me to use sodium
bicarbonate liquid ear drops for five evenings, then a monthly regime of olive
oil. I was pleased.
After a day
or two a hint of deafness appeared. On the fourth day I woke in the morning to
find that I was almost totally deaf. I had suddenly entered a completely
different world, one lacking an essential and vital sense.
I walked
silently to do my normal morning ablutions, realising, as I conducted them,
that I was much reliant on sounds in the normal course of events. Was my
electric shaver on or off? Did the lavatory actually flush? Were any taps still
running that might flood the place? Sound is needed in such matters.
I made breakfast. Had the kettle
boiled? Had the toaster worked? Did the key unlock the back door? Had I locked
it again?
If Margreet shouted into an ear I
might just understand a bit of what was being said – to some mutual amusement.
But I could speak normally. Conversation was one-sided.
I chose to walk to the audio
department once more, taking the river path where dogs didn’t bark, bicycle
bells not work, seagulls flew silently and aeroplanes throttling back to land
at Heathrow might well have been engineless gliders.
When I reached the very busy
rush-hour roadway, cars and lorries passed by silently, as if all had at last
been converted to electric or hydrogen power (this really would be progress).
To cross the road was rather frightening without the guidance of sound. I had
to look both ways several times.
Back again at the hospital’s
audio department, with sign language and pen and paper, the verdict was that I
had a conglomeration – or something – of wax that should be extracted as soon
as possible. But, as a specialist member staff was unavailable to operate their
microsuction machine, I was to take two busses to a walk-in clinic some
distance away.
Without
sound communication I was given a map on which the bus numbers were written. So
off I went, only to be asked the way, when I, myself, was rather lost in a
soundless world.
Near to my
destination at last, but unable to see the walk-in clinic, I showed my rather
indistinct map to a passer by who was a foreigner (I felt like one, too). But
then a young lady came to my aid, and although I could not understand her
instructions, her pointing out directions was enough.
At the
clinic, the nurse and I could see the funny side of the situation, but their
de-waxing facility was not to be used on patients like me who took warfarin.
So, unheard
by me, she made an appointment with those at my original audio clinic for a
“micro” de–waxing in a few days. No time of the day had been fixed. That
information would come by telephone to my home. But as I would be unable to
answer it or even be able to listen to the message, was there anyone who could
take the call? Margreet could, and did.
One ear did
suddenly come partially to life a day later and we could converse. But this did
not last for long.
I write
this on a silent keyboard.
Having to
cope with deafness permanently must be dreadful. Sound, which we take for
granted when combined with our other senses in the normal way, would, if
deprived of it, diminish one’s enjoyment of life considerably – and other
people’s, too.
Now that I
have experienced deafness first hand and in coping with it – even momentarily –
has been an enlightening experience. And in doing so, it has been a fascinating
challenge – and sometimes a most amusing one. Those of us with this faculty
intact should be very grateful for it.