Kyle Draganov
Kyle Draganov
  • 3
  • 309 340
Bike Home From Work ride - Ashley River Memorial Bridge
Bike Month 2017 - Bike to work day - Bike home from work ride with police escort across the Ashley River Memorial Bridge in Charleston SC.
There is currently no safe way to cross the Ashley River from West Ashley or James Island to downtown. On Bike to work day 2017, Charleston Moves worked with Charleston Police to provide police escorts before and after work. What a beautiful ride it was. Motorists are not able to appreciate the spectacular views while navigating traffic across the bridge. But, on a bike it is a completely different experience!
There is a plan for a bike lane on the Legare Bridge in to downtown Charleston. The City of Charleston has voted to implement it. However, the project has stalled with the Charleston County Council.
If you'd like to ride across the Ashley River Bridge, learn more and get in touch with your County Council representative at the link below.
charlestonmoves.org/legare-bridge/
Note: Time stamp on video is incorrect. This ride took place at 6:30pm.
zhlédnutí: 372

Video

Baby Ducks stuck in sewer pipe reunited with mom
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 9 lety
Mother duck was frantically circling a storm drain outside my office window. Angela, Jacob and Linda got them out (with a few of us joining shortly after) and relocated them for a reunion with momma duck.
Kelly's Cochlear Implant Activation
zhlédnutí 308KPřed 9 lety
Kelly's cochlear implant activation after several years of diminishing hearing due to ototoxicity from drugs related to Cystic Fibrosis and double lung transplant. She has had almost complete hearing lost for the past year.

Komentáře

  • @111MyTube1111
    @111MyTube1111 Před 7 měsíci

    Bap bap bah

  • @viviengreen7486
    @viviengreen7486 Před 10 měsíci

    Being implanted back in 1997 and re implanted 2019 Technology of internal was as good back in 1997 now the external processors with Bluetooth tech are amazing going from body worn processors to behind the ear was a huge step for me. So glad I was chosen to be first in South West England Uk and knowing they have done thousands of patients including children, babies since is outstanding.

  • @saltyswamper2113
    @saltyswamper2113 Před 11 měsíci

    Is this Elizabeth C. ?

  • @loisjackson3846
    @loisjackson3846 Před rokem

    My granddaughter has these and you would never know. I am so thankful for them. 10 yrs. Now.

  • @casualcrybaby
    @casualcrybaby Před rokem

    She is so lovely for asking about technology for blindness.. bless her heart. I’m so glad she had a good experience.

  • @BadTiger
    @BadTiger Před rokem

    In the middle of that she cares for the blind getting the same miracle. Jesus Christ that woman is a Saint

  • @mygirldarby
    @mygirldarby Před rokem

    If I could go back in time I would have become an audiologist or a speech therapist. I find this field so interesting.

  • @vgrof2315
    @vgrof2315 Před rokem

    Bravo!

  • @XrpAndy
    @XrpAndy Před rokem

    The way the doctor talks slow and mouths the words is incredible patient service

  • @calvingarrett3245
    @calvingarrett3245 Před 2 lety

    Well I've been watching a few of these videos and they put this thing on their ear? That's not a implant that's just a upgraded hearing aid the way I see it there's no implant to do with this and if I'm wrong please enlighten me.

    • @juliap.5375
      @juliap.5375 Před rokem

      You are wrong. Do you see that thing, some disk on cord which she put somewhere to back side of head? She connected it right to implant.

    • @calvingarrett3245
      @calvingarrett3245 Před rokem

      @@juliap.5375 Yes I forgot to correct my comment before I seen how they were doing that but it was a few videos later when I actually seen how they were doing it thank you for bringing it to my attention

  • @meharazhossainriyadh4908

    আমি লিখতে পারিনা আমি পড়তে পারি না কানে শুনি না কথা বলতে পারি না বাক প্রতিবন্ধী--

  • @dalehenry5233
    @dalehenry5233 Před 2 lety

    When I had mine turned on for the first time, It scared the bee geezus out of me, but sounded funny too but after a few days it started making more sense.

  • @googlinstuff8910
    @googlinstuff8910 Před 2 lety

    This is the most beautiful thing I have ever watched. I am late 50's and I am crying. Thank yolu.

    • @juliap.5375
      @juliap.5375 Před rokem

      You have unstable psycho system. Or maybe too lot of stresses and fears in your life? Illness, debt, something like that?

    • @googlinstuff8910
      @googlinstuff8910 Před rokem

      @@juliap.5375 No, I am merely expressing my thoughts and emotions while watching someone joyfully react to what I have taken for granted all of my life. Which includes vision, which includes reading, which includes reading your assinine question. I am still grateful, despite that. I would imagine that enduring the terror of living in China, as you do, has removed several essential aspects of humanity that you do not recognize.

  • @ElliLavender
    @ElliLavender Před 2 lety

    that's fascinating! I honestly didn't know that patients with a new cochlear implant can understand words so quickly. I thought the brain needs more time to adapt tbh!

    • @juliap.5375
      @juliap.5375 Před rokem

      People have different brains. Look how some singers can use dozens languages, without accent (you know, different language have different sounds, often unique for language). They just hear example and immediately repeat it. While majority of people, regular people, even can’t understand and repeat what they just heard, they need months to hear and often years to repeat correctly. Aa example watch video “Alisa Supronova Katysha”, girl sing in 40 different languages.

    • @hairtoss7975
      @hairtoss7975 Před rokem

      4:25 - She lost her hearing, she wasn't born deaf, so she already knew what the words are, she just had to remember/reactivate/retrain her brain.

  • @CMTZ11
    @CMTZ11 Před 2 lety

    So we are going to play some soothing sounds to test out for you “Hello, my name is Morgan Freeman and I want to tell you the story of apple pie”

  • @renemanuel7128
    @renemanuel7128 Před 2 lety

    Yes on the little ones.

  • @renemanuel7128
    @renemanuel7128 Před 2 lety

    Like my former teacher when she heard her voice on a tape recorder versus hearing from from inside out.

  • @chasingthelight7139
    @chasingthelight7139 Před 2 lety

    Kelly...she's a keeper

  • @lesskinner8588
    @lesskinner8588 Před 2 lety

    I've just had my surgery nearly 6 weeks ago, and the cochlear turned on for 3 weeks. I had exposure to ototoxic chemicals, as well as excessive workplace noise over a 42 year working life (so far). Ototoxic chemicals, drugs, pesticides, you really have to know what you are exposing yourself to in this modern world. Congrats to Kelly, after 8 years or so, I bet you are doing great, well I hope so. All the best.

  • @keeponkeepingon4357
    @keeponkeepingon4357 Před 2 lety

    Play them some zeppelin

  • @ShanonT12
    @ShanonT12 Před 2 lety

    Thank you thank you thank you for sharing with the world. This brightened my day, made me smile and extremely grateful to doctors and technology. ❤️

  • @johnfenn
    @johnfenn Před 2 lety

    This girl is super smart, the smartest patient of all of these videos.

  • @adart2496
    @adart2496 Před 2 lety

    I’d would love to know what her voice sounded like before she lost her hearing. I imagine if u can’t hear, you phonate differently. Lovely sounding voice now, though, regardless.

    • @kyledraganov
      @kyledraganov Před 2 lety

      Her voice actually never changed. She had hearing loss for a little over a year. Though, when her cochlear is not on, she sometimes doesn’t know how loud she’s talking.

    • @adart2496
      @adart2496 Před 2 lety

      @@kyledraganov Oh! Thank you. What a great spirit she is.

  • @youtubeblockscomments

    The people who made this device, thank you!

  • @Cookenour
    @Cookenour Před 2 lety

    As I'm in the process of being evaluated for this implant and watching videos of those who have them, Kelly made me laugh at 1:08, only out of mutual experiences as she says to say that again. It takes someone with such hearing loss as ours to know the feelings. So glad to see that she's on the path of hearing.

  • @lewishobbs9549
    @lewishobbs9549 Před 2 lety

    Good for hearing people not for deaf people ,…. put device in my skull (brain) no thank you. Hearing Aid will do ,…..wonder if you have heart can have electric shock your heart will it burn your brain ?

    • @kyledraganov
      @kyledraganov Před 2 lety

      I’ve never heard anything about electric shock concerns. It doesn’t actually touch the brain, the line goes outside skull to the cochlea. But, I do know that if she needs an MRI, the implant needs to be removed. She tried hearing aids, those did not work. She had almost total hearing loss when she got the implants. I do know that many who are born deaf are not interested, but for someone who had hearing her whole life this has been an amazing help for her.

  • @gkprivate433
    @gkprivate433 Před 2 lety

    We should spend billions on things such as this instead trying to land on the moon again

  • @gkprivate433
    @gkprivate433 Před 2 lety

    Wow, what she went through and still smiles. What a positive person

  • @Ibrahim-cs3qj
    @Ibrahim-cs3qj Před 2 lety

    I have a deaf brother please answer me ,where is here

    • @kyledraganov
      @kyledraganov Před 2 lety

      This is in South Carolina, USA.

    • @Ibrahim-cs3qj
      @Ibrahim-cs3qj Před 2 lety

      @@kyledraganov thank you for answer, how you know that.Could you say which hospital is it and number or email of hospital

  • @Ibrahim-cs3qj
    @Ibrahim-cs3qj Před 2 lety

    Where is here

  • @tipoftheicebergicy6448

    How can she talk so well?

    • @kyledraganov
      @kyledraganov Před 3 lety

      She only lost her hearing in her early 40s, due to medication she was taking after having a double lung transplant. So, at the time of this video she had only had hearing loss for about a year and a half.

  • @111111111Tiger
    @111111111Tiger Před 3 lety

    Awesome for Kelly !

  • @vigorousera
    @vigorousera Před 3 lety

    It's so wild that someone clicking around an old-ass Windows screen will allow a deaf person to hear.

  • @stevenmclaren2730
    @stevenmclaren2730 Před 3 lety

    What a wonderful woman.

  • @Spillinsanity72
    @Spillinsanity72 Před 3 lety

    "Sound Of Metal" brought me here.

  • @magoolew5131
    @magoolew5131 Před 3 lety

    She's a cutie.

  • @mikey-mot
    @mikey-mot Před 3 lety

    Awesome! ❤

  • @frankoptis
    @frankoptis Před 3 lety

    If it's still hard without visual cues, the doctor should have tried to go a little bit louder on the volume.

  • @rickyvilorio8398
    @rickyvilorio8398 Před 3 lety

    Hola soy Ricky vilorio🙏👂Gaspar Hernández👂🙏

  • @Wowwwzaaa
    @Wowwwzaaa Před 3 lety

    The audiologist should turn her back...not allow her to read lips at the start

  • @stevegray1308
    @stevegray1308 Před 3 lety

    Her speech is really good for someone deaf, she must have had excellent speech therapists.

  • @ramose83
    @ramose83 Před 3 lety

    How caring of her to ask if they have the same technology for blind people. I love her voice too ...

  • @nancyflaherty7038
    @nancyflaherty7038 Před 3 lety

    This is beautiful!

  • @subaruwrx3381
    @subaruwrx3381 Před 4 lety

    Cochlear implants from Australia with love

  • @sambarreto9639
    @sambarreto9639 Před 4 lety

    Thank God she's doing really well,Nice.

  • @leefithian3704
    @leefithian3704 Před 4 lety

    I guess if you’re already deaf from listening to loud music , you can make the switch , and then listen as loud as you want

  • @weldorworx6858
    @weldorworx6858 Před 4 lety

    Hoping all is well still 🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗

  • @robertfulton1991
    @robertfulton1991 Před 4 lety

    I have tinnitus really bad I sometimes have a hard time hearing clearly when someone is talking to me. Has anyone ever tried to see if cochlear implant would help someone like me ?

    • @lesskinner8588
      @lesskinner8588 Před 2 lety

      2 years ago, shame no reply. Do you also have hearing loss, medical or noise induced ? Hearing aids can reduce tinnitus, cochlear can help too . . . the brain wants to hear those missing tones, or more normal noise in general. There's not much that can cure it, sound therapy with / without hearing aids can help some, takes a while to start to work apparently. I have severe noise induced hearing loss from 42 years of working life, thankfully not much tinnitus, I know many that have said it's maddening.

  • @bethmerryfield7186
    @bethmerryfield7186 Před 4 lety

    This is so heartwarming. I'm so happy for this young lady. Thank you for sharing.

  • @spuriouseffect
    @spuriouseffect Před 4 lety

    Absolutely astonishing how quickly her brain reprogrammed itself.