Hearing loss
Hello Tonebase community,
My name is Francois, and I’m a lifelong music lover and passionate amateur pianist. Earlier this year, I experienced a sudden and complete hearing loss in my right ear due to sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL). This has deeply affected my relationship with music and the way I experience sound.
I’m now preparing for cochlear implant (CI) surgery and would love to connect with musicians or music enthusiasts who also lost their hearing as adults and later received a CI. I’m especially interested in understanding how CI rehabilitation affected their music perception, enjoyment, and emotional connection to sound.
I’d also be grateful to learn from musicians who are navigating hearing loss in any form and have found ways to appreciate and engage with music again.
I look forward to learning from you all.
Many thanks,
Francois
5 replies
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A friend of mine who is a singer and pianist had her CI turned on just 2 weeks ago. I don't know how she is doing today., but before her surgery, she told me, she may never be able to hear music again. She was able to understand words right away though, So we are keeping our fingers crossed. I'd have a serious discussion with your audiologist about your concerns. Each person is different.
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Hi Francois,
I hope you studied and researched enough for the decision to take cochlear implant surgery. My father-in-law had the surgery. What I heard is the sound he hears after surgery and before surgery is completely different, the new sound is like the sound of metal hitting.
You may have already watched “Sound of Metal”, movie about a drummer who lost hearing and got cochlear implant. My mother-in-law describes that the sound they hear is the one in the movie.
He had to learn to get used to hearing the new sound. It has been years since he had surgery, but he is still having difficulty recognizing words. Sometimes he takes off the device when music is on. I assume it is emotionally hard for him to listen to music with the device. A doctor said about 70 % of people get good results. So, it is possible that he did not get good results.
This website has the sound to simulate cochlear implant processing.
https://cochlearimplant.lab.uconn.edu/cochlear-implant-information/sounds/
I am afraid that you may be very disappointed with the sound you hear after the surgery. I imagine using one good ear and another ear with cochlear implant at the same time is very frustrating. I am not opposing your decision, but please prepare your mind for the bad scenario.