I have an odd sensitivity to low sounds. But I can’t hear
anything else.
It’s not a problem. It’s been this way for years. I’ve
managed. I’ll continue to manage.
Sometimes I ask people to repeat what they say. And I
regularly run the TV loud and play my music at full volume. But that’s out of a
desire to hear sound detail. I love a good sound mix.
I hate the slightest bit of noise when I’m trying to sleep.
I hear everything -- each breath my wife takes as she sleeps, the house
settling even when it’s still, flying insects buzzing around . . . outside . .
. at the other end of town. And because I hear so well, I haven’t had anyone
check out my hearing.
“You don’t hear so well,” my wife finally said to me the
other day.
But wives are always accusing their husbands of not hearing
so well. They just want us to listen.
Then my boss said I don’t listen. That’s when I wondered if
maybe I don’t hear so well.
No, that wasn’t it. I figured the world was simply plotting
against me. So I wasn’t going to call in some fancy hearing specialist. He’d be
in on the plot against me. I needed truth not lies.
I went online. I love the Internet. I found my answer
instantly. I read about a guy in Tacoma, WA, who could hear low tones really
well, but for the life of him couldn’t hear loud sounds. He said his wife
complained about his poor hearing. Just like my wife did. He said his boss
criticized him for not listening. Just like my boss had done. He said his boss
finally fired him.
I hate the Internet. Lies. All lies. My boss wasn’t going to
fire me for a little hearing issue.
Ridiculous. I vented my frustrations with a
stranger in line at the grocery store. The stranger was -- get this -- a
hearing specialist. He said he’d have to run a hearing test on me to be able to
define my condition.
My condition? What condition? The plot was thickening. And I
was beginning to believe I had an actual problem. Before this “specialist”
could assault me with his business card and more lies, I got his number and
told him I’d call. Fat chance.
At home my wife asked if I’d looked into my “problem” yet.
“Yeah,” I said. “I talked to a specialist. He said there
wasn’t a problem.”
After that, life went back to normal -- people complained
about my hearing. And while none of this was new, there was something different
about it all. In the back of my mind was the possibility that something was, in
fact, wrong. I began overanalyzing everything I was hearing or not hearing.
“Cby yjd tkkj ote trd tgksw?” my wife asked me.
No, those aren’t typos up there. That’s what I actually
heard my wife say. Normally I’d think she wasn’t speaking clearly. But with my
hearing in question, I worried the problem was mine.
That night in bed, I could still hear every sound under the
moon. The king of sounds that evening was the refrigerator making a buzzing
noise. My wife said she couldn’t hear it. As I tried to sleep, the sound got
louder and more annoying. Earplugs couldn’t hide it. Then my wife’s breathing
started up.
I grabbed the hearing protection I use at drag races, but
still, I could hear every breath my wife took. And I could swear I heard the
refrigerator making that buzzing noise.
“There’s something not right with my hearing!” I shouted.
I scared my snoozing wife into her end table. While cleaning
up the broken lamp, I told my wife how I talked to a hearing specialist in line
at the store for a couple of seconds, not in his office for a couple hours as I
said I’d done.
She wasn’t even mad at me for lying to her. All she cared
about was finding something wrong with my hearing.
The next day she brought me in for a test. The guy said I
had no problems with my hearing.
“Maybe it’s a focus issue,” my wife suggested. “Maybe you’re
not focusing when you’re accused of not listening, and maybe you’re focusing
too much when you’re overhearing.”
Just when I thought I was out, they pulled me back in. Now
they were trying to say I had Attention Deficit Disorder or something like
that. I needed truth not lies.
I went online. I found a test I could take on my computer
that would determine if I had these so-called focus issues.
Later, my wife asked if I’d looked into my new problem.
“Yeah,” I said. “I took a test online. It said there was nothing wrong with me.”
I really took the test. But I didn’t check the results. You see, this is all just another plot against me.
-July 2013