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There is a product called TV ears. They are cordless. They can be set up so everyone can watch TV. There are all kinds of products out there. The CapTel phone is where they can read a screen. Call your state Dept of the Deaf and see if there is anything free they can provide.
Deafness is very isolating. My husband does better one on one. Because of his almost life long deafness he can read lips. Groups are bad. He can't concentrate on one conversation. People tend not to have patience for the hard of hearing.
I laughed when you said "golden boy", because my sister calls my brother "the prince' LOL
My suggestion is to by a special phone for Mom. My husbands has a button where he sets his volume so when a call comes in, he pushes his button and the volume is at the level he can hear. See if they have hearing impaired phones that you can set the level to where its comfortable for Mom. For TV watching there are TV ears and headphones you can hook up to the TV.
Maybe if you stop yelling Mom will realize she has a problem.
My kids harangue him about this--and he turns it on me, says I tell them to talk to him about, when in fact, I have NEVER said anything to them about helping me help him.
His mother is about as deaf as he is. A conversation between the two of them is a comedic delight.
I know that doesn't answer how to get someone to try/accept hearing aids, and that's a question I still can't answer. I'm going through the same denial/refusal with my Mom now. But if I can get her to try hearing aids, I like to think her dementia decline might at least slow down. I think lots of people forget how important hearing and communication is to being part of the world around us. Good luck.
In her final years, i refered to conversation with Mom as "yelling with Mom". On the phone...I would go sit in the car so I wouldn't disturb other people with all the yelling. It was the way it was...
At that age, she was unwilling to change. I asked her why she didn't use hearing aids.... she said people never said anything she wanted to hear any way.
When I finally got tired of telling everyone in the family that they mumbled, I decided I would make a fashion statement -- I got my hearing aids in purple!
N O B O D Y N O T I C E S.
They're bright purple, I wear my hair pulled back, it would be impossible to miss them ... but people do. If I mention my hearing aids they'll even say, "Oh! I didn't know you wore hearing aids!"
They totally changed my life, by the way.
That thing about 'just look right at me and I'll hear you' -- worked for awhile. But a hearing loss is a hearing loss. When I lost the first 10% what vanished was all the consonants -- especially S and T -- and guessing from the vowels and tone of voice didn't actually work.
Also, in addition to age-related hearing loss, there can also be age-related audio-processing loss (in the brain, I mean) ... which the hearing aids make somewhat less obvious. When I can hear clearly, the audio-processing delay is less of a problem.
I often wonder what goes on in my mother's medical appointments. I am not allowed back to the examining room with her, because she got angry that they talk to me, not her. (Not really true; she was right there in the room and didn't HEAR them.) I think that doctors are saying things to her and just assuming she's heard them (and processed, and will remember). Not so!
MidKid58, I soooooooooooooooooooo feel your pain.
My husband, who has dementia, is stone deaf and now sleeps most of the day. So, when he does wake up, he doesn't think about hearing aids. To make along story short, it has just about ruined our relationship. He talks, I answer, he stares at me. I repeat, he stares at me. In his mind, staring is a polite way to ask me to repeat. If I don't repeat, he says ," no, tell me". So I tell him. He stares.
I long ago gave up my true personality with him, which is: lots of jokes, remarks about the news, funny observations, ironic asides. FAHGEDABOUDIT!
I have become as dispassionate as a paid employee. Really sad.
So, I do get it and y'all have my sympathy!
I just want to weep---he misses EVERYTHING!!! Every single sentence I say to him is followed by "what?". EVERY. SINGLE. DAMN. SENTENCE.
He has so many friends and acquaintances with aids, I do NOT see why he will not get them. He says it will make him look old. Well, for some reason, as his hearing has slowly gone, he'll sit looking like he's in a fog, he looks like he has dementia. His mouth hangs slightly open and usually, when in company, he lies on the sofa or floor and goes to sleep. Can't hear the conversations so he checks out.
They make such wonderful hearing aids now. No more of those clunky ones with the transistors in the pocket. I hope you find a way to get your mom to understand.