At 99 years and six months old, I had a Cochlear Implant! One of my audiologists says I am possibly the oldest person in the world to have had a Cochlear Implant. I had a rough start but I’m getting there - wherever ‘there’ is.
How marvelous Cecil! Were you 100% deaf from birth, or very HOH? Have you been learning English speech easily? Your children must have been so delighted. Am sitting in WA State all misty eyed that you're taking in 99 years of sounds you had missed.
Science at it's best. My 21 yr old daughter received her cochlear implant about 16 yrs ago. Best moment of my life to see her hear for the first time. She's now a neuroscience major in her junior year of college.
PRAISE GOD for your daughters VICTORY! It's a JOY to know she has what she needs, most of all LOVE from GOD and her family. Say hi to her from me. Be sure to tell I said, "GOD BLESS YOU!" Have a GOD day. I pray that the Lord continues to lift up you and those you love. God bless you too! Peace, Lynne 🍃💜🍃
Wow! I'm so glad there's more answers now. My ears are dimming with age but, its always been a little off. I read lips but sometimes can't so, I run the sentence over in my head to get the cadence and flow. Most of the time I get it but, not always.
The thing that most people don't understand about someone this age hearing for the first time is that they don't understand language at all, only sign language. He has a long road ahead of him to learn words and what they all mean and how to pronounce them. I wish him and his family the best!
My son heard his first sounds at age two. I cried like a baby when I saw his expression upon hearing. I am so thankful for the Audiology department at Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario...CHEO, in Ottawa. My son is 28 now and tho profoundly deaf, with the use of hearing aides, has learned to speak and is getting a college education. Happy new year everyone! 🤗♥️🇨🇦‼️
I know when I was little n lived in Ottawa that hospital was amazing to me when I had pneumonia. Man I miss Ottawa so much. I’ve been in London for 26yrs now
@@tinybrownin Ottawa is still there -- why not put it on your bucket list to visit maybe next year? Move heaven and earth to make it happen, and you'll have a wonderful time. Go for it!
@@babawali3021 That is such a nice post to encourage someone. I just wanted you to know that. It's a great idea. May God bless you and your caring heart! Peace, Lynne 🍃💜🍃
250 thumbs down? For this beautiful, awe inspiring, heart warming video? Hey you 250 out there, what hopelessly sad lives you must be living. We pity you.
There's a big argument in another thread about the deaf community feeling like this hurts their pride (some of them). I say it isn't freaking about them, just him, if he wants implants. My friend's oldest son died because he couldn't hear while crossing the road... I don't think anyone should be shamed for wanting to have the means to hear things they can't see.
My guess is that they may have down-voted the instructor because she launched straight into the practicalities and instructions to him instead of letting him absorb the moment and share it with his family with hugs and love. She could have given them a couple of minutes. You can see that they are bursting with emotion and each time he and they crack a smile and a joke she kills it and reverts back to her strict instructions. She needed to back off for even a moment to allow them absorb but she dominated everything, ignoring the emotional aspect of this milestone in the young man's life. People don't always downvote the entire video, just an aspect of the video. This is why I ignore whenever people downvote videos. There are often very reasonable reasons for doing so.
My daughter is 23 and heard for the first time 2 years ago this month. This is awesome. I’m that mom. I cried my eyes out when i saw her face. Congratulations!!!
I was curious how a 15 year old would react, being '15-cool and all,' not the open 'Wow' of younger kids or openly emotionally communicative women. He did superbly well! Both 15 'cool' and very communicative in subtle expressions, glances, reactions..
My mother was deaf, I wish she could have done this. When she was a child in school, she was made fun of and called names. She was ridiculed by her teachers. Her hearing aid required 2 huge batteries they were strapped to her legs. It became such a problem that my grandmother moved and sent my mother and my aunt to school as twins so my mother could understand. Her hearing aids got smaller as time went by. I spent my childhood talking loudly into my moms chest!! ( the aid fit in her bra) my friends parents said I was loud, lol, till they understood. I would have loved to see her hear 💕
Even if the technology existed earlier, cochlear implants don't work on all types of hearing loss. There are different types of hearing loss which effect different parts of the ear or brain. The most common type of hearing loss is sensorineural. It is a permanent hearing loss that occurs when there is damage to either the tiny hair-like cells of the inner ear or the auditory nerve itself, which prevents or weakens the transfer of nerve signals to the brain. Less common, is conductive hearing loss which is caused by damage or blockage to the outer or middle ear. Mixed hearing loss is a combination of sensorineural and conductive hearing loss. Cochlear implants are used on people with sensorineural or mixed hearing loss (in mixed hearing loss only the sensorineural loss will be effected, I believe). Depending on the type of deafness your mother had a Cochlear implant may or may not have worked.
Oh that's beautiful! I'm so sorry your mother had to go through such torment from an ailment that is not her fault! Bless her soul. I hope you are all happy together💖💕💓
Thanks for sharing. I felt every word. Your Mom did her best and she raised you to LOVE and UNDERSTAND. That's a gift. God bless you and your family. I said a prayer for all of you. Peace, Lynne 🍃💜🍃
@@crogers3602 She was born deaf, my grandmother (my moms mom) was deaf and at least one of g'ma sister was deaf also. It was different back then. They treated ppl with disabilities like they were contagious. Thanks for the info.
This has to be so overwhelming for this boy. Because his language is by hand he can also see mouth movements but to hear voices has to be so foreign. I think that’s something we don’t think about, we just assume when he hears voices he’s going to start talking but it’s not that way.
Hey Hey guys! This language is indeed Afrikaans from the Boere in South Africa. Its a very old form of dutch and has changed over many years into its own dialect :)
Bianca M thanks for saying that, I couldn't identify the language. I speak fluent Spanish and Italian, there are a few similarities, obviously a Latin based language...all that aside, so happy for this handsome young man, it must have totally changed his, and his families, world, in the best way possible.
He won't know them as words, but sounds - an entirely different thing. Sign will still be useful to him to distinguish each sound as a word. Six years on from this video he should now have a good vocabulary and understand most aspects of grammar. Speaking should also be enhanced. I hope he is doing well now.
@@stephensaltau6481 ...The boy is at the very earliest stages of hearing. Any music would be a very strange thing, a cacophony; and he would not know the words, I love you, unless they were accompanied by sign language by his mother. Hearing is a completely complex other world that it will take many months, if not possibly years, for him to adjust to, especially with speech. Deaf awareness is absolutely not the same as hearing awareness.
This is very hard work for him ... serious business. Often those with disabilities know they can never be "cool" within their culture; because of the they can develop who there truly are as a human being. All humans have built-in kindness and compassion when culture doesn't kill it.
At about the same time your mom got up crying, I grabbed a tissue and began to cry into it. You are a beautiful young person, and I hope this opens new doors for you. Welcome to the world of sound! I hope you find it a good place!
Bless his heart. At one point he looked frustrated, all but exhausted. It's gotta be difficult to know he must learn to speak and understand the sounds he hears in Afrikaans, not simply read them. With luck he learned some before before it got worse.
This is heartrendingly beautiful. I don't know if he hears what we normally hear but obviously he is getting the message and he can enunciate. This is too wonderful. Thanks. Good on ya mates.
There are other videos with uncontrollable crying. I prefer those. 😅 There aren't many of guys who cry or even get teary-eyed. BUT if you search for videos about seeing color for the first time, there are a lot. (Color blindness disproportionately affects boys.)
Ozzy Girl !* you may not at all. 👂Hearing ever for the first time can be not so great at all. It's a huge 💥impact on the person. It's a significant intrusion to that person's life *** It takes awhile to get used to it. The brain goes into a massive perceptional ⛈️storm!
I have found that the Dutch in general, do not display very much in the way of visible emotions... (I live in Lynden, Washington, where the Dutch abound).
I have a cochlear implant. I have watched a number of these videos lately. I have never had all the other wires coming from it. At the switch on time after a month from the operation all I Had was the disc connected to a computer so the lady could get all the readings on what I could hear then it was programed in to the outer part of the implant and that was it. I have next to perfect hearing. Life is worth living again
What joy you have in front of you, all the music to hear and the sounds of nature we all take these things for granted, so happy for you and your family xx
As a parent who sat there watching is own daughter hear sound for the first time it's very emotional. Our daughter is 33 now, she found it hard entering the earring world. That was a surprise to me and her mum, we automatically thought she would be happy.
If you look at his reactions, he's used to holding back his emotions. BUT. You can sort of see that he reacted differently than a lot of the other people who have had these cochlear implants. Most just start crying. He looked, a few times, like he felt this sense of relief, like he just got one of his life time goals realized. Kid is intelligent and very strong willed. With the help of science, he just completed something that he expected might come a LONG way down the road . . or . .maybe even not at all.
wow, I speak fluent German and this blew my mind... totally confused (until I read the comments below, now I know). How damned interesting. A form of Dutch that seems closer to German, so much so i understood at least 50% or more.
AlternativeDesign100 ...Afrikaans is not a form of Dutch. [AFRI] kaans is as the name suggests..... It is an AFRIcan language.... Some words of Dutch, German, Khoi and Malay all mixed together to form this language, which makes it very unique. This boy's reaction & body language/demenour is typical of the Afrikaner culture which is reserved Christian/Calvanistic.
@@lsmith7266 I am Dutch and I could understand every single word of it (but I'm a linguist and have heard/read Afrikaans before). As a German, you can easily recognize the counting and the days of the week here.
Very very very wonderful & heart warming & incredible hopeful for everyone who can’t hear! By the way I know that this is absolutely NOT important or the point but he is such a handsome kid.
They are speaking Afrikaans, Afrikaners are quite reserved people in public so it's understandable he isn't too emotional would probably cry or show emotion etc away from cameras in private with his family.
hebneh I think he's reserved. He was most certainly prepped for this seeing as he had to have surgery to implant a hearing device. I think he's very reserved as all the other videos show emotion not confusion.
The mother isnt being narcissistic, the technician said "Talk with your mother for a bit" to which the mother said "I cant" and moved back, crying, to which the tech said "Your mother is crying because she is so happy for you"
It brings me to tears, to take an ability as granted and than see something so touching! Am soooo happy for him, it will better his life and that's huge! 🎂🎂🎂🎂Love from Austria 😍
Its Amazing that even though I cannot speak this language that they are speaking, I can still feel & appreciate his & his family's joy & happiness. His mother could hardly contain her happiness, father as well & I was just so happy for him & I could not understand a word, for maybe when she was counting, I think! Beautiful video. He is so handsome!
Our son was two years old when he loss his hearing to meningitis. 3 months latter he was implanted with a cochlear implant. It was an adjustment at first hearing sound again, but he worked through it. We take hearing for granted. You can see in these videos just how much it effects and chances peoples lives. This young man's life will be better for it.
I was going to say, "viruses are a b*tch, but they're not necessarily a virus. Could be from bacteria, fungus or parasite. From breathing it in or changing diapers or coming in contact with poo...
It breaks my heart when I see someone who can't hear. I hope everyone who can't hear will someday get the opportunity to be helped to hear. I'm a musician and I just can't think what life would be without hearing anything. Jurie your life has just begun. God bless you and everyone who's been there for you.
So wonderlik! Dankie dat julle die video deel. Ons vergeet partykeer hoe gelukkig ons is om te kan hoor. Ek hoop alles het goed gegaan met die aanpassing en ontwikkeling!
Het is goed te verstaan. Ik kom uit Nederland leuk om te horen. Een famillielid van mij heeft gewoond in Joburg helaas overleden. Succes met je gehoor 🌍☺
Bless his beautiful heart! ❤️ Every child should have access to this and the other miraculous sense enhancing ie; sight and correcting accoutrements that most of us take for granted, regardless of ability to pay.
whenever I see these videos of especially children being introduced to sound for the first time I always wish that they would play music and the reason I say that is I'm starting to lose my hearing and it's tormenting me because I think that what I will miss most is music
From what I have heard though, it takes some time for the brain to learn to process the inputs from a cochlear implant. Many people describe just hearing a lot of clicks the first few days.
I felt exactly the same way as you at first viewing but after reading through some of the comments here, from both those that have had this specific procedure done and also some of the families that have commented on their own personal experiences, where it's not necessarily been the greatest of decisions they have made, I can see why they may want to dislike the video. There's also a technical issue in regards to the subtitles as it automatically subtitles in French and despite trying to change the language (for my on personal use) into English, the translation is terrible. Despite me refreshing the page several times, it refuses to translate and or just get stuck on one sentence and then crashes the video. I personally pressed the like button but I can now see why others may not. 🙂
He might just be in shock hearing his voice for the first time! :-) Sometimes people don't know how to react emotionally, because they've never connected emotion with sound--something hearing people have done all their lives. I think he was emotionally affected, but was still in a state of surprise. Also, for people who have never heard the sound of their own voice, it may be high-pitched at first until his brain starts to regularly receive signals and then start recognizing those sounds as human speech.
The things we take for granted. I can imagine how overwhelming this has to be. Living in a silent world your whole life and while it would be wondrous to hear, the world is so damned loud.
At 99 years and six months old, I had a Cochlear Implant! One of my audiologists says I am possibly the
oldest person in the world to have had a Cochlear Implant. I had a rough start but I’m getting there - wherever
‘there’ is.
How marvelous Cecil! Were you 100% deaf from birth, or very HOH? Have you been learning English speech easily? Your children must have been so delighted. Am sitting in WA State all misty eyed that you're taking in 99 years of sounds you had missed.
Ur last year playing lego (3-99)
@@son-of-the-moorish-empire Lots of people over 100, just wait.
My gramma lost half her hearing from scarlet fever as a kid. Still alive at close to your age.
BOI WHA DA HELL
Science at it's best. My 21 yr old daughter received her cochlear implant about 16 yrs ago. Best moment of my life to see her hear for the first time. She's now a neuroscience major in her junior year of college.
Congratulations to your entire family.
Send her our love!
Wonderful !! Marvelous !!
PRAISE GOD for your daughters VICTORY! It's a JOY to know she has what she needs, most of all LOVE from GOD and her family. Say hi to her from me. Be sure to tell I said, "GOD BLESS YOU!"
Have a GOD day. I pray that the Lord continues to lift up you and those you love. God bless you too!
Peace, Lynne 🍃💜🍃
Wow! I'm so glad there's more answers now. My ears are dimming with age but, its always been a little off. I read lips but sometimes can't so, I run the sentence over in my head to get the cadence and flow. Most of the time I get it but, not always.
Oh he is such a handsome lad bless him all emotions in one room im in tears.
He turned to his Mother immediately and she got up and walked away.
Me too
To be honest, he looks older than his age
S M yeah I wonder about that. Like why she got up and walked away.
@@dulceski6861 Maybe she felt guilty for his disability and couldn't handle it? Or she didn't want to cry.
The thing that most people don't understand about someone this age hearing for the first time is that they don't understand language at all, only sign language.
He has a long road ahead of him to learn words and what they all mean and how to pronounce them.
I wish him and his family the best!
He will do great!
1970's Chick Exactly what I was thinking....that’s a lot of words to be bombarded with, bless his heart.
I was wondering. Just happy he can hear
Exactly. So why is she speaking to him? He wouldn’t understand.
@@Paulinrnke He seems to be able to read lips, and she was speaking slowly and clearly so he's now matching sounds to the lip formations he sees.
My son heard his first sounds at age two. I cried like a baby when I saw his expression upon hearing. I am so thankful for the Audiology department at Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario...CHEO, in Ottawa. My son is 28 now and tho profoundly deaf, with the use of hearing aides, has learned to speak and is getting a college education. Happy new year everyone! 🤗♥️🇨🇦‼️
Kimberly Knott aww! I'm soo happy for you and your son!
THATS AWESOME! PRAISE GOD! May He continue to bless you and your son with everything you both need to be happy and healthy!
Peace, Lynne 🍃💜🍃
I know when I was little n lived in Ottawa that hospital was amazing to me when I had pneumonia. Man I miss Ottawa so much. I’ve been in London for 26yrs now
@@tinybrownin Ottawa is still there -- why not put it on your bucket list to visit maybe next year? Move heaven and earth to make it happen, and you'll have a wonderful time. Go for it!
@@babawali3021 That is such a nice post to encourage someone. I just wanted you to know that. It's a great idea. May God bless you and your caring heart!
Peace, Lynne 🍃💜🍃
the language of joy is universal. All the best chap.
heisenberg all the way
❤
Yes
Can you hear me now?
@@jenlovesjesus face x xfcdc
250 thumbs down? For this beautiful, awe inspiring, heart warming video?
Hey you 250 out there, what hopelessly sad lives you must be living. We pity you.
There's a big argument in another thread about the deaf community feeling like this hurts their pride (some of them). I say it isn't freaking about them, just him, if he wants implants. My friend's oldest son died because he couldn't hear while crossing the road... I don't think anyone should be shamed for wanting to have the means to hear things they can't see.
Mostly bots; don’t let it bother you. The deaf community would not deny this happiness, though it does represent a culture at risk.
My guess is that they may have down-voted the instructor because she launched straight into the practicalities and instructions to him instead of letting him absorb the moment and share it with his family with hugs and love. She could have given them a couple of minutes. You can see that they are bursting with emotion and each time he and they crack a smile and a joke she kills it and reverts back to her strict instructions. She needed to back off for even a moment to allow them absorb but she dominated everything, ignoring the emotional aspect of this milestone in the young man's life. People don't always downvote the entire video, just an aspect of the video. This is why I ignore whenever people downvote videos. There are often very reasonable reasons for doing so.
Maybe they thumbdown this because it's not in english
They must be evil the people with thumps down. Beautiful young lad
That sweet thing he looks so overwhelmed I just wanna hug him
Me too! Just watching on 07/19/21
Me, too. I kept hoping someone from his family would reach out to him.
@@irishdivajeffries6668 Watching 13 Jan 2022
My daughter is 23 and heard for the first time 2 years ago this month. This is awesome. I’m that mom. I cried my eyes out when i saw her face. Congratulations!!!
Awe! He looks so nervous, a little scared. Bless his heart! Such a handsome young man. Happy for all of you!
I was curious how a 15 year old would react, being '15-cool and all,' not the open 'Wow' of younger kids or openly emotionally communicative women. He did superbly well! Both 15 'cool' and very communicative in subtle expressions, glances, reactions..
I was thinking he'd probably holdim back his tears.
My heart goes out to those who loved this boy and to the people who made it possible for him to hear.
Such a pleasure to see a Young man helped to hear. The young deserve every chance in life.
My mother was deaf, I wish she could have done this. When she was a child in school, she was made fun of and called names. She was ridiculed by her teachers. Her hearing aid required 2 huge batteries they were strapped to her legs. It became such a problem that my grandmother moved and sent my mother and my aunt to school as twins so my mother could understand. Her hearing aids got smaller as time went by. I spent my childhood talking loudly into my moms chest!! ( the aid fit in her bra) my friends parents said I was loud, lol, till they understood. I would have loved to see her hear 💕
Even if the technology existed earlier, cochlear implants don't work on all types of hearing loss. There are different types of hearing loss which effect different parts of the ear or brain. The most common type of hearing loss is sensorineural. It is a permanent hearing loss that occurs when there is damage to either the tiny hair-like cells of the inner ear or the auditory nerve itself, which prevents or weakens the transfer of nerve signals to the brain. Less common, is conductive hearing loss which is caused by damage or blockage to the outer or middle ear. Mixed hearing loss is a combination of sensorineural and conductive hearing loss. Cochlear implants are used on people with sensorineural or mixed hearing loss (in mixed hearing loss only the sensorineural loss will be effected, I believe). Depending on the type of deafness your mother had a Cochlear implant may or may not have worked.
Oh that's beautiful! I'm so sorry your mother had to go through such torment from an ailment that is not her fault! Bless her soul. I hope you are all happy together💖💕💓
Thanks for sharing. I felt every word. Your Mom did her best and she raised you to LOVE and UNDERSTAND. That's a gift. God bless you and your family. I said a prayer for all of you.
Peace, Lynne 🍃💜🍃
Loss or lack of hearing is so awful. Potentially very lonely I imagine.
@@crogers3602 She was born deaf, my grandmother (my moms mom) was deaf and at least one of g'ma sister was deaf also. It was different back then. They treated ppl with disabilities like they were contagious. Thanks for the info.
His smile tells you everything you need to know.
I no idea about what they are saying but I'm very happy for him and his family.
Exactly! So happy for him! And his parents!
it tells you that dutch or wtv is the funniest fucking language in the world
@@iRaps1 afrikaans
This video still tugs at my heart. Have seen it several times. I feel so happy for him, a little teary eyed. His joyous smile speaks volumes.
This has to be so overwhelming for this boy. Because his language is by hand he can also see mouth movements but to hear voices has to be so foreign. I think that’s something we don’t think about, we just assume when he hears voices he’s going to start talking but it’s not that way.
It also sounds kind of mechanical.
Don't really care what the language is. over here bawling like a baby. so happy for him and his family.
He is speaking Afrikaans, one of South Africa's languages. Thanks for caring
@@milly8522 i thought it was Dutch 😁
@@selihter Afrikaans stems from the Dutch language.
@@milly8522 thanks. Hope you stay well and adapt to the world we are in:)
@@selihter , First I thought it was Fries language, language of Dutch province in the north.I was living in Nederland for 30 years.
Hey Hey guys! This language is indeed Afrikaans from the Boere in South Africa. Its a very old form of dutch and has changed over many years into its own dialect :)
I'm not a native Dutch speaker, but it's fun to realise that I'm able to understand quite a lot of Afrikaans :)
i was like witch language is this it sounds so dutch
Yes, they can actually communicate with Dutch speakers.
NJ
Bianca M thanks for saying that, I couldn't identify the language. I speak fluent Spanish and Italian, there are a few similarities, obviously a Latin based language...all that aside, so happy for this handsome young man, it must have totally changed his, and his families, world, in the best way possible.
I need a "love" button for this one! Beautiful moments to watch. Thank you.
Oh how exciting it was after fifteen years of not hearing he is finally able hear his first words. Congratulations!!!
He won't know them as words, but sounds - an entirely different thing. Sign will still be useful to him to distinguish each sound as a word. Six years on from this video he should now have a good vocabulary and understand most aspects of grammar. Speaking should also be enhanced. I hope he is doing well now.
I would like to see him listen to some Yes or Mozart for the first time or when his mother says I love you.
@@stephensaltau6481 ...The boy is at the very earliest stages of hearing. Any music would be a very strange thing, a cacophony; and he would not know the words, I love you, unless they were accompanied by sign language by his mother. Hearing is a completely complex other world that it will take many months, if not possibly years, for him to adjust to, especially with speech. Deaf awareness is absolutely not the same as hearing awareness.
My heart is running over with joy for him, and his family
So happy for him. I must say, he has the nicest smile.
This young man’s face is sooo sincere...I’m sure he has a kind heart ❤️
This is very hard work for him ... serious business. Often those with disabilities know they can never be "cool" within their culture; because of the they can develop who there truly are as a human being. All humans have built-in kindness and compassion when culture doesn't kill it.
What a gift for this young man. Talking about a life changer. I wish I could have given him a hug myself.
He is implanted with the product from my company!!! So proud~~~~
Hey
May i ask which product .
Yanju Liu good job. My job sucks and I help no one with anything.
sadam ankara Advanced Bionics
sadam ankara Yes, he is implanted with Hifocus 1J implant with Naida Speech Processor
Yanju Liu all right! your company did good! chi chi
At about the same time your mom got up crying, I grabbed a tissue and began to cry into it. You are a beautiful young person, and I hope this opens new doors for you. Welcome to the world of sound! I hope you find it a good place!
Beautiful.... His daddy is so emotional. They are so blessed and 😊 happy.
Such a life changer for this handsome young man. I work in retail and have seen toddlers w/ the hearing implants. I wear hearing aids myself
I can’t believe any one would give something like this a thumbs down
Trolls have no hearts
Sad
Imagine hearing your family say, "I love you" for the first time! How wonderful. This is my favorite video of the day.
I bet it was wonderful to hear the birds chirping for the first time. A dog barking. A cat meowing. Very wonderful.
God Bless.
Brings me joy he can hear, something we take for granted. God bless you.
Bless his heart. At one point he looked frustrated, all but exhausted. It's gotta be difficult to know he must learn to speak and understand the sounds he hears in Afrikaans, not simply read them. With luck he learned some before before it got worse.
This is heartrendingly beautiful. I don't know if he hears what we normally hear but obviously he is getting the message and he can enunciate. This is too wonderful. Thanks. Good on ya mates.
Omg...I'm so happy for this young man! Thank you God! Check out his reaction..it's priceless!
😁😁😁🍺
I'm so happy this cutie can now have a better life. May he be blessed
What a stoic 15 year old. I'd be crying uncontrollably for sure.
I did! SO wonderful.
There are other videos with uncontrollable crying. I prefer those. 😅 There aren't many of guys who cry or even get teary-eyed. BUT if you search for videos about seeing color for the first time, there are a lot. (Color blindness disproportionately affects boys.)
Ozzy Girl !* you may not at all. 👂Hearing ever for the first time can be not so great at all. It's a huge 💥impact on the person.
It's a significant intrusion to that person's life ***
It takes awhile to get used to it. The brain goes into a massive perceptional ⛈️storm!
He's probably in shock
I have found that the Dutch in general, do not display very much in the way of visible emotions... (I live in Lynden, Washington, where the Dutch abound).
So happy for him. It's so wonderful to hear Afrikaans being spoken. Takes me back home to SA.
It's that lovely little smile that's so special, no wonder his mum cried, bless him he looks so concerned for her
His father looks so proud. Beautiful
A new world in front of you. Congratulations. From Chile.
Otec Estrella Milenaria vamos chile
Land down under!
I'm so happy for them. Everyone deserves too see ,hear, laugh, and be happy!❤
These are some of my favorite videos on UA-cam. They are amazing and moving.
Can't get enough of these heartfelt and beautiful clips.
Can't put a price on some things 🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌
His smile melted my heart !
What is even more amazing is that he did not understand Afrikaans before.
He did not understand anything.
I have a cochlear implant. I have watched a number of these videos lately. I have never had all the other wires coming from it. At the switch on time after a month from the operation all I Had was the disc connected to a computer so the lady could get all the readings on what I could hear then it was programed in to the outer part of the implant and that was it. I have next to perfect hearing. Life is worth living again
I feel so happy for this young man and his family, it makes me cry 😭
That dad can never say that kid isn't his. If you ever want to know what the dad looked like when he was young just look at that kid. :)
God Bless him and his family and the hearing people who made it possible ..
What joy you have in front of you, all the music to hear and the sounds of nature we all take these things for granted, so happy for you and your family xx
As a parent who sat there watching is own daughter hear sound for the first time it's very emotional. Our daughter is 33 now, she found it hard entering the earring world. That was a surprise to me and her mum, we automatically thought she would be happy.
How beautiful to see this, a whole new world is now open to this young man!!!!!
If you look at his reactions, he's used to holding back his emotions. BUT. You can sort of see that he reacted differently than a lot of the other people who have had these cochlear implants. Most just start crying. He looked, a few times, like he felt this sense of relief, like he just got one of his life time goals realized. Kid is intelligent and very strong willed. With the help of science, he just completed something that he expected might come a LONG way down the road . . or . .maybe even not at all.
Handsome boy. This is a beautiful moment. God bless this family.
I love it when he hears his family laughing; he seems to be confused then it dawns in him what’s happening. Wow laughter for the first time - amazing!
wow, I speak fluent German and this blew my mind... totally confused (until I read the comments below, now I know). How damned interesting. A form of Dutch that seems closer to German, so much so i understood at least 50% or more.
AlternativeDesign100 ...Afrikaans is not a form of Dutch. [AFRI] kaans is as the name suggests..... It is an AFRIcan language.... Some words of Dutch, German, Khoi and Malay all mixed together to form this language, which makes it very unique. This boy's reaction & body language/demenour is typical of the Afrikaner culture which is reserved Christian/Calvanistic.
Woher kommst du?
directdude100 ... Sorry, but in everything said to this young man and his family, not one word of the Afrikaans spoken was German, Khoi or Malay.
@@lsmith7266 I am Dutch and I could understand every single word of it (but I'm a linguist and have heard/read Afrikaans before). As a German, you can easily recognize the counting and the days of the week here.
@@directdude100 men in SA dont often show much emotion. it is a hard life their
Very very very wonderful & heart warming & incredible hopeful for everyone who can’t hear! By the way I know that this is absolutely NOT important or the point but he is such a handsome kid.
Couldn’t watch for more than a few minutes then came back to finish watching. This video hits home. 💕
I watch these every time I come across them. Just beautiful. I can’t imagine how wonderful this must feel.
Makes me want to cry we take things for granted.
They are speaking Afrikaans, Afrikaners are quite reserved people in public so it's understandable he isn't too emotional would probably cry or show emotion etc away from cameras in private with his family.
I think he's more confused and trying to figure out what's going on, than being "reserved".
hebneh I think he's reserved. He was most certainly prepped for this seeing as he had to have surgery to implant a hearing device. I think he's very reserved as all the other videos show emotion not confusion.
What an unempathetic person you are :(
The mother isnt being narcissistic, the technician said
"Talk with your mother for a bit" to which the mother said "I cant" and moved back, crying, to which the tech said "Your mother is crying because she is so happy for you"
Charmaine Harrison Unless they are angry then they are not reserved in public at all.
It brings me to tears, to take an ability as granted and than see something so touching! Am soooo happy for him, it will better his life and that's huge! 🎂🎂🎂🎂Love from Austria 😍
He is 15 and OMGosh he can hear but so much he has to learn this is one story that is Sad but Wonderful at the same time God Bless Him ✌💙
I am Dutch, but it always makes me smile when I hear some Afrikaans 🙂
This is the type of thing I love to see on social media.... something so beautiful
So amazing! Such a tremendous gift that most of us take for granted.
So sweet! Thanks for helping him!
I'm an English speaking South African and stumbled on this by chance.I guess this youngster's life has changed quite a bit in the last 3 years.
You are are not South African then and neither is this boy.
@@healingandgrowth-infp4677 i bet you a hundred million trillion billion Rand I am and so is he
So weird to listen to this as a Dutchman. They're speaking Suid-Afrikaans but I can understand everything they're saying.
It's just called Afrikaans. Similar to Dutch
Wow that's very cool ,now your bilingual .
I understand some Ebonix ,so i guess you could say i am bilingual. .
Afrikaans is such a lovely language. So simple and so complex. Ek wonder hoe Jurie nou hoor.
Tragically the entire family was killed in a carjacking immediately on leaving the clinic. So a bitter-sweet day for the Du Plessis.
I have so much emotions watching this video ! It makes me cry
Its Amazing that even though I cannot speak this language that they are speaking, I can still feel & appreciate his & his family's joy & happiness. His mother could hardly contain her happiness, father as well & I was just so happy for him & I could not understand a word, for maybe when she was counting, I think! Beautiful video. He is so handsome!
It's lovely to hear the gradual improvement in his speech now that he can hear. It's even more lovely to hear them doing this in Afrikaans.
Using sign language together with talking to him and patience will help him eventually ❣️ wishing him the best, he’s a fine young Ladd 👍🙏
Our son was two years old when he loss his hearing to meningitis. 3 months latter he was implanted with a cochlear implant. It was an adjustment at first hearing sound again, but he worked through it. We take hearing for granted. You can see in these videos just how much it effects and chances peoples lives. This young man's life will be better for it.
I was going to say, "viruses are a b*tch, but they're not necessarily a virus. Could be from bacteria, fungus or parasite. From breathing it in or changing diapers or coming in contact with poo...
It breaks my heart when I see someone who can't hear. I hope everyone who can't hear will someday get the opportunity to be helped to hear. I'm a musician and I just can't think what life would be without hearing anything. Jurie your life has just begun. God bless you and everyone who's been there for you.
The ‘thumbs down’ guys think that everything on UA-cam should be in English, and that any other language has no value.
I wonder if English sounds as funny to other speakers, and some languages do to those of us who are English speakers - I'm sure it does!
I can imagine it would all be foreign language!! So happy for he and his family!!🙏🙏
These videos are so important. May we embrace our blessings and our differences. The expressions on his fave are priceless.
Omg...how sweetly emotional...so happy for this young man.
So wonderlik! Dankie dat julle die video deel. Ons vergeet partykeer hoe gelukkig ons is om te kan hoor. Ek hoop alles het goed gegaan met die aanpassing en ontwikkeling!
🙏🏻
Het is goed te verstaan. Ik kom uit Nederland leuk om te horen. Een famillielid van mij heeft gewoond in Joburg helaas overleden. Succes met je gehoor 🌍☺
Amazing, this is Dutch 👍i thought at first the video were in Dutch speaking language lol
he has such a beautiful smooth clear voice already just from that tiny bit of listening wow
Bless his beautiful heart! ❤️ Every child should have access to this and the other miraculous sense enhancing ie; sight and correcting accoutrements that most of us take for granted, regardless of ability to pay.
He is so cute ..♡
I'm not crying...I have something in my eye..
Me too. ❤
What jerk would dislike a video where a child gets the ability to hear. It is an awesome thing for him.
He looks to be a shy guy but a very nice person I think. Lots of love from parents. He is also handsome and girls will like him a lot
I love watching this instead of all the crap that's going on in the world today. Best wishes young man.
whenever I see these videos of especially children being introduced to sound for the first time I always wish that they would play music and the reason I say that is I'm starting to lose my hearing and it's tormenting me because I think that what I will miss most is music
Is there anything they can do? There's a new movie about that. He's a musician, a drummer..
So sorry to hear. Bless you.❤
From what I have heard though, it takes some time for the brain to learn to process the inputs from a cochlear implant. Many people describe just hearing a lot of clicks the first few days.
IN MY VIEW
I will never stop appreciating the pleasure the hearing recipients have when they experience hearing.
Awww, must be totally overwhelming , hope that you adjust to hearing soon ,amazing ,thankyou for sharing xx
Not every day that you see a son who looks so much like his father.
U must never leave your house
How heartless do you have to be to down vote this Beautiful moment of Joy? I'll Never understand some people...
I felt exactly the same way as you at first viewing but after reading through some of the comments here, from both those that have had this specific procedure done and also some of the families that have commented on their own personal experiences, where it's not necessarily been the greatest of decisions they have made, I can see why they may want to dislike the video. There's also a technical issue in regards to the subtitles as it automatically subtitles in French and despite trying to change the language (for my on personal use) into English, the translation is terrible. Despite me refreshing the page several times, it refuses to translate and or just get stuck on one sentence and then crashes the video. I personally pressed the like button but I can now see why others may not. 🙂
I'm so happy for this young man! God bless him.
Such a handsom sweet young lad. So happy for him!!!
Good for him, no matter what language!
One of Sourh Africa's languages Afrikaans
Crazy Dutch kid. Hard as fuck. Not a tear shed
This is not Dutch dude, it's Afrikaans.
He might just be in shock hearing his voice for the first time! :-) Sometimes people don't know how to react emotionally, because they've never connected emotion with sound--something hearing people have done all their lives. I think he was emotionally affected, but was still in a state of surprise. Also, for people who have never heard
the sound of their own voice, it may be high-pitched at first until his brain starts to regularly receive
signals and then start recognizing those sounds as human speech.
its some kind of mixture of dutch and other stuff in it
it sounds more like south african (charlize theron) wich sound very much like dutch
***** wtf
The things we take for granted. I can imagine how overwhelming this has to be. Living in a silent world your whole life and while it would be wondrous to hear, the world is so damned loud.
The best thing in LIFE! This is beautiful. I hope all children can hear for the rest of their lives.