Fear and Loathing in the Cage.

in #writing8 years ago (edited)

They take you to the cage. It's a small room with padded walls.   They must think the walls protect them if the animal caught inside lashes out.

"Put them on and pay attention" they say.
"When you hear anything: a beep, a growl, a hrshshs, click the button." they instruct and turn around.
They leave and close the door.
You feel claustrophobic.

You are alone in the room, staring through a small window at the person feeding sounds to you, testing your hearing.
Mocking you.

You are here for what they medically call "an audiogram", a hearing test.  When your ears are fucked, this is a test that you know you can't pass. You know you shouldn't think in these terms.   Nothing that happens here says anything relevant about you beyond having a disability.
Yet, you feel like a failure after every one of these.

This is just the first part, the second part is the worst.

Same headset, same rules but with a twist.
Have you ever played the " telephone game"?
A kid whispers a world into a kid's next to him and that kid to the next and so on.   The last kid must say the word he heard and the other kids laugh because it's such a different world than the first.   The first one laughs the most though, the last one doesn't laugh at all.
It's a bit like that only you are playing with yourself and the words are simple, ones you use everyday.  
OH, and I'm the last kid.

A stentorian voice will enunciate words and you need to repeat them.   He - always a he - is talking clearly and without accent, like a machine god laughing at your impotence.
"Salami" it sends to you..."Tzunami?" you ask.
"Mother" it says...."mather?.. mother?" you guess.

You can't look the doctor in the eyes and you chuckle at the stupid words you come up with but in reality, it's shame you feel.  It's disgust at the futility of these tests that are pushed upon you all the time.  You wonder, what the fuck is the point?
But you'll be back anyway.  You have to.

When it's over they give you a card with the evaluation.  It's a little graph, like a kid's drawing because they doctor writes every line manually, usually with a crayon.   It shows exactly, carbon on paper, how fucked you are.
You know what to expect, of course, but you hope for a second that maybe, it got a little better than last time.
It hasn't.

When you get out, you pass by a kid with such severe hearing loss, his mother is not even trying to talk at him, no matter how load, just direct him to the cage.   The kid seems happy and ready to play.
You are remembered that, always, it could be worse.  And that your attitude can change the meaning of the experience.   You try to smile as you get out of the clinic and into the world.

Sounds awash on you and you try to be grateful that you can hear these, that you can communicate, that you are, still, almost normal.
You can hold on to this realization for a while.
"I'm lucky, I'm lucky" , you repeat like a mantra and for a while you believe it..

Until you are back in the cage.

Sort:  

I've been in, "the cage" to get some hearing loss diagnosed. It's a strange place that's for sure. My experience obviously isn't the same as yours but there certainly is something anxiety inducing about the whole processes.

hear hear! <-- see what I did ?

very punny... ok kill me now.

you deserve it:D

I've never been in "the cage" I might go there now because of this, keep up the good work!

I work with bio acoustics to help people back to a balanced vibration through sound therapy and nutritional help.....

I would always press the button way too much. Im only 23 and basically come to terms that Im going to be that old guy yelling "WHAT DID YOU SAY?" in public.

the temptation is real...and sometimes even confusing because is that a real sound or your imagination.

I am alredy that old man but i have a hearing aid that helps.

we're alright!!!

Oh wow I didn't expect it to be a real-life story. It felt very claustrophobic, and the pacing was very suspenseful--all good things. Looking forward to reading more of your work!

Been there, done that, Răzvan.
Știu cum e....

Partea bună este ca stai mai bine ca mine la urechea dreaptă.
Pe urechea stangă sunt cam 98% surd. Deci avem cam aceeași dizabilitate, cu toate că eu am surzit la varsta de 10 ani din cauza oreionului.... In rest, aceeasi poveste, aceleași "lupte interioare", aceleași dezamăgiri... mai ales în liceu.
Dar toată durerea asta, toate luptele cu demonii interiori m-au făcut omul de astăzi. Și cred că ai aceeași părere despre tine.
Răzvan, am o singură întrebare: Cum ai învățat limba engleză? eu am dificultăți de pronunție și aud cuvintele ușor diferit iar asta îmi creează mari probleme și de obicei mă cam sabotez cand sufăr eșecuri.... Tu ce strategie ai folosit pentru a învăța engleza? Ai un mod de exprimare foarte simplu și fain, iar pronunția, este foarte bună(am observat-o în video-ul tău cu mulțumiri pt comunitatea steemit).
Felicitări pentru tot ceea ce faci!

P.S : Stau aproape de București și mi-ar face mare plăcere să ne cunoaștem! Marius D.

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