This story began four years ago in Australia. Jamie, a healthy female, was born in one of the community clinics. The parents were pleased, but something was wrong with the baby within the first month of his life. “Our infant didn’t respond at all to the noises.” “So we went to the doctors,” Ben, the family patriarch, recalls.
Doctors confirmed that the girl has serious hearing loss. The right ear is deafeningly deafeningly deafeningly deafeningly deafeningly deafeningly dea. There was just one way out: surgery and the use of a special hearing aid. According to Jamie’s mother, Lisa Pliksh, Jamie quickly adapted to the implant, and there were no difficulties for the first several months.
It all started when the girl started to gnash her teeth. “As my baby got older, she became more interested in the world around her.” She effectively chewed our first hearing aid. “And at the time, I thought it would be good to repair it,” she says. What was the mother’s surprise when she discovered only a few variations of caps with implants attached at a specialized store? They lacked a distinctive design and were uninspiring.
“I concluded I had to create my own hearing aid design.” After some thought, I created a silky, vivid bandage that both secured the implant and adorned my baby.”
It’s worth noting that not only Jamie, but also her friends, agreed on this idea. Lisa had gotten her first orders for these headbands. As my daughter grew older, so did the design of the fasteners.
I now embellish with rhinestones, sequins, jewelry, and fabric. Jamie and I are currently working on jewelry together. “My daughter adores pink and gleaming stones.” Lisa Pliksh’s reputation for creating hearing aid accessories has grown to the point where she has launched her own online store called “Lisa’s Quiet World.”