Last week I got hearing aids. This is not something I was expecting just yet. I am still vibrant. Still trendy. I can bench press a respectable weight. I am most definitely not an old man. I went bald at 36. I started wearing glasses at 45. At 48, I had to start using a CPAP machine to help me breathe at night. Now I am 50. The decline has been slow and steady. Perhaps I shouldn’t have felt so blindsided by the inevitable surrender of my eardrums.
But there is something about wearing little capsules on the back of my ears, with their tiny transparent wires snaking into my head, that feels like crossing a border into proper old age.
I talk for a living. Listening is, or at least should be, part of the job. And yet for the past few years it has been a strain. Headphones at maximum volume. TV and radio booming obnoxiously through the house. When someone speaks to me in a crowded gym or football stadium, I allow myself to say “pardon” twice. After that, I just laugh, nod and pretend I’ve understood.
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At home, the kids take the piss. “I’m going to be late,” my daughter shouted from across the room. “Who ate a plate?” I replied. Everyone laughed. Even my wife. Hahaha. Silly deaf bastard. On more than one occasion, I’ve excused myself from family conversations. I’ve even turned down the odd social invitation. The effort of keeping up can be exhausting.
Still, 50 feels a bit young for all this. I looked into it and there are plenty of blokes diagnosed with hearing loss at this age who do nothing about it for years. Maybe they can’t accept such a vivid symbol of decline. But the longer you leave it, the worse it gets. The strain of constant listening is tiring. There are even studies linking it to early dementia.
