She can hear! Actually, it turns out that Simone has better hearing than I do. I don’t remember if I mentioned this before, but I have a partial hearing loss in my right ear, and have since I was young—the result of chronic ear infections. It doesn’t affect me much unless I am watching a television program full of mumblers (Mad Men, I’m looking at YOU) or trying to listen to something while an air conditioner or similar appliance is on in the background.
But this isn’t about me. It’s about Simone! And how she can hear!
The audiologist this morning was amazing. I am fairly certain that a run-in with this woman is what inspired Shannon Sossamon to name her child Audio Science. The audiologist we saw before gave up moments into the Stick-Things-In-Your-Ear Evaluation, as soon as Simone started wiggling. But Linda, my audiological hero, made funny faces and did the hand-motions to Itsy Bitsy Spider, and generally so enthralled Simone that she couldn’t have cared less what was probing her and where. The tympanogram (puff-of-air test) showed no fluid in either ear. We also nabbed a fairly conclusive, healthy OAE response from the right ear, but by the time we got to the left ear even Itsy Bitsy Spider was losing its charm, and the results were more questionable.
Simone was long overdue for a nap by this point, and in fact had been a whining, thrashing beast in the waiting room, my first experience out in public with an un-shushable child. It is a peculiarly awful feeling when your baby is the one screaming in a quiet waiting room and nothing you can do will soothe her. I spilled half a bottle of milk all over the carpet, and even the fish in the fish tank seemed to be judging my parenting skills. Anyway, that is all beside the point, the point being that Simone was overdue for a nap, and I was doing my swing imitation with her all swaddled up, and dear, sweet Linda said “Hey, why don’t you try to get her to sleep, and we’ll do an ABR right now!” And I did, and we did, and it was completely and totally normal in both ears.
After that we woke Simone and did some behavioral testing (and someone should have WARNED ME that there was a PIG in the speaker box—it looked like a plain old speaker, and the one time Simone turned to it when it produced a noise, it’s insides lit up to reveal a stuffed, hat-wearing porcine creature, and I almost fell off my chair). The final verdict is that Simone has an Auditory Developmental Delay. We have been given a bunch of exercises to do to help her catch up, most of which involve drawing her attention to sounds by acting like a complete tool (OH! IS THAT THE PHONE???? LISTEN TO IT RING! RING RING RING! IT’S THE PHONE! YES IT IS! Etc.). We will see Linda again in six weeks and have therapy through Early Intervention in the meantime, with the hope that we can squash this before it interferes too severely with speech/language development.
Of course no one want to hear the words “developmental delay” applied to their child, but we will muscle our way through this, and whatever else is thrown our way (Simone seems to have some feeding issues with solids, for instance. Another post for another day). For now, I am going to concentrate on how grateful I am that my daughter can hear EVERY VERSE of Oh I Wish I Were a Little ‘Lectric Eel. We are still going to do baby signing, because I think the idea of being able to form language before you have the ability to communicate sounds nightmarish, and it’s no WONDER toddlers are so cranky, under those circumstances. But I won’t deny that I’m pleased to avoid having to figure out whether my puns translate in ASL.

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Now THAT is some fantastic news! And isn’t it amazing just how much of parenting involves acting like a complete tool?
Phew. Seeing as how I act like a tool pretty much all the time, I’m free to come over and act normally. (MY GOD, IS THAT YOUR PHONE?!)
wonderful news, Simone. So happy for you and your parents.
HOLLLLLLLLLLLLLAAAAAAAAAA!
That’s fantastic news! So if I understand correctly, Simone is simply practicing her teenage defiance waaaaay early. And they are calling this a developmental delay? ;)
What wonderful news!!!! Hooray!!!
WONDERFUL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Oh HAPPY DAY! Great news – enjoy! And celebrate! With a Sidecar!
woo hoo!!!!!!!!!!!!!! congrats!
big kudos to Linda, who’s now my fourth-favorite person in MN after the Flotsams. :)
I’m so happy for you and your girl! Yay for the audiologist from heaven!
It’s cloudy, cold and rainy in my part of the world today but this news sure does brighten my day! I’m so happy for all of you.
Fantastic news!!!!
What fantastic, wonderful, great news! I am so very thrilled for you all. I have no doubt that she will do wonderfully with the therapy. (We did baby sign, btw, and loved it–I think it did really help resolve frustration over communication. I recommend it to everyone!)
YAYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!!!!! Go Simone Go!!!
That is so wonderful!!
Ok, it was a pig, not a monkey, but I did warn you about freaky animals at the hearing test.
I didn’t notice how bad M’s hearing had gotten from her ear infections, but once we did, got the tubes, and got her in a daycare where they sign more, the change has been nothing short of amazing.
Toddler signing is voodoo. The good kind.
HOOORRAAYYYYY!!!!!!
HOORAY!!!!! I am really, truly overjoyed for you right now! Oh, good job, little one! I knew you could do it.
You guys will punch this auditory delay right in the mouth and then when it’s bleeding, you’ll kick it in the shins and it will run wailing home to it’s mother. She’s gonna do GREAT.
YAY!
I am so very very happy for you!!
And yeah, so you like silly doing the exercises, but you know what, everyone looks silly with babies.
WOOOOHOOOO! Fantastic news!
And yet another Friday when I’m all teared up at work!
Well, that’s wonderful news, dear Alexa! I’m so happy for you three. And that audiologist sounds like a true gem.
Now I can’t stop thinking about puns in sign language! What an intriguing challenge…
Hey we have that pig in the speaker here in Boston too. Cracks me up every time. I think the other speaker has a lamb but now I can’t remember. Now that my daughter is older, we’ve moved on to putting things in a container instead of looking for the pig.
Sweet. Fortunately you have many close relatives with lots of experience acting like tools. You’ll have a wealth of goofiness to draw from. BTW, closed captioning is a wonderful thing.
Bravao, Wonderful, Yay! I’m so happy for you. I think a video of you being a complete tool for the brilliant Simone is in order. :D
YAY!
Excellent news!
I’m happy you’re happy.
And I’m especially happy that you’ve discovered what happens when parents flip off apparent authority figures and seek out people who really care and resources that really work.
Yay!
I think it’s a great idea to continue with teaching her some signs as well. I tried with my little guy and he did pick up a few. It was always very cute when he would get a cookie from the bakery at our grocery store and sign ‘thank you’ to the girls at the counter. They thought it was the greatest thing too.
WHEE!!! That is so completely wonderful. What a relief for you and your husband. Sing that eel song, baby!
Yipeee!! How wonderful!! I’m so glad Simone will be able to fully appreciate the Little ‘Lectric Eel song!
FANTASTIC news, i am so thrilled for you!! xx
Is the sound of all this online cheering hurting your sweetie’s ears???
:)
Congrats on the hearing! Woo-hoo!
Yes! Yes! Fantastic news! the entire blogosphere is relieved on your behalf! Go out and celebrate (buy that girl a drum set or a synthesizer or something!)
Mo
FANTASTIC news. I’m so glad for you. What a relief, a truly earned relief.
(I got less than excellent news re. my own little guy’s audiology appointment yesterday. But those little light-up boxes in the testing room are pretty cool, aren’t they?)
Yay! Way to go Simone! She’s going to be a hearing all-star, I have a feeling. :)
What great news! Woo hoo!!!!
HOORAY! She who hears, hears!
Hooray! That’s wonderful!! =)
Hooray! Hooray hooray hooray!!
Congrats to all in flotsam land.
Yea!
What a fabulous piece of news! I am so glad the heavens deemed fit to give you guys a break! Am quite elated on your behalf!
YAY!
Does this mean you don’t have to go do that sedated thing you worked so hard to set up?
Oh hurrah!!! What a wonderful post, and how wonderful those various professionals who deal with our kids can make our lives. March on brilliant Simone!
No fluid! She can hear! I am so overjoyed by this news I can only parrot your blog entry back to you!
yay!
Perhaps the best news I’ve heard all day. Hooray!
Oh, and I remember doing the auditory tests with Ben, and freaking out when I realized there was a whole anamatronic theater used as part of the test. I may have had a mild heart attack at that moment.
Huzzah! She Who is VERY Appropriately Named!
I remember the pig in a box! And the bear in a box oin the other corner of the room. My Boy had to be tested after having lots and lots of infections. (not nearly so scary as what you’ve been through — you have my deepest sympathies and best wishes) — but I thought he’d been compensating rather well. No speech delays, he seemed to hear us just fine. Imagine my sinking stomach as I watched him repeatedly ignore the little drum-playing pig in the box. But when they did the test by putting the gizmo behind his ear, to vibrate the bones, they coudl tell that his EARS were fine; it was the GUNK in them causing th eproblem. (And some mom I felt like: “Oh, he hears fine, yes he does. Urm. Except that he doesn’t.”)
So glad to hear your good news. =)
Such good news!
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