People may experience hearing loss at almost any age. Some babies may experience a loss of hearing inside the birth canal. However, hearing loss is normally associated with aging. Look for the following signs of hearing loss to help you with early detection.
A person experiencing a loss of hearing may be very loud during conversations. Interestingly, a person experiencing hearing loss may speak very quietly. People with even mild hearing loss may have difficulty hearing their own voice. The person may not know that his voice level is higher or lower than normal.
If you notice that every time someone else enters the room they turn the volume down on the radio or television, this could be a sign of a loss of hearing. It is very easy to turn the volume up to compensate for your hearing loss.
People with hearing loss may have difficulty hearing on the telephone. Some will actually stop using the telephone, without realizing that a loss of hearing is the problem. Fortunately, today most phones have built in volume controls that allow the user to turn up the volume in order to better hear the conversation. Another person may pick up your phone and make a comment about the volume as a sign of your loss of hearing. Cell phones pose a totally different problem, as many of the ring tones simply blend into the background noise for people with bad hearing. Many people with hearing issues have difficulty hearing conversations on cell phones, even when the volume is turned to high.
If your hearing loss took place at an early age, you may have learned to compensate through reading of lips. In fact, many people may not even know that they have a hearing problem until a change in visual ability makes it difficult for them to hear. A person who reads lips will position himself or herself in such a way that they are directly facing the other person in the conversation. People with facial hair make lip reading difficult for some people who read lips.
Some people who develop a hearing problem begin to dominate conversations. Dominating the conversation keeps the person from being expected to answer other's questions that the hearing-impaired person did not hear.
Sometimes people with a loss of hearing find that family or friends have expectations that the person has agreed to without understanding the commitment. When a person has bad hearing, his mind may subconsciously fill in the blanks with what would seem to be the normal conversation. The person with bad hearing may not realize that he did not hear what he thought he heard. This allows you to agree to commitments to which you did not mean to agree. Such actions can become embarrassing to the person experiencing a loss of hearing.
If your hearing loss is beginning to cause any of the above difficulties, you should see your health professional. A doctor or hearing professional can check your ear canals for anything that might be blocking sounds from your eardrum. Sometimes removing a wax buildup in the ear can restore hearing.