The work has begun.

11.10.2009

Rehab

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We have been busy working with Alexander’s newly activated ear.  Being apart of his rehabilitation process I am continually reminded how amazing the brain is.  Just the fact that the brain processes billions of pieces of information without us asking it too makes me grateful for the one I have.  With Alexander’s brain, I feel as though we are spoon feeding it,  shoveling down jars of information it has not yet experienced. 

I’ve often imagined myself in therapy having a conversation directly with Alexander’s brain. It might go something like this, “Brain, when I say “Ha, Ha, Ha”, I am referring to a jack-o-lantern. Do you see why? It is really a pumpkin, but there is a face carved in it and it looks as though it is laughing…”

With a cochlear implant, Alexander must learn to process sound and develop meaningful use of acoustic input. Some of the cognitive processes that result in meaningful use of sound are as follows: attention to sound through time, the ability to judge two sounds as same or different, auditory imagery and memory for auditory images, memory span for auditory events, maintenance of the sound sequences, associating sounds with their referents, use of sound for linguistic purposes and retrieval of sound images for linguistic expression (Daniel, et. al., 1999, Pisoni and Geers, 1998).

To help with his rehab his therapist at chattering children has given me some great ideas.  The /oo/ and /m/ sound are difficult to distinguish, so I have worked specifically with him listening for the difference between the two.

A recommendation:

A few months ago Alexander’s amazing therapist  helped him make a family placemat. On one side they cut out our printed faces then glued and laminated them to the placemat.  On the other side they glued foods that he was familiar with.  As a result of this his language jumped.  He is able to speak and sign all of his family members and the foods he regularly eats.

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10.30.2009

Change

As life currently stands, things will always change. The pleasant things will inevitably come to an end. Like family visiting, warm cinnamon rolls, a bouquet of cut flowers, a child’s age.   It is unfortunate, but we get to learn and grow through change; although I typically drag my feet.

Not this time.

Today I was grateful for change.

Change in the weather.

Change in the leaves.

Change in my children’s health. 

Change in their attitudes.

Change from indoors to outdoors, it has been too long!

Change gave me moments like this today.

fall-leaves    fall days 043fall days 076   fall days 051

fall days 061 

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There are no editing changes to these photographs. The colors are real, and brilliant.  I plan to enjoy  many more fall days filled with color until change happens again.

10.25.2009

Riddle Me This: Answered

In for the fun with H1N1.

509px-H1N1_influenza_virus

What would you think if i told you one of my boys has had head lice and tested positive for swine flu in the past 6 months?

A: He sleeps in a homeless shelter

B: He goes to public school

C: He never showers

Thanks swine flu for spending the last week with us.

800px-Sow_with_piglet

signiture

10.24.2009

Riddle Me This

Ready?

I don’t speak.

But I am talked about a lot.

I visit the movie theaters, playgrounds, schools, and the farm

But I don’t have a car.

Adults discourage me,

Kids can’t stay away.

What am I?

10.20.2009

freedom vs. nucleus 5

cochlear processors side by side

So here it is, the side by side comparison of the Freedom and the Nucleus 5 processors. 

First of all it is thinner and lighter but “more stylish” is still debatable.  They all have chrome across the top rim for a reason I am unaware of. When he is wearing his processors he has been tagged with the name Silver Fox, they are nice and shiny. One thing for sure is it will probably not be on the next model.

Secondly, the indicator light letting me know it is on is a calming green instead of a rapid blinking ‘Night Rider’ red. Love that.

The third difference are the batteries.  Rechargeable batteries for the N5 have not been approved by the FDA yet, bummer I know. So we are doing our part making contributions to the landfill with 2 batteries for each processor every 2 days. The Freedom uses 3 batteries.

The fourth is the remote control which is much like a wii remote. It took the place of the behind the ear controls. To find out what program he is on I simply look at the remote instead of constantly pulling on his baby worn cable to read the screen. The remote has an awesome future that I personally want to thank Cochlear for including.  It beeps loudly when one of Alexander's processors falls off. Brilliant! So now I know when the processor is off his ear. Now if only they could program a GPS device for the N5 then life would be perfect.

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