"Sweetie, do you hear anything different?" said Mom.
"You don't have to shout, Mom." I nodded happily.
"Are you hearing better?" asked the ear doctor. "I don't hear
that noise anymore," I
answered. "It's so quiet in my ears."
"The white noise is gone," he said, nodding. He looked at me and winked. "I told you
you'd like what you heard, August." He made more adjustments on the left hearing aid.
"Does it sound very different, love?" Mom asked.
"Yeah." I nodded. "It sounds . . . lighter."
"That's because you have bionic hearing now, buddy," said the ear doctor, adjusting
the right side. "Now touch here." He put my hand behind the hearing aid. "Do you feel
that? That's the volume. You have to find the volume that works for you. We're going
to do that next. Well, what do you think?" He picked up a small mirror and had me look
in the big mirror at how the hearing aids looked in the back. My
hair covered most of
the headband. The only part that peeked out was the tubing.
"Are you okay with your new bionic Lobot hearing aids?" the ear doctor asked, looking
in the mirror at me.
"Yeah," I said. "Thank you." "
Thank you so much, Dr. James," said Mom.
The first day I showed up at school
with the hearing aids, I thought kids would make a
big deal about it. But no one did. Summer was glad I could hear better,
and Jack said it
made me look like an FBI agent or something. But that was it. Mr. Browne asked me
about it in English class, but it wasn't like, what the heck is that thing on your head?! It
was more like, "If you ever
need me to repeat something, Auggie, make sure you tell
me, okay?"
Now that I look back, I don't know why I was so stressed about it all this time. Funny
how sometimes you worry a lot about something and it turns out to be nothing.
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