Deaf Brothers Get Implants To Hear For First Time

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Deaf Brothers Get Implants To Hear For First Time - News

A Beaver Dam mother said she is grateful and looking forward to experiencing a miracle with her sons -- who will hear sound for the first time on Friday.

The brothers, who are deaf, will have cochlear implants. Mother Brenda Mueller said they are anxious and excited about their new journey.

Three of Mueller's four sons -- Casey, Coltin and Riley -- were born deaf.

Their mother said their life is as full and rewarding as any parent could hope for their child. Mueller said that the fact that they're deaf has given them the gift of a place in a special community and is not a setback.

"Being deaf is a way of life and a culture and a beautiful culture in its own self. I've explained to other people you would not feel sorry for someone from Germany if they were speaking German and couldn't speak English," Mueller said.

But cochlear implants will give the boys the choice of experiencing life in both the hearing and deaf cultures.

"I don't feel there's anything wrong with my children. We're not fixing them; they're not broken," Mueller said. "I think the boys are excited, but they don't really know what this is."

Both Coltin and Casey will have their implants turned on Friday, when the will begin to hear sounds for the first time in their lives.

Young Riley is already experiencing life with sound. His implant was first turned on two weeks ago.

"That day when they're turned on, it's not some big epiphany. It's very calm," Mueller said. "Last night, he was climbing on my back and my brother was over and he's making an attempt to make the same sound back, which is huge; it's huge."

Doctors said that actual words usually take three to six months. But just last week, Riley already blurted out his first real word -- "stop."

"I told him to do it, and he did plain as day. I almost fell over with the s and the t and the o and the p perfect. I made him do it again and again," Mueller said. "I waited almost 11 years for Coltin to say his first words. I try to keep my emotions in check. It's not a sad thing; it's a happy thing. But it is emotionally overwhelming as a parent to wait so long."

Mueller said that she had better odds of winning the lottery than having three sons who can't hear. But she said that this turned out to be her lottery and that she can't wait for the implants to be activated.

NOTE: WISC-TV will be with the family on Friday when Coltin and Casey have their implants turned on for the first time, and the story will air during the 6 p.m. news on Feb. 2. Tune into WISC-TV and Channel 3000 for part two of this story.
 
Hey can the media report on the children whose CIs seem not to work for them? What about those children? What about the problems with no communication btw the hearing parents and the deaf children with CIs? Will they do a news story on that...probably not!
 
Hey can the media report on the children whose CIs seem not to work for them? What about those children? What about the problems with no communication btw the hearing parents and the deaf children with CIs? Will they do a news story on that...probably not!

I hear you. I bet it's up to us to write up reports about this and publicize it on the 'net and mainstream media. I believe teachers and parents with kids whose CI failed are in great position to write about these problems.

But CI industry will use all their powers to stop people from writing about negative stuff behind CI etc.
 
Deaf Brothers Hear Sound For First Time

Deaf Brothers Hear Sound For First Time - News

A Beaver Dam mother said that Feb. 2 will forever be a monumental day in her life -- because that's the day two of her sons heard sound for the first time.

Three of Brenda Mueller's four sons -- Casey, Coltin and Riley -- were born deaf.

But through cochlear implants, which were turned on Friday for Casey and Coltin, the brothers experienced what was to them the unusual sensation of sound.

Their younger brother Riley, who is in kindergarten, had his cochlear implant activated two weeks ago.

On Friday, Riley got a new adjustment for his implant, while his brothers Casey and Coltin were ready to try hearing for the first time.

The new sounds are a little scary for the boys at first.

"It's new and it's different and it's just going to take time," said Dr. Diane Heatley, who works in pediatric Otolaryngology at University of Wisconsin-Madison Health.

The new sounds were loud for the boys on Friday, and they said it even hurt a little to hear them.

"It's the first time I've been talking to you for 11 years, and today is the first day that you can hear me," Mueller explained to her sons on Friday.

After a few minutes, the boys relaxed a little and tested the new devices, trying new sounds and talking about the things they want to hear, WISC-TV reported.

Mueller said it was hard for her to put the experience into words.

"I'm excited and a little overwhelmed cause we worked very hard to get here. It has been a long, long year, and I wanted everything to happen so fast, and I know this is a long, long process," Mueller said.

"It will be a lot of work for these boys and this whole family for several years," Heatley said.

Mueller said she hopes their story will help others appreciate the gift of hearing.

"It's not just our day. We can share it with so many people and maybe we'll make a difference in somebody else's life or maybe they'll appreciate what they hear when they eat dinner tonight," she said. "It's like having them all over again. It's like their ears are born today."

The boys will process the sounds they're taking in for several months and possibly start to form words in six months and put together phrases in a year.

Mueller said that on Friday, one of her sons asked if they could honk the car horn all the way home.
 
Interesting... seems like a lot more people are getting cochlear implants nowadays.
 
whose CI failed are in great position to write about these problems.

But CI industry will use all their powers to stop people from writing about negative stuff behind CI etc.
I thought CI failure was relatively rare? Like absolutly no benifit is very rare......I thought that almost everyone got at least enviromental sounds?
I agree with you...........our country's health care system is just so captialist....it's all about the manufactors selling a "gotta have" product, and sometimes it seems like they are an infocomercial. It's gotten better......A few years ago, EVERYWHERE was "CI= HEARING!"..........now its more realistic....like they admit that hearing results vary........which is good!
 
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