September 29, 2009

The jobs I never thought I'd have... are the jobs I'm doing!

Before I got my implant, there were some jobs I thought I would NEVER be able to have and I thought I was going to miss out on the jobs that “everyone starts off with” such as being a waiter, working the front desk answering phones, helping visitors with directions, working the cashier stand at a fast food restaurant, etc.
But since I’ve started college and become more comfortable with my implant/hearing… I’m working one of the jobs I thought I would NEVER have which is working the front desk as a receptionist.

For the past year, I worked the front desk answering phones and assisting visitors who came into the Berry College Alumni Center. Sure, in the beginning it was a little tough getting used to it, and I always got nervous when someone called because I was afraid I wasn’t going to understand them or to be able to answer their questions, etc. But as time went by, it got easier and I got more comfortable answering phones and helping people.

But now, since I’ve switched jobs/departments, I’m no longer working the front desk but I’m answering calls about reservations in the different meeting rooms, dining halls, ballrooms, etc.

So it’s definitely been an adventure working these jobs! Every day it amazes me that ME – a DEAF person – is answering phones, helping people, and training the new freshmen, etc. It makes me feel good that I’m able to do this and it makes me that much more grateful for the opportunities I’m now experiencing because of my Cochlear Implant and having gone through Auditory Verbal Therapy. Without them… I don’t know where I would be working right now.

I guess you can say that deaf people can achieve what we originally thought was impossible! :)

July 23, 2009

Body-Worn Processor can come in handy

My Grandpa has had the implant for about 2 years now and seems to be progressing. But unfortunately, because of his age and health, his progress is very slow. But even though it's a slow progress, we can definitely see a difference with his conversations being more at ease. He can hear a lot better then he did with just the two hearing aids and we don't have to worry about him using the FM system as a microphone for everyone at the table. He can definitely do a lot better in the quiet environments but it does get challenging in the noisier environments so we have to make sure we talk slow for him.

Since he has gotten the implant, we have been noticing that he has a hard time managing his BTE processor, oxygen tube and glasses all on his ear. It would sometimes get tangled up and everything falls off. We have tried the earmold for his ear to help hold it on, but it was too difficult for him to use. So as a solution, we traded out the BTE processor for the body-worn hoping this will help. As a result, he doesn't get tangled up on his ears balancing everything and plus, he seems to be hearing better with the body-worn instead of the BTE!

So we're glad this is working out better for him... I guess you never know until you try it!

July 13, 2009

Jonathan's new job with CutCo!

My brother just got a job last week working with CutCo. Now for those of you who aren't familiar with CutCo, it's a knife company that involves selling them "door to door." Apparently these knives are very expensive but top of the line... I don't even think you can buy them in stores.

So what he has to do is call people up asking them to make an appointment so he can give them about a 30 minute presentation of the products and hope that they'll be interested enough to buy some. Its a hard job - sometimes they'll buy and sometimes they wont.

But what's amazing is that he's able to do all this -- call people up, make appointments, give about a 30 minute presentation of the knives, and sell them. Literally the job of a salesman!

After 2 days of working, he's made over $3,000 in sales! Now, that's pretty impressive!! I think he not only loves making the sales, but he loves how he gets calls from his boss checking in and complimenting him on how great he's doing!

Jonathan making one of his first sales!


But if you think about it, he would not be able to do this if it weren't for the AB Harmony.

We were all kinda actually kinda nervous in the beginning on how he would do... but he has definitely proved us all wrong - nothing can stop you from doing what you want! So thanks for the Harmony and Jonathan's hardworking personality, he's able to make great money and save up for college and a new car! :)

June 15, 2009

Keith Urban Concert!

Since I LOVE Keith Urban's music, my brother and my best friend got me tickets for my birthday to see him in Concert which was last night! And the concert was AMAZING! We had such a great time dancing and singing along with Keith Urban and his songs!

Thanks to the Harmony, both my brother and I could actually enjoy the concert and sing along with his music!

Now, hopefully next year we can try to go to the CMA Music Fest in Nashville, TN and see ALL of our favorite country stars!! :)








"I'm alive and I'm free... Who wouldn't wanna be me"
-Keith Urban

May 27, 2009

Future Entrepreneur?

Berry College has several Student Ran Enterprises on campus... Lisa and I started an enterprise creating an Online Alumni Collection. Since the Alumni only have a few "Alumni items", we are creating an online based store to provide more alumni items for both the younger and the older graduates. The other day we were interviewed and published in the Rome, Ga Newspaper!
Check it out:



Ideas bear fruit at Berry
by Bryant Steele


Berry College freshman Samantha Brilling (left) and sophomore Lisa Smith with some of the products from their business venture, the Online Berry Alumni Collection at Oak Hill. Alumni gear is currently available in the alumni office in the Ford Buildings on Berry College's main campus and will soon be available online through Oak Hill's Web site. (Photo by Lindy Dugger Cordell / RN-T)





The whiteboard in Rufus Massey’s office at Berry College (map) is a color-coded mass of lists and boxes with lines and arrows connecting one thing to another or more. It is what Picasso might have come up with had he been a business major.

Massey’s masterpiece is an evolving study in a new student work experience called Enterprise Development.

“We want to build a high-performance team, and we want the students to be more competitive in the workforce when they leave,” Massey, assistant vice president for enterprise development, said.

He said the program shares ideas with the entrepreneurship program at the college’s Campbell School of Business, but the businesses this program builds will stay at Berry after students graduate, always to be run by students with oversight from faculty and staff called co-managers.

“It gives students the opportunity to run their own enterprise,” Massey said. “The students had to develop the project plans.”

The idea, to market Berry’s products and services beyond the Berry family, had its genesis in October. The progress will be evaluated during the summer (summer students are keeping the pilot projects going), and Massey hopes to have more projects up and running by fall.

Most projects have a readily recognizable Berry theme, like the Berry Farms Jersey Milk Co. and Berry Farms Jersey Beef Co. Then there’s Vision Studios, a video production company to visually preserve not only anniversary and birthday celebrations but also property owners’ belongings for insurance purposes.

“For the last six months, we’ve gathered ideas. We have 200 ideas on the business concept list,” Massey said.

Berry Farms Genetic Services can take advantage of the school’s Jersey cattle herd, ranked No. 13 in the nation, he said. “Genetic Services basically would have a veterinarian work with students and harvest embryos and ship them frozen anywhere in the world. The goal is to have Berry Cattle walking all over the world. It’s all about continuing the Berry line.”

The Cottages at Berry – four log cabins — are “not really open to the public,” Massey said. “But with 21,000 alumni, there are plenty of customers.” The cottages are being converted to a student-run enterprise with the goal “to keep them full all the time,” Massey said.

The Berry Bike Shop is an old blacksmith shop that will partner with local bicycle shops and provide minor repairs, tours and rentals, he said.

Berry Farms Jersey Milk “has taken the campus by storm,” Massey said. It’s processed by Cagle Dairy in Canton and offered in whole, 2 percent and chocolate. Details about offering it to the public at large are being worked out.

“What we have in mind” with the Berry Organic Garden “is that the average meal takes 1,500 miles to get to the table. Wouldn’t we rather have food that takes a quarter-mile to get to the table?”

‘Sky’s the limit’

“We are actually selling product now,” said Nathan Clackum, co-manager of Berry Angus Beef Co. “So far we’ve been mainly marketing to faculty, staff, students and alumni. However, we will sell it to the public.

(See Berryangus@berry.edu for sales information.)

“Berry Angus specializes in high-quality ground beef and steaks. Our product is natural, which means that there are no artificial preservatives or artificial ingredients added to the meat. It’s also raised without added hormones.”

The product is seasonal (January through July) and is processed by Sheriff’s Meat Processing in Calhoun, a state -inspected plant, Clackum said.

The school has been marketing animals in larger portions for several years, but the enterprise selling individual cuts just started in May, he said.

Massey would one day like people to see menu items from Berry College Student Enterprises. “It’s not far-fetched. It’s pretty simple to do that.”

“Basically, the sky’s the limit,” Clackum said. “We’re going to grow based on demand. We have the animal numbers right now to do about 40 head per year.”

Jessica Crumbley, general manager of the enterprise and a rising senior, asked to be a part of the pilot project. She thought it would be helpful because she plans to be a veterinarian but doesn’t have a business minor.

“It gets me thinking about all aspects of running a business,” she said. “Raising steers, getting them prepped, the paperwork. It helps me see more than just the health care.

Alumni have bought Berry merchandise for years, but The Alumni Collection at Oak Hill enterprise plans to sell even more caps, shirts, motto plaques, calendars and more.

Operations manager and rising junior Lisa Smith and marketing manager and rising sophomore Samantha Brilling will survey alumni at the upcoming Alumni Weekend for additional merchandise ideas as they also plan to take the business online.

Brilling, a marketing major, thinks the enterprise will help prepare her for her career. Smith said she does it more for the students. “I came from the business world back to school,” she said.

The Berry Enterprises Student Team is a support group majoring in areas like business management, accounting and finance, marketing and communication, Massey said. The group will meet at least once a semester to discuss what’s been accomplished and seek advice from a volunteer board that includes trustees, Campbell School faculty and the Alumni Council.

David Reeves, a rising senior and visual communications manager, is on the

BEST team and is Web designer for the entire project.

“Most purchases will be made online eventually,” he said. “The Web is now the new Yellow Pages that everyone can go to for reference.”

“Our home page will be about how we’ve come about, who we are, have contact information and a link to all the enterprises.” It will include information about how the project helps further education, he said.

‘Premier work institution’

The program has levels of work. Freshmen start at level one and have the opportunity to reach level five and run entire programs.

“The ultimate vision is student-run enterprises,” Massey said. “Academics are still first, but work is a unique component.

“Berry’s vision is to be known as a premier work institution in the nation,” Massey said. “By the time students graduate, up to 95 percent have worked on campus. It’s the culture.”

May 19, 2009

Connect to a Mentor

An article from Advanced Bionics:


Advanced Bionics is connecting cochlear implant recipients and candidates from across the country through its new "Connect to Mentor" Web site.


Valencia, Calif. (PRWEB) May 18, 2009 -- In the first such online community of its kind, Advanced Bionics, the only U.S.-based manufacturer of cochlear implants (or "bionic ears"), is connecting cochlear recipients and candidates from across the country through its new "Connect to Mentor" Web site. The new site, part of the BEA (Bionic Ear Association) Mentor Program, allows cochlear implant candidates to contact volunteer "mentors" and communicate directly with hearing professionals.

"Advanced Bionics has an actively engaged population of 6,000 BEA members," said CEO Jeffrey Greiner of Advanced Bionics. "In developing this Web site, the company realized that its most valuable assets are cochlear implant recipients themselves. This site allows them to share their experiences, offer advice to others who might be thinking of being implanted, and help them navigate the process from surgery to entering the hearing world."

http://www.bionicear.com/CTM

May 15, 2009

Hearing Journey

Advanced Bionics has a website called the Hearing Journey which is a community website for all AB staff, AB CI users and potential CI users who come together to ask questions and to help others with their questions and concerns. This is also a great way to meet and connect with other people who are going through the same journey with getting the CI.

I'll be honest, at first, I wasn't a fan of the site. I liked the concept of it and thought it was great. But when I first became a member and started looking around at the different topics, I thought it was a bit obnoxious. There were so many people posting comments, I couldn't keep up.

But now, that I've had more time to explore the site... I've started to catch on and is enjoying the site more. It has a lot of helpful topics... even for me!

Some of the topics include:
- Sports & Protection
- Telling people about the CI
- Alarm Clocks
- Surgery Concerns
- Mapping Tips
- Information about the CI parts
---and many more!

So I suggest you to sign up for the Hearing Journey website and read what other people have to say. Or maybe post your questions/concerns so you can get even more feedback from just reading these blogs.


www.HearingJourney.com



May 7, 2009

Audio Tours in Museums!

Last weekend, my Mom and I went to the Mummy Museum and we paid for the Audio Tour. We assumed it was going to be a little recording with headphones to listen with as you walk around. I used that when I went to the Art Museum downtown… instead of using the regular headphones that came with it, I would just plug in my direct connect cord from my implant to the recorder so I could hear it better. It was great!

But suprisingly, this place was more advanced and had personal walkie-talkie phone type things we listen too. When they handed this to me, I wasn’t sure how this was going to go. But we figured we’d try it out anyways.

As you can see from the picture below, it was basically like holding a TV remote to our ears and listen to it…. It was like we were from the future! I felt like such a dork walking around with that! haha



But surprisingly, I could understand most of it! In fact, we got more information and details then a person who didn’t have the audio tour! It was like we had our own personal behind-the-scenes tour guide!

So being that I love learning about mummies and Egypt, I was very thankful we got the Audio Tour and that I could hear it! :D




April 3, 2009

The Wonderful World of BEA Mentors!



Last weekend I flew out to Valencia, California for Advanced Bionic’s BEA Mentor Training Weekend with about 40 other people who also have the Advanced Bionics Cochlear Implant or someone else in their family does. It was so much fun learning about the company, about the things coming out in the future, seeing AB’s headquarters, meeting all the BEA and AB staff and learning how to be a better mentor.

I also had a great time meeting other people who have the CI and hearing about their hearing journey and what it was like for them to go through the process of getting the implant. It’s amazing to me to hear all the stories of what it was like, because it seems like we all have unique situations that we’ve been or are going through. Here are a couple pictures of me with some of the other CI users I met…








I edited my links list which is to the right, below my profile box. As you can see, there are three categories: Resources, Other Bloggers, and Other ways to find me.

In the “Resources” category, there are some important links to check out for when you are going through your CI journey…

The Auditory Verbal Center is the center I went to for Auditory Verbal Therapy to help train my brain to hear and understand with the CI. This is also the center that taught me to hear and speak when I was diagnosed at 2. So I went there for therapy when I was youger to learn to hear and speak with my hearing aids... then when I got my CI, I went back for a couple months for some more therapy.

Advanced Bionics, as you probably already know, is the Cochlear Implant company I have… best choice I ever made! This is the link to their website in case you want some more information anout the company.

Hearing Journey is an online community through Advanced Bionics to where other CI users and potential CI users can post topics and discuss their questions or concerns.

Hearing Exchange is Paula Rosenthal’s site for blogs and recourses of people with a Hearing Loss. On Facebook, she also has two groups you can join called “HearingExchange” and “HearingExchange Teens.” I am a member of both groups, which is cool because you can meet other deaf people and post on discussions within that group. It’s a fun way to meet other deaf people in your area and throughout the country.

Deaf Village is also a website like Hearing Exchange to where you can find information and resources about Hearing Loss and other deaf people.

The next Category is “Other Bloggers" and as you can tell, there are three subcategories for Adults, Young Adult/Teens and Children. So depending on your situation, you can also find someone else w ho might be going through the same challenges as you. They are all great Mentors and some of them I had the privilege of meeting at the BEA Mentor Training this past weekend. So I highly recommend checking them out too! :)

And lastly, “Other ways you can find me” is for anyone who would like to find me outside of my BlogSpot… through Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Email, AIM and/or Skype. I love getting emails and meeting new people... so feel free to find me or add me as a friend! :)


I hope these links will be beneficial to you and if you have any other questions or comments, dont hesitate to ask/tell! :)

January 5, 2009

A Flock of Geese

My friend John, who just got the implant, was telling me today about how he heard a flock of geese for the first time!



The other day, he went hiking with his dog and heard this weird sound and couldn't figure out what it was. But he noticed his dog looking up, so he looked up to see what he was looking at and saw a whole group of geese flying above him!

He was so excited that he could hear them because before he would have been completely oblivious to them... he would never have known they were flying above him unless he was actually looking at the sky.

Now, if you were out and enjoying nature taking nice hikes through the woods, wouldn't you want to get the full effect and hear all the neat sounds of birds and animals? I know I would! :)

I guess its the little things that we take for granted that mean the most...

It always makes me happy when deaf people hear new sounds for the first time making their faces glow with excitement! I guess you never know what you're missing out on until you hear something for the first time.

January 3, 2009

Living Apartment Style...

I always laughed when people would complain about how they could hear their neighbors when they lived in apartments because I never really thought I would have to worry about it. I never really thought it would bother me because at night I would just take my hearing equipment off and I wouldn't hear anything.

But scratch that...

The other week I stayed with some friends in New York City in their apartment which happened to be on the 17th floor. But even though it was pretty high up, I could STILL hear the traffic outside! It was so annoying when I would be reading or just hanging out there when every ten minutes I'd hear someone honk their horn or hear the police or ambulance go by! It was almost like the windows were open, but they weren't! lol

Even though I wouldn't want to listen to that everyday in my own home... I still thought it was kinda cool that I could hear everything outside from the 17th floor! lol I guess that's something you'd just have to learn to deal with living in the big city!

Here's a picture of the view outside the window...



The city was so much fun though... we had the view of the Empire State Building! :)