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“Why Are Hearing Difficulties So Exhausting?”

Most people who’re severely to profoundly deaf (even with digital hearing-devices) will mention recurring exhaustion from “actively listening” all the time to communicate, to receive and remember daily facts, and to process at warp-speed detail that’s fed to you – in its incompleteness or entirety.

A multi-choice survey on the “Hearing Ourselves Think” blog by psychologist Katharine Cecilia Williams, has some brilliant questions on this same topic.

Read: “Why Is Hearing Impairment Exhausting?”

For this respondent, the single answer to these questions is “All The Above”. Read the text below the survey-box to get further insights to the challenges.

Listening Fatigue Exists And Is Real

This real “concentration fatigue” is described by UK-based Ian Noon, as being like “doing jigsaws, Sudokhu and Scrabble all at the same time”.

Read: Being deaf and dealing with concentration fatigue

For children and teens learning in mainstream classrooms, this fatigue is very real – and the frustration can emerge at the end of a school day when they get home. Some take off their hearing devices for a break after school – while others zone out in a quiet part of the house, or in their bedrooms simply to recharge their own energy.

Self-Pacing Personal Energy Is Crucial

In the later teens and college years, before moving to workplaces, students with hearing issues need to self-pace to find their point of discomfort, and to learn to know when they need time out, whether this is a 20 minute break, a night in, a day’s annual leave, a long weekend or bigger stretch of time off.

Parents, educators and employers should be aware that this concentration fatigue exists and is not an excuse for a person to shirk their duties, to miss deadlines or to perform below their threshold in a work role. Quite simply, their brains can temporarily be so fatigued that clear thinking and communication is not viable.

There’s irony in a deaf person needing ‘quiet time’ to recharge – but it’s vital.

More Reading

  • Captioning: A Lifeline At Conferences And Seminars
  • Disability Law News Journal: Deaf Children and Inclusive Education
  • Video: how captioning benefits a deaf student in Albany
  • Educational Supports Unlock Students’ Potential
  • CART: Upskills for the job, and confidence for the future
Jul 29, 2013Team Sound Advice

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Comments: 1
  1. Caroline Carswell
    7 years ago

    ” Hearing is a full-time job. It takes up a lot of my thoughts, time and energy. ” http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/tamara-marshall/hearing-loss_b_17650932.html

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