Better Hearing Consumer

Featured image for “I Dreamt I Had Hearing Loss!”
Aug. 15, 2016

I Dreamt I Had Hearing Loss!

Gael Hannan
I woke up with a shock the other morning.  Actually, the shock didn’t happen right away, because I was thinking about my cool dream of being interviewed for a position as nanny for Justin Trudeau’s kids. (For those not up on Canadian politics, Justin is our Prime Minister.)   The jolt came when I realized that during this interview with
Featured image for “A Message from a Unicorn”
Aug. 07, 2016

A Message from a Unicorn

Gael Hannan
For those of us with hearing loss, reminders are everywhere of what we may be missing —the joy of music or speech, for example, if only we could hear well enough to make sense of them.  Yet sometimes, unexpectedly, we receive messages from unusual sources that tell us that our senses are intertwined, helping us to enjoy what we thought
Featured image for “20 QUESTIONS & 5 STEPS TO A BETTER LIFE WITH HEARING LOSS”
Aug. 01, 2016

20 QUESTIONS & 5 STEPS TO A BETTER LIFE WITH HEARING LOSS

Gael Hannan
Don’t you just love those headlines that promise you the world?  5 Simple Tricks You Can Do TODAY to Revive Your Love Life! 10 Things You Didn’t Know About Celery—But Should! 3 Neat Ways to Pick the 5 People You’ll Meet Up There! These are examples of a listicle—a combination of an article and a list which offers advice to
Featured image for “Speech-Body-Reading: A HoH’s Secret Skill”
Jul. 25, 2016

Speech-Body-Reading: A HoH’s Secret Skill

Gael Hannan
Don’t mess with a speechreader!  This is a person with hearing loss—sometimes also known as a HoH (hard of hearing)—who secretly scans faces and body language to help them communicate. A recent article on interpreting body language by Travis Bradberry in Linkedin.com, is a fascinating look at how we interpret visual cues. In “Great Tricks for Reading People’s Body Language”, Bradberry translates
Featured image for “Someone’s in the Kitchen with Tinnitus”
Jul. 18, 2016

Someone’s in the Kitchen with Tinnitus

Gael Hannan
Someone’s in the kitchen with Dinah Someone’s in the kitchen I know (oh-oh-oh) Someone’s in the kitchen with Dine-AHH Making lots of noise, noise, noise! The World Health Organization (WHO) says that  “excessive noise seriously harms human health and interferes with people’s daily activities at school, at work, at home and during leisure time. It can disturb sleep, cause cardiovascular
Featured image for “Drinks, Dementia and Hearing Loss”
Jul. 11, 2016

Drinks, Dementia and Hearing Loss

Gael Hannan
For those who have hearing loss and/or chronic tinnitus, news of breakthrough cures or treatments are met with a heartbeat-jump of hope. Then, a snort of suspicion.  But then we think, but what if?  How wonderful if one day, preferably before I die, ‘they’ discover something we can swallow or smoke that will actually revive those cochlear hair cells or eliminate chronic
Featured image for “The Hearing Loss Battle Cry”
Jul. 05, 2016

The Hearing Loss Battle Cry

Gael Hannan
This month, at least two countries are celebrating historic independence as nations. It was a full-on revolution for the United States and a bloodless document-signing for Canadians, but for both countries, it was a years-long march to the desired freedoms. People with hearing loss also wage private wars with their disability—that can last a lifetime. Maybe a little more flag-waving would
Featured image for “When Yer Talkin’ to a HoH…”
Jun. 28, 2016

When Yer Talkin’ to a HoH…

Gael Hannan
When people with hearing loss gather together—like 1500 of them—you’d think it would be noisy.  Loud voices talking over each other, yelling what?! or pardon?! In some ways, however, we are a quieter crowd than an equivalent number of hearing people. If more than one person talks at a time, we don’t understand anybody, so we generally honor the one-speaker rule.
Featured image for “Why You Should Let Your Face-Light Shine!”
Jun. 20, 2016

Why You Should Let Your Face-Light Shine!

Gael Hannan
This is a simple plea: let there be light. If you’re speaking with people like me—who have hearing loss and who depend to some degree on speechreading—make sure we can see your face. Your whole face.  All the time. That means no shadows.  Examples of shadow-makers include baseball caps, light from beneath or above—which has the added disadvantage of making
Featured image for “Don’t Make Us Beg”
Jun. 14, 2016

Don’t Make Us Beg

Gael Hannan
It’s the kind of news that makes the hard of hearing heart beat faster. No, there’s been no proclamation of National 50% Off Hearing Aids Day. No announcement of a little pink pill that will make damaged cochlear hair cells spring back to life. No scientific proof of a twice-daily mantra that will calm the neurons firing off tinnitus cannons