‘Tis the Season to be … anxious …

I love Christmas. I love the childlike, contagious joy. I love the happy, and sometimes emotive music. I love the delicious baking aromas dancing through the house. I love the colourful decorations, the shiny baubles a grand temptation for our family cat and mini dachshund.

But, I don’t like the work gatherings. Three in five days this year.

I dislike not being able to strategically choose where to sit where I know I will have a better chance to hear to participate in conversations. I struggle with the unknown event planner sitting me at a table where conversations are bouncing around me, left and right, behind, in front, and back and forth, sometimes words heard, sometimes not.

I loathe the loud noise surrounding me, as I try to tune into the drowned-out conversations, the excess noise competing with the limited hearing in my good ear and it’s hyperacusis, and my cochlear implant in my Meniere’s ear.

I grapple with the embarrassment of asking someone to repeat themselves. Once. Twice. Sometimes three times.

And I deplore feeling like a fake, pretending to be a normal person who is perfectly happy, like everyone else seems to be as they enjoy every moment, while I sit there as a wobbling pool of anxiety that makes me want to flee from the room.

I hate being an observer, looking for who is talking … the unremitting, tiresome watching … watching how other people are reacting to what is being said that I cannot hear properly. Should I fake smile now? Should I pretend to laugh now? Should I look crestfallen now? Should I shake my head from side to side like others now? Should I nod, now?

I despise being the copycat, and the battle of trying to fit in.

I hate … how utterly exhausting it is.

And I resent how it makes me feel. Like I’m not good enough. Like I’m an add on. Like the others are just being polite to me.

I hate what Meniere’s has done to me. I feel like I am living in a world where I don’t belong. A misfit.

I feel like I am a spectator to a life that is full of colour, while my shadow, Meniere’s, drains the colour from my life.

And then I feel disappointed in myself.

I should be thankful that my vertigo was destroyed by gentamicin, also destroying my balance and having to relearn to walk using my eyesight. I should be thankful that I have a cochlear implant. I should be leaping with joy that I can still teach in classrooms of teenagers, guiding them, helping them to grow their wings so they can be whatever they want to be in life.

But, my work friends and colleagues (whom I love and adore) don’t know how exhausting it is trying to fit in with their photobooths, their conversations in a loud background environment, their misbelief that perhaps my life is as normal as theirs, when in fact my struggle is exhausting, riddled with the poison of life destroying anxiety.

They don’t know how, when I go home, I have to pick up the pieces of me that are breaking off to the reality that I feel like I don’t fit in. That I will never be normal. Like them.

They don’t see me as I melt into a pool of self-pity.

How do I ask my generous employer for an exemption from the compulsory celebratory gatherings? How do I explain I don’t want to go to the extravagant, lavish, work celebrations to stop the physical, emotional, and psychological fallout? How do I explain these social gatherings make me want to run from the room, or sink into a corner where I can be invisible? How do I explain that I don’t want to go so I don’t have to suffer my own personal after-celebration post-mortem of overthinking, and tears? How do I explain that I don’t want to go, to stop me waking at 3am, hating being me, and hating my shadow, Meniere’s.

And then I think … the person who others think I am, the version of me they see at work, is entirely my fault. I’m exceptional at covering up my disability and my invisible illness. 26 years of Meniere’s. I’ve had a lot of practice. They can’t see me working hard to keep my balance. They can’t see me working hard to have a conversation with them. They don’t see my cochlear implant, hiding beneath my hair.

And then I remember…

I am a survivor. A fighter. What I have been through with Meniere’s disease is heartbreaking. Devastating. Life changing.  

I suck in a breath and hold back my tears …

But still. I so hate this. I so hate what Meniere’s has done to me, and what is has done, and is doing, to others.

I think back to the advice I generously give to others, reminding myself to use it –

  • Change your mindset from negative to positive.
  • Look for the small triumphs.
  • Celebrate the small wins.

I’ve done it a thousand times before. And I must continue doing it …

Well, I did do it! I survived three social celebrations in five days, as physically exhausting as it was. I’m thankful to be invited. It would be worse to be left out. I connected with another work colleague who is deaf in one ear. I asked her how she was going with all the noise, thinking how blessed I am to have a cochlear implant. I watched as normal hearing people struggled to hear conversations, me sometimes hearing the conversation better than them with my Cochlear Implant! And I had very patient friends and colleagues who did repeat words for me, and understood. And I thank and honour them for their kindness.

If you’re reading this, finding yourself nodding your head with perfect understanding, and even perhaps, tears falling, remember, if you are going to a social event, you can do it! I totally get what you are going through. Look for the helpers. Look for the good things that happen. And … forgive yourself. Forgive others, for they do not understand. Be kind to yourself – intentionally, extravagantly, unconditionally.

Good things are coming … I know it.

Julieann Wallace is a multi-published author and artist. When she is not disappearing into her imaginary worlds as Julieann Wallace – children’s author, or as Amelia Grace – fiction novelist, she is working as a secondary teacher. Julieann’s 7th novel with a main character with Meniere’s disease—‘The Colour of Broken’—written under her pen name of Amelia Grace, was #1 on Amazon in its category a number of times, and was longlisted to be made into a movie or TV series by Screen Queensland, Australia. She donates profits from her books to Macquarie University, where they are researching Meniere’s disease to find a cure. Julieann is a self-confessed tea ninja and Cadbury chocoholic, has a passion for music and art, and tries not to scare her cat, Claude Monet, with her terrible cello playing.

Purchase ‘The Colour of Broken’: print book & ebook or audiobook (narrated by the incredible Heather Davies)

Purchase ‘All the Colours Above’: print book & ebook

Purchase ‘Daily Meniere’s Journal – 3 month’: print book

https://www.facebook.com/julieannwallace.author

https://www.instagram.com/julieann_wallace_/

https://www.instagram.com/myshadow_menieres/

My Hearing Addiction

The rain is falling on our tin roof. I step off the veranda with my umbrella, and close my eyes. A tear slips down my cheek. I can hear droplets of water battering the umbrella with two ears. For the first time in 15 years. It’s a big deal. I never thought I would hear the world around me again in my left ear, except for the five torturing sounds of loud, relentless tinnitus – louder than any rock concert or loud party I had attended – a symptom of the abhorrent Meniere’s disease.

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The rain is in ‘surround sound’. It’s surreal. I twirl, slowly, without losing my balance. My own type of raindance, keeping my cochlear implant processor dry.

Bliss. Happiness. Beyond thankful.

My homeland has gone from heartbreaking drought to catastrophic fires to flooding rain. But nobody is complaining. Rain is water. And water is life.

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After a long moment of mindfulness, I return to my study. I have work to do. Learning to hear again. Not just sounds, but words and sentences to understand conversations to allow me to be confident with interactions with people, friends and family, and to restore my social life.

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I can’t lie. I was more nervous about the ‘switch-on’ of my cochlear implant – where you finally discover if the electrodes work, how many work, and whether you can hear, or not – than the almost two-hour surgery.

I was never really certain about what I would actually hear with my cochlear implant. And there were no guarantees that I would hear well, or at all, after 15 years of deafness from Meniere’s disease. I wondered, if I could hear, would it sound like ‘normal’ hearing? Would I be able to understand speech? Would I be able to hear music? Or, would I be lost in a world of robotic hearing that is so terrible and irritating that I will regret having the procedure done? What if it is not successful?

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I’m taking an enormous leap of faith. I’m diving into an unknown world. How many times have I read the words, “I’m too scared to get a cochlear implant!”?

On the flip side, how many times have I read the words,

“It will change your life!”

Before being activated, I watched online cochlear implant simulators that claim to sound like what is heard with a cochlear implant, but many of them didn’t sound like my implant. And many were dated a very long time ago, when the technology was new. Hearing with a cochlear implant has come along way since then.

The video that I think is close to what hearing with cochlear implant technology is like, is this one – and that was in 2014. Since then, cochlear implant technology has been improved and refined.

Learning to hear. It’s a new territory for me. A new journey. But one I am excited about.

I did a silent dance of victory when my cochlear audiologist told me I had to listen to audiobooks for at least 30 minutes a day to learn to hear. I LOVE reading!

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And then there were the apps for my iPhone (thanks to Apple for the direct connectivity to my CI – the Nucleus Smart). Apps filled with common environmental sounds; sight words; matching the sound to the visual word; matching the picture to the sound; word discrimination; sentences; and more (there’s a list of apps at the end of this blog).

The moment I started to listen to the audiobook, ‘The Lake House’, by Kate Morton, and followed the words in my print book, I startled.

Learning to hear is just like learning to read!

I should know. Over my teaching career, I’ve given thousands of students the gift of reading.

But with learning to hear, instead of learning what a word looks like in print, you are learning what a word sounds like. I’ve decided to call it a ‘SoundPrint‘. I don’t know whether that’s a real thing, but I like the concept of it. I like the thought of making a ‘SoundPrint‘ in my cochlear implant ear to make new hearing memories, and connecting stored memories of my once upon a time hearing to my new hearing. It’s like bringing beautiful colours of hearing back to the greyness of my deaf ear.

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I’ve got to admit, I’m addicted to my cochlear implant hearing. When I don’t have my CI processor on, I feel like a piece of me is missing, and I recede to my former self, the other me, all my senses on high alert – I didn’t realise how exhausting my life was before my new bionic hearing.

The gift of hearing. Thank you can never be enough to Professor Graeme Clark AC, the inventor of the multi-channel cochlear implant. My heart smiles everyday, thanks to you.

P.S. Some of the apps I use for learning to hear:

• Join your local library so you can download audiobooks. I choose the audiobook for print books I already have at home so I can follow the printed text while listening.
• Hearoes  https://www.games4hearoes.com/  FREE https://www.facebook.com/hearoesapp/
• Angelsound http://angelsound.tigerspeech.com/ FREE
• Children’s picture books are highly recommended – use Storyline Online https://www.storylineonline.net/ You can turn on captions, or, if you want to challenge yourself, turn them off

  • I’ve started compiling my Spotify Cochlear Music Collection – Cochlear Implant Music by Jules – it’s a work in progress, and I’m still on a learning curve with music. But I have discovered, that if I already know the song, it is easier to ‘pair’ the music with my cochlear implant hearing and my music memories before hearing loss 😊

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Julieann Wallace is a best-selling author, artist and teacher. She is continually inspired by the gift of imagination, the power of words and the creative arts. She is a self-confessed tea-ninja, Cadbury chocoholic, and has a passion for music and art. She raises money to help find a cure for Meniere’s disease, and tries not to scare her cat, Claude Monet, with her terrible cello playing.

The Colour of Broken‘ – The #1 Amazon bestselling book with a main character with Meniere’s disease – raising awareness and understanding.

Buy ‘The Colour of Broken’

Buy ‘The Color of Broken’

Buy the ‘Daily Meniere’s Journal’

Buy the ‘Monthly Meniere’s Journal’

100% profits from the above books are donated to medical research for Meniere’s disease to help find a cure.

About this blog …

My Shadow, Meniere’s, is not just about the physical aspect of a Cochlear Implant – you can research about them online. I am sharing the human side of the journey towards a Cochlear Implant – feelings, appointments, the process, apprehensions, successes, highs and lows as I step into the next chapter of my Meniere’s journey.

I am mindful of those who also have incurable diseases or are walking the path of a diagnosis that is life changing. My blog never aims to undermine the severity of anyone else’s illness, disability or journey. We all deal with life with different tolerances, attitudes and thresholds. ‘My Shadow -Meniere’s’ is my journey. It is my hope that it can help others with Meniere’s disease, or hearing loss, or simply when life has a plot twist.

I also acknowledge those before me, who have already had a Cochlear Implant. Your experiences, advice and suggestions are welcome.

Learning to Hear

Fatigue
/fəˈtiːɡ/
noun
noun: fatigue; plural noun: fatigues
1.
extreme tiredness resulting from mental or physical exertion or illness.

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December 19, 2019, I had Cochlear Implant surgery. On the 9th of January, 2020, my Cochlear Implant was “activated”. My world of deafness, including the five roaring noises of tinnitus changed. I could hear again for the first time in 15 years!

My cochlear audiologist, Jane, warned me, ‘You will have mental fatigue from hearing again with your left cochlear.’

Yeah nah, I thought. I’ve had the repugnant, revolting, repulsive Meniere’s disease for 25 years now, three children and a teaching workload. I know exactly what mental and physical fatigue is like. The simple act of hearing again will leave me fatigued? I doubt it!

Yeah Nah. Australian slang for no.

Yeah nah

I enter the outside world. Reality. I’m no longer safe and comfortable in the confines of the quiet audiologist’s office, where Jane’s reassuring smiles, encouragement and support, wrap me like a warm blanket on a freezing winter’s night.

My eyes widen. It’s so NOISY! I hear EVERYTHING! But not the sounds of normal hearing, but of cochlear implant hearing, newly activated: chipmunk voices, robotic representations of every sound my 22 electrodes can feed into my auditory nerve. I am told that what I hear now, is not what I will hear as I continue to attend “mapping” sessions. Sounds will become more “normal-ish”, like what I hear with my right ear.

After 10 hours of wearing my processor, I am fatigued. Like a flat battery.
Nah Yeah. Yes. Jane was right. Again.

nah yeah
My cochlear audiologist, Jane, explained, ‘It’s like you’re a baby again. You hear absolutely everything. For your left hearing centre in your brain, every noise is new, and it’s working hard to work out whether to file the sound as an important sound, or background sound, that it doesn’t have to pay attention to. And the two hemispheres of your brain are not working together, yet. But they will.’

Creative background, the human brain on a blue background, the hemisphere is responsible for logic, and responsible for creativity. different hemispheres of the brain, 3D illustration, 3D render
source 123rf

She continued. ‘When you lost your hearing 15 years ago, your brain re-used that area for something else, and now that it is stimulated again with hearing, your brain is madly reorganising what parts of your brain are used for what. It is also accessing your auditory memories to match up to what you are hearing now.’

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WOW! Mind blown. Not only by the fact that I can hear again, but by the knowledge that the brain has a design and intelligence that is beyond human understanding.

My cochlear implant journey has been a road filled with new learnings, revelations and knowledge. My erudite self is soaking up anything and everything about hearing, the cochlear and the brain. The more I learn, the more I realise what an amazing piece of architecture our brain is, one that cannot be replicated. It’s complexity and control of our bodies are both extraordinary and intriguing.

When Jane was talking about my brain reorganising, she was talking about brain plasticity, or neuroplasticity, which I was already familiar with from having to relearn my balance after having my balance cells destroyed in my left ear to stop the horrendous, violent, vertigo of Meniere’s disease.

“Neuroplasticity or brain plasticity, is defined as the ability of the nervous system to change its activity in response to intrinsic or extrinsic stimuli by reorganizing its structure, functions, or connections. A fundamental property of neurons is their ability to modify the strength and efficacy of synaptic transmission through a diverse number of activity-dependent mechanisms, typically referred as synaptic plasticity”

https://www.physio-pedia.com/Neuroplasticity

Principles of neuroplasticity

The brain wastes nothing…

So, my left hearing centre is like a baby again. It’s got me thinking. If I was a baby again, would I choose the same path in life. For instance, if I didn’t excel in sport, and I didn’t receive a head trauma just in front of my left ear that I believe caused my Meniere’s,  would I still have Meniere’s disease in my lifetime? Would I still be me?

Next blog – Learning to Hear is like Learning to Read

Julieann Wallace 300 dpi

(Dip T., B Ed., Author, Artist, Teacher, Tea Ninja, Chocoholic, Papercut Survivor)

Julieann Wallace is a bestselling author, artist and teacher. She is continually inspired by the gift of imagination, the power of words and the creative arts. She is a self-confessed tea ninja, Cadbury chocoholic, and has a passion for music and art. She raises money to help find a cure for Meniere’s disease, and tries not to scare her cat, Claude Monet, with her terrible cello playing.

MD weather forecast

About this blog …

My Shadow, Meniere’s, is not just about the physical aspect of a Cochlear Implant – you can research about them online. I am sharing the human side of the journey towards a Cochlear Implant – feelings, appointments, the process, apprehensions, successes, highs and lows as I step into the next chapter of my Meniere’s journey.

I am mindful of those who also have incurable diseases or are walking the path of a diagnosis that is life changing. My blog never aims to undermine the severity of anyone else’s illness, disability or journey. We all deal with life with different tolerances, attitudes and thresholds. ‘My Shadow -Meniere’s’ is my journey. It is my hope that it can help others with Meniere’s disease, or hearing loss, or simply when life has a plot twist.

I also acknowledge those before me, who have already had a Cochlear Implant. Your experiences, advice and suggestions are welcome.

 

It Did Change My Life

Cochlear Implant Activation, 9th January

 

The alarm is sounding. It’s 6am. But it doesn’t wake me, my husband does. I am lying on my “good’ hearing ear, so I hear nothing. He touches me to wake me and I struggle to open my eyes. I’m tired. I’m so tired. I haven’t slept well because it’s hot and humid. The night-time low was 24 degrees Celsius.

 

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I roll over and vertigo hits me, followed by nausea.

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Great, I think, as my world spins. I hold still and the room stops spinning and the nausea goes. BPPV. A misalignment of the crystals in the inner ear. I know I can do the Epley Manoeuvre to stop it. But I don’t want to do it until I check with my Cochlear Surgeon in 4 weeks’ time.

I breathe a messy breath through my lips and sit up. First, I focus on the wall to check that my world is not spinning again, then stand slowly, to ascertain whether my balance feels okay. I remember it’s Cochlear activation day. But I’m so tired. Activation can’t be on a day when I am exhausted before the day begins. It didn’t happen that way in my imagination when I looked forward to hearing again. I sigh. 

I push forward with my morning routine. Breakfast is low key. Toast with peanut butter and a cup of tea. Anxiety joins my shadow, Meniere’s, and me at the table. The three of us together again. I frown. Why do I feel anxious about activation, but not about the two-hour surgery where they drilled a hole in my skull three weeks ago?

I stop before the door before we leave to drive to the city. I feel safe here, behind the closed door. Comfortable. Once I open that door, my world is going to change. I take a deep breath, place my hand on the doorknob and turn it.

I step out into my future.

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My husband and I arrive early for the appointment. We sit in the waiting room where the perfectly arranged magazines adorn the table, that have been painstakingly presented. When my husband takes a magazine, flips through it and plops it back on the table, I can’t help but to straighten it up so it is like the others.

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I look up when I think I hear my name called.

Jane, my cochlear audiologist greets me with a smile. The universal language that puts you at ease. Anxiety, Tinnitus, Deafness, My Shadow, Meniere’s, my husband, and I follow her to her office. We all sit down, except for my shadow, Meniere’s. He’s jumping up at the window overlooking the city, and sliding down with a giggle. I shake my head at him.

‘Welcome back,’ Jane says. ‘How did the surgery go?’

‘Good,’ I say. ‘I’ve had no pain, no major vertigo, just little spins when I roll over. BPPV. I can fix that with the Epley Manoeuvre, but I want to wait until I see my surgeon in a few weeks.’

Jane shakes her head. ‘The little spins may not be BPPV. Sometimes drilling the hole in your skull can upset your inner ear and cause that. It will get better.’

Oh. I am surprised by that information. I smile. ‘The surgeon managed to get the 22 electrodes all the way in. He was really happy with that.’

‘Wonderful. Plus you have two earth electrodes in there as well.’ Immediately my mind turns to the memory of me out in the storm the other day. I had rushed inside in case my implant attracted lightning.

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Then, on researching lightning and Cochlear Implants, I am no more likely to be struck by lightning than anyone else. Phew!

Jane turns to my husband and shows him what has been implanted into the cochlear of my inner ear. ‘The electrodes are 1/5 of the width of a hair strand, in size.’ My husband’s jaw drops to the floor. He shakes his head. It’s hard to comprehend.

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‘Okay. Are you ready for today?’ she asks.

I nod, and see Anxiety double his size beside me. I want to grab a pen and stabbed him so he farts all the air out of him. My shadow, Meniere’s, sits in the corner and lowers his head. Tinnitus is doing pirouettes in a tutu. My life really is a circus!

Jane places the external hardware over my ear, attaches the transmitting coil to the magnet that sits under my skin on my scalp, all the while explaining how it works. The enthusiasm in her voice tells me how much she loves her job. She is super excited about switching on my Cochlear Implant.

Once the processor and transmitter are in place, Jane sits on her chair. I’m knotting my fingers together as my skin burns. I frown. I can’t hear a thing in my Meniere’s ear. Nothing has changed. My tinnitus is still screaming at me.

She attaches a wire to the speech processor around my ear and taps a few keys on the computer. She smiles and says all the electrodes are looking good. Then she taps another key and I still. My heart starts to race and my eyes widen. I can hear a few crackles and pops.

‘Can you hear this, Julieann?’ she asks in her English accented voice.

Three beeps sound in my deaf ear. Then another three at a different pitch, and another three.

‘Yes,’ I say, my voice cracking. I cover my eyes as tears fall. I can’t stop from crying.

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‘I can hear that,’ I add.

‘Good,’ she says and smiles. ‘Are you okay? There’s tissues behind you.’

‘Yes,’ I squeak. I grab a tissue and look over at my husband. His eyes are red-rimmed and wet. He has been a part of my journey. Twenty-five years of being a spectator to my incurable Meniere’s disease, where he could do absolutely nothing to help me, except clean out the vomit bucket time after time after time after I had vomited violently whilst spinning, or attending the emergency room when I was so dehydrated from vomiting that it was dangerous to my health, or when we thought the violent spinning wouldn’t end. We’ve been married for 31 years. He knows exactly what physical, emotional and psychological toll it has taken on me. He has seen me during my darkest days.

Yet, I spared him from witnessing the darkest of dark days when I no longer wanted to be here, when I wasn’t the colour of grey with an “e”, nor the colour of gray with an “a”, but the colour of black.

From my novel – ‘The Colour of Broken’ – Yolande, the main character is sitting in the chair, talking to her psychologist …

‘What colour are you?’

I took a deep breath and twisted my fingers together. My stomach tightened. I cleared my throat. ‘The colour of broken …’

Dr Jones was silent.

I stopped breathing when anxiety rose inside me like a wall of lava, about to incinerate me. It was freaking me out that she now knew this about me, and that she had not reacted to the description of my colour.

‘And what colour would that be?’ she finally asked.

I breathed out through my lips, slowly, steadily, counting to five in my head. ‘Gray with an “a”.’

‘There’s a difference?’

‘Oh, yes. Grey with an “e” is very different to gray with an “a”.’

‘How?’

‘Grey with an “e” is like the rain clouds. It’s melancholy, but an enjoyable melancholy that builds up until it releases, and then it’s like petrichor, the smell of the rain after warm, dry weather. Satisfying. Grey with an “e” is also when deep thought, philosophy and ponderings happen. Everyone should experience grey with an “e”, it helps to discover parts of you that you never knew existed, and it can vanish without leaving a bitter aftertaste.’

‘Tell me about gray with an “a”.’

I looked down at my knotted hands. ‘Gray with an “a” is … never enjoyable—it’s a very dark gray. It’s self-judgement, doom and gloom, forever hanging around and within. It wants to drag you into the dark abyss of the colour black, that absorbs all colours … the colour of self-condemnation, the colour of depression, the colour of death of the physical body.’

‘But not the spiritual body?’

‘No.’ I didn’t want to add any more to this conversation. It was painful to talk about.
‘So, me being a supposedly normal person, could I see your gray with an “a”?’
‘No. Because I mask it. And my gray with an “a” is not a plain gray with an “a”. It’s a crackled dark gray, with other colours that seep out … sometimes.’

‘What colours would they be?’

‘Drips of red for anger … specks of black—’ for self-hate, ‘—for my secret, blushes of pink for my love for Mia and my family, and explosions of turquoise that screams at me to love myself …’

‘That’s very insightful, Yolande. It’s highly intuitive. I’m curious … when you look at me, what colour am I?’

I hesitated before I spoke. I never told anyone the colour I had appointed to them for fear of them running from me. But Dr Jones, she was different, she would understand …

‘You are … magenta,’ I finally said. ‘It’s the colour of a person who helps to construct harmony and balance in life, hope and aspiration for a better world—mentally and emotionally,’ I said, and held my breath, waiting for her reaction.

She raised her eyebrows at me. ‘That’s an amazing gift to have in your mind toolbox, Yolande. Does it ever lie to you?’

Jane says, ‘I’m going to switch on each of the electrodes, one by one. Tap on the table when you hear the beeps.’

And so it begins. As I hear beeps, and tap on the table, hope rises in me like a flower blooming, facing its sun. I hear 21 out of 22 electrodes. Jane is ecstatic.

I am in shock and a tears trickles down my face. I can hear!

She looks at me and smiles. ‘Do you need a break?’

‘No,’ I say. I am beyond fascinated. In awe. What an age to live in with medical science, discoveries and inventions.

‘Let’s try some speech,’ she says. She taps a few more keys, and suddenly there are words in my Cochlear Implanted ear.

I start crying, wiping a thousand tears from my cheeks. ‘I can hear what you are saying,’ I sob. ‘But you sound like you have been inhaling helium!’ 

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Jane’s face lights up with a smile. ‘You can! That is so wonderful!’ She is looking at me with a contagious joy.

She continues talking. I hear her chipmunk voice, but I can’t understand her. She keeps talking, and with my good ear, I understand that, as she keeps talking for another 10 minutes, my brain will start understanding better. She says the hearing part of the left side of my brain has been used for some other processes since I lost my hearing. And now it is shuffling, trying to find my speech and sound memories, to make sense of what it is hearing. It is using auditory pathways and memories, and must work at a higher level to pull together the information to have bi-normal hearing. The brain must code all the information coming in.

And then suddenly, like a light has been turned on, I can understand much of what she is saying, as words. Not all of them, but quite a few. For the words I don’t get, my mind fills in the blanks with words to match the meaning of what she is saying.

I am speechless.

She turns to my husband. ‘Say something to Julieann.’

I look at him and smile. 

He smiles back. I see his lips move. I wait for the sound of his chipmunk voice. I swallow and my skin burns. His voice doesn’t even register as a chipmunk. I can’t hear his voice at all!

His eyes widen in panic.

Jane jumps in quickly in a calm and encouraging voice. ‘That’s okay. It will happen.’ 

Jane reaches over and pulls out a foam ear plug and puts it firmly into my good ear.

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Then she places a hearing muff over my good ear.

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I have lost all hearing that I have been relying on to hear and understand conversation.

Jane continues talking like we are in a normal everyday conversation. I stare at her, trying to get what she is saying. It is so hard. Her voice is sound, but not words.

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I focus harder, and slowly some of the sounds become words.

She stops and asks me a question. I stare at her blankly. I am trying to figure out what she has asked. I am trying to piece together what words I understood of the question, and with the missing words, I am working on using any visual cues from what she is doing, plus I am trying to read her lips.

Finally, I answer with a smile. ‘Yes. I can hear you. And your speech is starting to sound like words.’ 

‘Well done!’ she says. And I understand her chipmunk voice perfectly. She then explains about the delay happening in my brain with the speech and understanding. She knows how hard I am working to try and understand the new input into my brain.

‘Can you hear this?’ she rattles a piece of paper in front of her.

‘Yes,’ I say, although it doesn’t sound like paper, but an unrecognisable noise.

She stands and goes behind me and I hear another noise. I nod my head. I can hear it. She shows me a tissue that she rubbed in her palms. I am absolutely gobsmacked. She asks me to repeat words. I get most of them right, guessing some of them. Then Jane covers her mouth so I can’t read her lips. I hear her, but not clearly enough and get some of the words wrong.

She turns to my husband and asks him to speak to me again, and he does.

I still can’t understand him, at all.

She tells him to slow down and breaks his sentences into chunks, and not to run the words together.

He tries again.

I smile at him and say, ‘No. You don’t sound like Darth Vader.’ He smiles. He’s happy now.

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Jane grins. She goes through the Cochlear Australia backpack that is mine to keep. It is filled with bits and pieces for care of my Cochlear Implant external hardware, plus other bits and pieces and chargers and batteries and paraphernalia. She shows me how to use everything, and then asks me to do the same. It fits in perfectly with my teaching philosophy.

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After two hours of intense concentration, she asks in her chipmunk voice, ‘Is there anything you want to ask me before you leave today?’

I think for a moment. I’ve had way too much information overload. My brain is working double time and I am tired. ‘Is it okay to wear my new hearing to the Big Bash Cricket tonight?’

Jane laughs. ‘Yes. If you like. It will be very noisy though.’

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My husband and I leave her office, take the elevator and walk out into the real world. I stop for a moment, wondering if I can hold my emotions together. The impact of activation has been overwhelming. Two hours ago I had walked into Jane’s office deaf in one ear. Now I walk out, hearing with two ears.

The thought is profound.

My husband looks at me. ‘Are you okay?’ His eyebrows are pulled together. For a moment, I wonder how hard this has been on him? 

‘Yes.’ I blink away tears, then start to walk again. 

The world is noisy. Terribly noisy. I hear everything in a tinny, echoing, chipmunk way. My brain is detecting two lots of hearing with everything – my deaf, now hearing Meniere’s ear, hearing conversations of chipmunk voices, and chipmunk city noises of its own while I listen with my good ear to the same thing with normal hearing. The two sides of my brain haven’t synced yet. They are acting independently of each other. 

I laugh to myself. How privileged am I to be able to experience this oddity? My heart overflows with gratitude.

I take confident steps into my new normal. Into my future. Bilateral hearing. Something I haven’t had for 15 years. Something I thought would be impossible.   

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Before I go to bed, I remove the external hardware. Immediately my ear feels full and profoundly deaf. My tinnitus returns. But that’s okay. That’s my other normal. Two of me.

I reflect on my most extraordinary day –  five times I have stilled at big moments:

  1. When the Cochlear Implant was activated and I could hear! My mind was blown!
  2. When I heard music. I cried so hard my husband wanted to pull over the car to make sure I was okay.
  3. I located the direction of a sound. I haven’t been able to find where a sound is coming from for 15 years. This ramifications of this for me in the classroom will change my stress level as I teach. 
  4.  I heard a man’s lower chipmunk voice while waiting to catch the bus after the cricket …

The cricket … I think back to the Big Bash Cricket and smile. On entry, I was pulled aside for a security check, the metal detector waved over and around me – it always happens to me at airports too. It’s become a running joke with my family. I held my breath, wondering whether my Cochlear Implant would set the detector off, but it didn’t. 

And Jane was right. The Big Bash was very noisy. But it was so worth it. And I’m taking marshmallows to toast in the flame next time!

And number 5 … I entered our walk-in wardrobe. As I stood there trying to decide what to wear to the  cricket, I froze. Something was wrong. Very wrong. My heart raced and I started to panic. I couldn’t hear anything. Not even from my “good” ear. I felt for the Cochlear Implant external hardware. It was still there. I ran my hands over my arms to make sure I was still me, and I wasn’t dying – seriously!

Something wasn’t right.

I could hear absolutely nothing. Nothing! I spoke to check that the Cochlear Implant was still working. Maybe the power pack had gone flat? I heard my own voice as well as my chipmunk voice. Two of me. I stopped and listened again in the stillness of my walk-in wardrobe.

There was silence. Utter. Beautiful. Silence. No tinnitus. After a quarter of a century. I closed my eyes and let my tears fall, covered my mouth and ugly cried. 

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The gift of hearing. I am so beyond thankful. I have no words to explain what it feels like to have the Cochlear Implant activated and to hear again. My faith. Health professionals. Family. Support of friends and Facebook groups. It takes a tribe.

The Cochlear Implant has changed my life. On activation. It has made the impossible, possible. Meniere’s disease may not be curable, yet, but we can take back from Meniere’s what is has taken from us. 

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Next blog – learning to hear again …

Julieann Wallace 300 dpi

Julieann Wallace is a best-selling author, artist and teacher. She is continually inspired by the gift of imagination, the power of words and the creative arts. She is a self-confessed tea ninja, Cadbury chocoholic, and has a passion for music and art. She raises money to help find a cure for Meniere’s disease, and tries not to scare her cat, Claude Monet, with her terrible cello playing. 

https://www.facebook.com/julieannwallace.author/

https://www.julieannwallaceauthor.com/

Meniere’s Journals are available for pre-order at Lilly Pilly Publishing  & Amazon (30 Jan. 2020). Profits are donated from ‘The Colour of Broken’ and the Journals to Meniere’s research to help find a cure.

About this blog …

My Shadow, Meniere’s, is not just about the physical aspect of a Cochlear Implant – you can research about them online. I am sharing the human side of the journey towards a Cochlear Implant – feelings, appointments, the process, apprehensions, successes, highs and lows as I step into the next chapter of my Meniere’s journey.

I am mindful of those who also have incurable diseases or are walking the path of a diagnosis that is life changing. My blog never aims to undermine the severity of anyone else’s illness, disability or journey. We all deal with life with different tolerances, attitudes and thresholds. ‘My Shadow -Meniere’s’ is my journey. It is my hope that it can help others with Meniere’s disease, or hearing loss, or simply when life has a plot twist.

I also acknowledge those before me, who have already had a Cochlear Implant. Your experiences, advice and suggestions are welcome.

It Will Change Your Life #2

Monday 21.10.19 continued …

My own silence is smothering me. The journey to the Cochlear audiologist in the city is forty minutes long. Forty minutes of staring out the window. Looking but not seeing. Forty minutes of mixed feelings and questions ruminating inside me, alongside anxiety, and the five impossibly loud noises of tinnitus that never leave me. I can never have inner silence. Ever.

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I turn my head towards my husband. My ENT shakes his hand each time we visit him, and he fills him with kind words about sticking by me through my Meniere’s journey. ‘Most men would have left their wives by now,’ he says.

I focus on his facial scars from a recent surgery to remove two skin cancers from the bridge of his nose (a Basal cell carcinoma and Squamous cell carcinoma). Sixty-eight stitches. ‘There goes my modelling career,’ he joked with the plastic surgeon. We all laughed. Our fabulous Australian sun loves us too much. At least the cancers are removed now. He’ll get on with this life after this slight hiccup like nothing even happened. It’s not as if he has a debilitating condition that stops him from enjoying life, I think. My stomach drops. I berate myself for not being sympathetic to what he has been through, and guilt hits me like a freight train.

Disappointed with myself, I look back to the road before us, the movement of cars making me nauseous. I hate Meniere’s disease. When will it end? Meniere’s for life. Like a prison sentence. Wherever I go, Meniere’s goes. My shadow, always present. Lurking.   

The first thing I see at the hearing centre is a ginormous ear. Yep. I’m at the right place! 

An audiologist enters the reception area and calls me to follow him. We go into a soundproof room and he introduces himself and then asks me, ‘Your Meniere’s started in which year?’

‘My left ear,’ I answer.

‘Uh – huh. Which … year … did it start?’ He repeats.

I burst out laughing at my mishearing. Welcome to my life. He doesn’t laugh like me. I’m guessing he has heard it all before. I am having my hearing tested for hear loss after all. Mis-hearing is nothing new to him. ‘It started in 1995,’ I answer in a serious voice.  

He asks more general questions, and at the end of his questioning, I say – just for general information, ‘I know that research shows no cause and no cure for Meniere’s, but I believe my Meniere’s is caused by being hit on the side of my head, close to my left ear, by a softball when I was sixteen.’

The audiologist leans back in his chair and folds his arms.

Uh-oh…  

He takes a deep breath. ‘Meniere’s disease is an inflammation of the endolymphatic sac and—’

‘I know, in detail, what happens in the inner ear with Meniere’s. I have been researching about it for 24 long years and was invited to the Meniere’s Symposium in Sydney last year (https://healthyhearing.com.au/menieres-disease-research-symposium/) and have heard about and seen images of the physiology of what happens during a vertigo attack.’ I had cut him off. I feel bad. He assumed I had no idea I knew anything about my disease, as one would. He should have asked first. All of us Menierians search for the exact moment that might have changed our lives, and research the disease itself. We talk to each other. We know A LOT of stuff about our disease.

He gives me a nod and says no more on the subject.

I add, ‘I had a hearing test a couple of years ago and it showed that I have cookie bite hearing loss (https://www.hearingdirect.com/au/blog/what-is-cookie-bite-hearing-loss.html ). It’s genetic on my father’s side. That’s why I would like to get a cochlear implant, so at least I have some hearing in the future.’

He gives me a nod again. ‘Okay. Let’s start the hearing test.’

He sets me up with the earphones, beeper, gives me the usual hearing test instructions then sits at his desk of hearing test gear. He gives a negative sigh and I wonder if he likes his job. We begin on my ‘good’ ear first, and I push the button each time I hear a beep, trying to ignore the terribly loud tinnitus in my left ear. Some tones I guess because I don’t know if it is the tinnitus sound or the beep, so I just push the button anyway.

My Meniere’s ear is next. I cannot hear the beginning of the beep at any time, but towards the finish of the testing, at times I hear the end of the beep, I think, so I press the button. I get excited when I can hear some high tones. I can hear! My heart smiles.

The testing continues. By the end, I have sat through these hearing tests:

1. pure tone audiometry, which tests how loud different sounds need to be for you to hear them

2. air conduction, which measures whether you can hear different tones played through headphones

3. bone conduction, which measures how well your cochlea picks up vibrations

4. tympanometry, which isn’t a hearing test, but a check of your eardrum

When the audiologist is finished, I sit in silence and wait on his results, still buzzing from the fact that I could hear some high tones in my Meniere’s ear. It’s a good day 😊

He looks up from the audiometric graph and pulls a face. I interpret it as a good result. I can hear in my Meniere’s ear, when I thought I was profoundly deaf. That’s what he is about to tell me…

‘You don’t have cookie bite hearing loss,’ he says. ‘Your right ear is fine, except you can’t hear the high sounds above our normal hearing range, which people with normal hearing can on our tests. Your Meniere’s ear is what we call, “dead”.’

I am surprised and happy. I don’t have cookie bite hearing loss? How did the testing show cookie bite hearing loss two years ago, but not now? I’ll take it as a win for my good ear.

Then my heart sinks. Weirdly I feel sorry for my left ear. The audiologist called it ‘dead’.

I touch my ear without thinking. Like consoling it. It’s like he has hurt its feelings. I blink.

The audiologist continues, ‘We do cochlear implants for one-sided hearing loss like yours. You have zero speech discrimination, so a cochlear implant will help you. Are you seeing Jane, the cochlear implant assessor, after this test?’

‘No. That’s Monday.’ I nod. Anxiety raises its head.

He gives me a smile. ‘Right. Let’s optimize your cros hearing aids.’

I follow him to another room overlooking the city. He cleans my Phonak Cros hearing aids that I love. I wear two – the left one sends the sound to the right hearing aid, so I can hear sound on my left side. The audiologist tells me the best place for prices to get replacement filters and batteries. Then he places them into my ears, puts an analysing device on my shoulders, and connects it all to the computer. He adds my latest hearing results to the program, and just like that, the computer system optimizes my Cros hearing technology. Brilliant.

I walk out of the audiologist’s rooms happier than I entered. I don’t have the genetic cookie bite hearing loss that affects only the girls on my dad’s side of the family, like my aunty and her three daughters. I’d add a happy skip, but I’d lose my balance and fall over. My shadow, Meniere’s, chuckles at me.

The next appointment – assessment for a cochlear…

Artwork and words by Julieann Wallace

About this blog …

It’s not just about the physical aspect of a Cochlear Implant – you can research them online. I am sharing the other side of the journey towards a Cochlear Implant –  my feelings, my appointments, the process, apprehensions, successes and failures as I step into the next chapter of my Meniere’s journey.

I am mindful of those who also have incurable diseases or are walking of the path of a diagnosis that is life changing. My blog never aims to undermine the severity of anyone else’s illness, disability or journey. We all deal with life with different tolerances, attitudes and thresholds.  ‘My Shadow -Meniere’s’ is my journey. It is my hope that it can help others with Meniere’s disease, or hearing loss.