Chapter
1
The Emotional Impact of Hearing Loss
David Luterman,
D. Ed.
Dr. Luterman is
Professor Emeritus at Emerson College
in Boston and Director of the Thayer Lindsey
Family Centered Nursery for Hearing Impaired
Children. He has dedicated his career
to developing a greater understanding
of the psychological effects and emotions
associated with hearing loss and the caregiver
role. He teaches professionals to understand
the emotional responses of parents as
they come to grips with the hearing loss
of their child. He has lectured extensively
on counseling throughout the United States,
Canada and abroad, and has authored a
number of books on the subject matter
of hearing loss in children.
I often
tell parents who have recently completed
the diagnostic process that you have the
same child you went into the testing booth
with—it‘s just that you’re
looking at him/her differently now. By
this I mean that the “problem”
at this time is the parents’ problem,
not the child’s problem. For the
parents, it’s a grief reaction:
they’ve lost the child they thought
they were going to have and the life they
expected to live. This will invoke for
the parents many feelings of loss. For
the child, there will be feelings associated
with the hearing loss, but these will
not be one of loss as almost all children
with hearing loss have never heard normally
or have no memory of hearing. These children
have little or no concept of what they’ve
lost.
In the
past, I’ve compared the parental
loss to a death, but I have begun to see
that this is no longer accurate. In a
death, there’s finality to the grief,
there’s a burial and life can go
on, albeit with pain and loss. With hearing
loss the grief is chronic, lived with
24/7. The child is a constant reminder
to the parents of this loss. No matter
how well adjusted the parents seem to
be to the reality that their child has
a hearing loss, there will be trigger
events that remind them of the loss and
those initial feelings of pain and sorrow
return. Triggers can be as simple as a
birthday party or the anniversary of their
original diagnostic evaluation. What seems
to happen after the initial pain of the
diagnosis is that parents learn to live
in a bubble of “normal” hearing
loss and adjust to the disability of their
child by not thinking about it. The trigger
events remind them just how abnormal their
life really is and what they’ve
lost. . .
Stages of Diagnosis
The feelings
experienced in the early stages of diagnosis
are quite intense, and the emotional response
to the child’s hearing loss is independent
of the degree of loss. The disability
is never in the audiogram, it’s
in the perception of the parents. Parents
of children with mild hearing loss seldom
appreciate being told that they are lucky
their child can hear so much. For them
it’s still a loss for which they
have a right to grieve. In fact, research
has shown (Yoshinaga-Itano and Abdala
de Uzcategui, 2001) that parents of children
with mild to moderate losses are more
stressed than parents of children with
severe to profound losses. Parents of
children with mild to moderate losses
have more decisions to make regarding
school placement and many of these children
are on the cusp of needing a cochlear
implant. Outcomes and decisions for these
children are more ambiguous than for children
with more severe losses. Also the mildly
impaired child has potentially more hearing
to lose and parents often live with the
constant fear of a further increase in
the hearing loss.
At the
time of diagnosis a host of uncomfortable
feelings usually emerge, among them fear,
inadequacy, anger, guilt, vulnerability
and confusion. Underlying all this for
hearing parents is the profound feeling
of loss. The pain of this loss never quite
goes away, as one father of a fifteen
year old said: “When you first find
out your child is hard-of-hearing, it
really hurts and then it becomes a dull
ache that never goes away.”
All the
feelings described in this chapter are
appropriate to life’s situation:
the feelings just are—they need
to be listened to, validated and not judged.
Behavior has consequences that can be
evaluated so parents need not be responsible
for how they feel but always and only
for how they behave. . . |