Definitely this. Group discussions are a royal pain in the backside, especially when someone speaks over another and everyone starts just talking at random. I can't follow a conversation and end up just giving up and sticking to myself like a wallflower.
Thank you for these tips. I'm starting to learn them one by one, as my dad is also starting to lose his ability to hear due to age.
So, trying to explain everything in as few words as possible, as slowly, clearly, and calmly as possible seems to be the key as far as I can understand until now.
When communicating with your dad, it's not a bad idea to use your phone to type and show him what you want to say to him, or to text him back and forth even if he's in front of you. Some deaf are known to carry around a notepad and a pen. I personally carry around a cheap Android tablet I bought off Amazon just in the off chance I need it so someone can communicate with me. Some people speak and I just can't catch any words.
Thank you for the tips. Have you thought about using the speech to text tools that exist in all smartphones nowadays? That could help too.
In my dad's case, what I figured out is that I talk to my mom first and she knows better how to communicate to him, slowly and with as little as words as possible. So, that helps as well.
That's how I actually handle phone calls, but generally speaking, for everyday conversations, it's not all that great, especially in noisy environments. Two way phone calls, it's OK, but for person to person interaction face to face? Terrible.
I typically read lips, it's just I can only communicate one on one so a 3 way conversation is far more draining, adding more just forget it.
Perhaps consider talking to your like like an old school google search. ;) Instead of "When was the last time you ate?" you'd say "When Last Ate".
Right on. There are numerous ways to communicate with the deaf and hard of hearing, just got to do it. If he can see just fine or even with glasses, you can type what you want to say on your phone and just show him your phone if that's easier for you. :)
Definitely this. Group discussions are a royal pain in the backside, especially when someone speaks over another and everyone starts just talking at random. I can't follow a conversation and end up just giving up and sticking to myself like a wallflower.
Yep :( True.
All the same, it's nice having another deaf guy around. Hello! ^__^
Hello :)) you ok? Are you in USA?
Yeah, I'm fine, just lonely as per my usual. And yes I'm in the states.
Lonely here too! Welcome...
Even with company it's easy to feel lonely, mostly because of the lack of ability to hold onto conversations too easily with those who can't sign.
Yes true, deaf people feel more lonely and isolated....
Those types of discussions are a pain for everybody except for the people who randomly shout at each other. So, it's a universal problem.
I'm sure they are a pain, it's just more a pain when you can't hear because I have to look at you for lipreading. Otherwise I miss a lot of details.
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Thank you for these tips. I'm starting to learn them one by one, as my dad is also starting to lose his ability to hear due to age.
So, trying to explain everything in as few words as possible, as slowly, clearly, and calmly as possible seems to be the key as far as I can understand until now.
You welcome x
When communicating with your dad, it's not a bad idea to use your phone to type and show him what you want to say to him, or to text him back and forth even if he's in front of you. Some deaf are known to carry around a notepad and a pen. I personally carry around a cheap Android tablet I bought off Amazon just in the off chance I need it so someone can communicate with me. Some people speak and I just can't catch any words.
Thank you for the tips. Have you thought about using the speech to text tools that exist in all smartphones nowadays? That could help too.
In my dad's case, what I figured out is that I talk to my mom first and she knows better how to communicate to him, slowly and with as little as words as possible. So, that helps as well.
That's how I actually handle phone calls, but generally speaking, for everyday conversations, it's not all that great, especially in noisy environments. Two way phone calls, it's OK, but for person to person interaction face to face? Terrible.
I typically read lips, it's just I can only communicate one on one so a 3 way conversation is far more draining, adding more just forget it.
Perhaps consider talking to your like like an old school google search. ;) Instead of "When was the last time you ate?" you'd say "When Last Ate".
Unfortunately, this is actually what I'm doing more and more nowadays.
Right on. There are numerous ways to communicate with the deaf and hard of hearing, just got to do it. If he can see just fine or even with glasses, you can type what you want to say on your phone and just show him your phone if that's easier for you. :)
Great discussion!