Posted on 10/17/2017 4:43:43 PM PDT by Kaslin
RUSH: Bud in Stow, Ohio. Great to have you on the program, sir. How are you?
CALLER: How you doing, Rush?
RUSH: Very good. Thanks.
CALLER: Been listening to you since August 1st, 1988, and I listen through all your trials and stuff. And I just gotta let you know Wednesday of last week I had cochlear implant surgery.
RUSH: You did?
CALLER: Yes. My right ear had total hearing loss. It was sudden. I went to bed one night, it was fine; got up the next morning, it was gone. And I just wanted to let you know just how much you inspired my decision to have this implant. You know, your impact goes far, far beyond the political out here in the fruited plains. And I just wanted to let you know that youre an inspiration. And so far Im glad Ive had it. Im doing well. But you just had to know just how much of an impact you have, other than political.
RUSH: I cannot thank you enough. That is very inspirational to hear. You can still hear in your left ear a little?
CALLER: Yeah, Ive got about 50% hearing in my left here.
RUSH: Now, can you hang on through the break here?
CALLER: Absolutely.
RUSH: Cause we gotta take it here. Back here in just a second.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Now, back to Bud in Stow, Ohio. Its interesting that they authorized implant surgery when you still had 60% hearing on your left side. Back when I got mine, I wasnt able I dont think. My memory is that you had to have under 10% hearing loss in both ears before you could be approved by the FDA for the surgery. Thats probably changed since then.
CALLER: Yeah, thats changed, and were going with the Baha System, which is the bone-anchored hearing aid. It uses bone conduction. My implant, the mount stud is actually an inch behind my right ear and its screwed right into the skull. After three months or so of healing, then the transducer will just clip on to that and its removable. Clip on to that and the vibrations go down the cochlear nerve and all that stuff. So its a new system. Ive been in touch with Cochlear throughout the whole process. Its about a year-and-a-half old.
RUSH: Well, how you doing on speech comprehension on that side?
CALLER: Well, right now I cant hear anything on the right ear. Once the transducer They had this Rush, they have this
RUSH: Wait. You mean they havent activated it yet? Thats what youre telling me?
CALLER: No. No, no. Its gonna take about two-and-a-half, three months for the bone to heal around the anchor.
RUSH: Ah. Okay. See, mine was turned on 30 days. I dont have the bone transducer.
CALLER: Yeah, you have the cochlear, right?
RUSH: Im right into the cochlear nerve. They scoop out the entire inner ear and replace it with the man-made electrodes that connects to the nerve, and then its a crapshoot as to how well it works.
CALLER: Right.
RUSH: Everybodys different. Theres so many factors. The longer youre deaf before you get it done, the less success youll have statistically.
CALLER: Right. The prime thing on this one was I still had one good nerve and that the bone conduction on the right side will actually activate the left side nerve. So
RUSH: How long did this surgery take?
CALLER: About 45 minutes.
RUSH: Forty-five minutes?
CALLER: Yeah. They made a one-inch incision, dissected down to the skull, cleaned everything up and then they literally just screwed this thing into the skull. It looks like a T-15 stud and a snap.
RUSH: Yeah.
CALLER: And, Rush, looking at one of the transducers, the Baha 5 is actually Bluetooth compatible.
RUSH: Yeah, see, thats new. I have to wear a necklace around my neck if I want to use that Bluetooth stuff, which I dont do. Mines an antique. Mines an antique compared to yours.
CALLER: (chuckles) Yeah, you were one of the first that Id ever heard of. And, you know, because of your success and your dont-give-up attitude you didnt let that stop you from your love of what you do thats part of the inspiration that helped me decide to go ahead and do this.
RUSH: Well, good for you. I appreciate you saying that.
CALLER: Well, its true. You have a far greater impact than beyond the political arena.
RUSH: Well, let me tell you: Hearing loss today doesnt mean what it used to mean.
CALLER: No, it doesnt.
RUSH: But not everybody is How to phrase it? Not everybody is a candidate for implant surgery. There have to be some circumstances met. Back in my day, you had to have really significant loss.
CALLER: We had a checklist that we had to go down before we could do it.
RUSH: Right. Well, Im glad it worked. Im glad. Im sure its gonna be successful. If youve got 60% hearing on your left side, thats a great buffer. But, Bud, I appreciate the call. I really do. And best of luck with it. Heres something I tell everybody, Bud and youve probably already have learned this just in the course of living your life. I have found that the disability of hearing loss is the only disability in the world where the victim is blamed for having it.
CALLER: Yes.
RUSH: For example, if somebody cant see, you would never say to them, Just look harder! I know you can see! Youre faking! Just look harder.
CALLER: (laughing)
RUSH: Or if somebodys in a wheelchair and cant walk, you will not say, Come on! Just get up and walk! Just try!
CALLER: Youre absolutely right, Rush.
RUSH: But when you have hearing loss, people think you can hear and are just not trying or just not paying attention.
CALLER: Youre absolutely right.
RUSH: Bud, I still have people whisper to me on the golf course, thinking that I can hear them. And they know Im deaf. Hearing, its a strange disability for people, because you can pretend to be blind. You can close your eyes, and you can pretend to not be able to walk, but you cant, no matter what you do, folks, you cannot become totally deaf. You cant plug your ears up, you cant put headphones on, theres nothing you can do that equates total deafness.
And, as such, everybody, You can hear something, I know you can. And because of the vagaries of the implant, some things I do hear that Im surprised I hear. Acoustics. Its amazing. But just be patient with people out there, Bud. Just be patient. Cause they will lose patience with you, even though they know you cant hear. Now, I appreciate the call.
That was a very enjoyable conversation.
Hope he does well. It’s so frustrating to ask people to repeat things 3 times, and they never get any louder, they just keep repeating it at the same level...uh, if I could hear at that level, I would have heard you the first time!
Some people do mumble when they speak. My son is one of them, and when I have trouble understanding him than he get mad at me and tells me I need a hearing aid
Ever notice how many people unconsciously hold a hand over their mouth while speaking? Or continue speaking while walking away with their back to you?
I hear all sorts of low-level ambient sound. I call myself ‘hard-of-understanding’. I do need closed captions in order to not miss anything on TV, especially with accents. I hear the sound; I just don’t always process the speech.
And a lot of folks do mumble....they drop their volume and say things sotto voce and then it’s the listener’s fault for not understanding them.
My left ear was done in March. 2010. so I'm seven+ years old with that one..
My right ear was done in Oct. 2011 so I'm six years old with this one..
I also followed Rush Limbaugh all thru both of his implants, and when I went to my ENT and they asked if I ever heard of a COCHLEAR IMPLANT I had to chuckle and tell them, yes, through Rush. I was given a written quiz and passed with a 100%, they laughed and said, you learned a lot from Rush..
My ENT group got the ball rolling for me and took care of all the paper work and I was introduced to Dr. Barry Hirsch at Pittsburgh UMPC...Medicare refused me the surgery..and Dr.Hirsch went to bat for me and filed a form and fought for me to have the surgery...took six months and WE WON..I got approved. Retired I was 67 yrs. old.
Handled the surgery well, it took four hours. and I was activated six weeks later..and have loved it every day...
When I had my year check up, I was asked if I was ready for my second..and it went well also and love my processors..I just recently was up graded to a Kanso which is FANTASTIC, and Medicare paid 80% and they pay for my batteries as well..only because it is a surgical procedure...Batteries for Hearing Aids is NOT covered by Medicare.
I hight recommend COCHLEAR IMPLANTS TO ANY ONE WHO ARE
TOLD THEY QUALIFY..
Cochlears Motto...HEAR NOW, HEAR ALWAYS.
Yep, I happened to catch that call on the radio today. The caller was kind to let Rush know how much of an inspiration he’d been and Rush was typically gracious in the way he spoke with the caller. It got me thinking about what a good guy Rush is and what generally good folks 99% of conservatives are, and how the left is totally out to lunch in how they perceive our basic character.
Megadittoes! :)
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