The Face Hole Series

I Can’t Hear You

The Difference Between Hearing and Listening

Dr. Linda Dahl
6 min readJul 21, 2022

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Working in New York City, I see a lot of patients who think they have hearing loss. They can’t hear conversations at business dinners. They have to ask people to repeat themselves at parties. They struggle to hear phone calls when they are walking down the street. These aren’t necessarily older people, by the way. Most of them are young and healthy with no history of hearing loss.

Last week, one such patient came in at her husband’s request.

“He keeps complaining he has to yell from the other room to get my attention. Why can’t I hear him?” she asked.

“Because you are married,” I joked.

She didn’t laugh.

“Let me take a look,” I said, proceeding to do what I normally do, which is first check for earwax. Much to my disappointment, there was no sticky glob to remove that would magically restore her hearing. So I looked for other possibilities, like fluid in her middle ear, an external ear infection, or exostoses, which are bony growths in the ear canal that happen from swimming in cold waters. I also made her try to pop her ear so I could check that her eardrum was moving. Everything looked good.

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Dr. Linda Dahl
Dr. Linda Dahl

Written by Dr. Linda Dahl

Physician. Author of Tooth and Nail:The Making of a Female Fight Doctor & Better Breastfeeding, http://www.drlindadahl.com @doctorlindadahl