PILOT SPIN
Spin Zone => Spin Zone => Topic started by: EppyGA - White Christian Domestic Terrorist on September 16, 2024, 05:51:41 PM
-
Wife and I went to see this movie tonight. We found it quite entertaining as Matt Walsh exposed the DEI for profit industry.
-
One of the people the interviewed for the movie.
https://www.nationalreview.com/news/robin-diangelo-addresses-humiliating-matt-walsh-movie-i-had-been-played/
-
I can’t watch it until I can stream it with subtitles. :(
-
I can’t watch it until I can stream it with subtitles. :(
Sorry
-
I can’t watch it until I can stream it with subtitles. :(
I used to be that way too. I couldn't go to movie theaters and I had to quit Rotary because I could never understand the speakers. When we ate out, my wife had to explain to me what the waitress was saying.
All that changed when I got a Cochlear implant on one side. (I'm going to have the other side done as soon as they approve it).
My "word" recognition in my implanted ear went from 10% to 85% and "sentence" comprehension went from35% to 95%. It has been life changing for me. I can now have conversations with strangers and hear medical receptionists that are behind glass and wearing a mask. I have never been able to do that before.
My only regret is that I didn't do this years (decades) ago.
Rush, I know you have immune sensitivities that can effect implanted devices, but I strongly suggest you talk to your audiologist and ENT about this. They were 100% covered by insurance.
-
I used to be that way too. I couldn't go to movie theaters and I had to quit Rotary because I could never understand the speakers. When we ate out, my wife had to explain to me what the waitress was saying.
All that changed when I got a Cochlear implant on one side. (I'm going to have the other side done as soon as they approve it).
My "word" recognition in my implanted ear went from 10% to 85% and "sentence" comprehension went from35% to 95%. It has been life changing for me. I can now have conversations with strangers and hear medical receptionists that are behind glass and wearing a mask. I have never been able to do that before.
My only regret is that I didn't do this years (decades) ago.
Rush, I know you have immune sensitivities that can effect implanted devices, but I strongly suggest you talk to your audiologist and ENT about this. They were 100% covered by insurance.
Thanks for this, I believe that I will end up with cochlear implants. I can’t stomach the idea of being as deaf as my mother ended up. At least now I can carry on a normal conversation with one person at a time with no background noise for the most part, only saying “huh?” here and there. With HAs on maximum of course. But my mother got so bad you had to scream at the top of your lungs at her, hurting your own ears in the process and sometimes she still never got it and would dismiss you in frustration. I’d rather be dead than put my family through that.