My wonderful but stubborn 78 year old mother has always had hearing problems, but never wanted to wear a hearing aid. Her hearing has gotten worse now and every single conversation is two conversations now. Me saying something. Her saying "pardon, I didn't hear you" and me repeating it. This goes on all day long. She does it with my children and with other people. Why? Because she can't hear them.
About 3 years ago she relented and bought two hearing aids. She then took back the one for "the bad ear" (both ears are bad really!) and kept the one for "the good ear" which she then lost and found a few times. She never wore the hearing aid at all except in the movie theater. Her hearing has been noticeably worse over the past few months and I have encouraged, reasoned, begged, pleaded, cajoled, asked her to wear it because she can't hear. Her responses range from "if people would just look at me when they talk to me I can hear them." to "I can hear fine - it's when people start mumbling I can't hear."
Okay people, I know she is in denial. So anyway we went back to the hearing aid center (actually twice in the past month) and the guy there tried his very best to convince her that she has a problem. He tested her hearing. He even compared it to ours so she could tell the difference. He played a sound track on the computer and she saw us raise our hands earlier than her. Still not convinced, he put her hearing aid in and she acknowledged that she could hear the sound earlier. He did everything he possibly could to get her to admit she has a problem. She varied from "there are people in my family with hearing loss when I was growing up" to the absurd, "you are all ganging up on me."
I am sick and tired of banging my head up against her brick wall. Why won't she admit she has a problem and do something about it? Me and my 2 adult daughters, and the guy at the hearing aid center, have all told her repeatedly that this is putting a strain on our relationship with her and to "please just wear the damn thing" but she refuses to.
I honestly don't think that she realizes how many times she says "pardon, what did you say?" etc..,
And God forbid when I might say "Mom, put your hearing aid in" after she says that because she just gets VERY angry and defensive.
Has anyone gone through this?
And what do I say next time she says "Pardon?" because honest to God, she says it at least 95 percent of the time and I am at wit's end.
By the way: as mother ages, it's harder and harder for her to do manual tasks that require coordination. The staff at her ALF now put the hearing aids in for her every morning, recharge the batteries at night, and so on. She really couldn't do it herself but hated to admit it If you can convince your parent to let someone help, it may make the difference.
My mother cannot hear us, even if we are sitting feet away. I have given up trying to carry on a conversation with her.
My 95 year old Mom has had hearing aids for about 18 months now. She refused to get them for a long time saying that others she knew who had them didn't like them. Having them has made her life and ours so much better! I think what finally convinced her to try them was when my husband's mother and sister were visiting and she felt they had ignored her. I explained that they weren't ignoring her, they just knew that she couldn't hear them and didn't want to yell out everything they were saying.
For the phone, we have a Clarity W425 Pro. Then I plug in a corded earbud with microphone and put that in her good ear. She is able to carry on a conversation on the phone with this set up. Just using the phone alone doesn't work for her due to her head and hand tremors. She can't hold the phone still enough to be able to hear.
Best wishes with your Mom. If you're in the Chicago area, I would highly recommend Dr Jing at the Hearing Health Center on Raymond in Naperville. He was awesome with my Mom and her head tremor didn't bother him a bit. :)
My parents moved in with me about 8 months ago and I sometimes think I'm going to lose my mind with the repeating myself.. I love my parents so much - but my patience are wearing thin.. My mother 75 has not even gotten to the doctor yet for the hearing aids. (We are going next month)..
She is one of those people that want to know what's going on and involved in the conversation. I really think she will be so much happier if she could hear what everyone is saying.
Not to mention everyone has to talk over the blasting TV all day & night..
One of the most annoying is when I'm talking to my son, husband or on my phone and she says "Huh"? "I'm not talking to you Mom..." Then I feel bad..
That's the worst part... I do feel bad because I get so short with her sometimes and don't mean to make her feel bad or upset.
God Love them all.. Thanks for posting - good to know we're not alone!
I also tell my mother that I will not even attempt to talk to her when she does not have them in. She will ask me questions, without them in, and then cannot hear anything I say. This is very irritating. Getting the silent treatment by other family members is usually enough to do the trick.
I'm not supposed to ask if he has his hearing aids in or not. I ask anyway, or visually check his ears. If he's in the same room and I can't hear him, I say so or ignore him until he speaks clearly. Often he must turn his TV down before I can hear him.
If I want to ask him something, I go to him and sit in front of him to get his attention first before I speak. That works very well.
When we're talking and I respond to him only to hear or see him leaving the room, I just stop talking and forget about what I wanted to say. Obviously I've lost my audience.
So in summary, I don't cater to his poor communication acts and do my best to help communication when I initiate it.
Get their COMPLETE attention before saying anything of relevance,
Make a game of "what did I say?" to have them repeat it or just paraphrase - this is key and must happen before moving on,
Then, "put your hearing aid in now, thank you",
Then wait.
Until they do.
This is a ritual that you must carry out diligently, every time, even for the simplest of communications, until, one day soon, they will put the hearing aid in as a habit, the moment you walk into the room or shout from another room.
I dont know why this works.
It works.
Then follow through.
Or, when she talks to you, say,"Pardon?" Keep doing it until she puts the hearing aids in.
Neither way is very "nice" buy it may work.