The bride insisted I remove my hearing aids for her wedding day because they were “too noticeable” and would ruin her perfect photos. When I refused to go practically deaf for her special day, she told my cousin I was trying to destroy their relationship—and it all blew up in her face in a way none of us saw coming. I’m writing this because a small, stubborn part of me still wonders if I was wrong for drawing the line.
The rest of me knows that line probably saved my cousin from marrying the wrong person. My cousin Bethany (26F) and I (22F) grew up in that very American kind of closeness where “cousin” doesn’t really cover it. We were more like sisters.
We lived a few blocks apart in a middle‑class suburb outside Columbus, Ohio—the kind of neighborhood with Little League games at the park, PTA bake sales, and an American flag on half the porches. Friday nights meant high school football, Dairy Queen after the game, and church on Sunday whether you liked it or not. Our moms are sisters.
Holidays were always loud and crowded: Thanksgiving turkey crammed around the same scratched‑up dining table, Fourth of July cookouts with discount sparklers in my aunt’s backyard, Christmas Eve at my grandmother’s little white house with the fake fireplace channel playing on TV and too many people squeezed into too small a living room. When I was seven, everything got a little quieter for me. My parents took me to Nationwide Children’s Hospital in downtown Columbus because I kept asking “Huh?” and turning the TV up so loud it shook the windows.
A pediatric audiologist in bright green scrubs put me in a sound booth, slipped big headphones over my ears, and told me to raise my hand whenever I heard a beep. I didn’t raise my hand as often as I should have. After what felt like a hundred tests, the doctor sat my parents down and explained that I had moderate hearing loss in both ears.
Genetic. Progressive. I remember the long hallway with the cartoon murals more than her exact words, but I do remember my mom going very still and my dad nodding slowly like he was trying not to look scared.
A week later, I walked into second grade wearing my first pair of hearing aids. They were plastic, beige, and enormous in my mind. The first day I wore them, kids at our public elementary school stared like I’d grown antennae.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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