He had pretty much already created a lot of compensation habits by the time they figured it out (5th grade - there was lots of gnashing of teeth and testing before this was figured out). But as an adult now, I would say it no longer has any significant impact on his life. He chose an occupation that doesn't require a lot of requirement for auditory processing and regurgitation. (as school often is). As the tester said at the time, "once it gets IN [his brain] it is really IN -- he doesn't seem to forget much of
anything. But getting it established in, and then getting him to also be able to coherently output the information -- that is a real struggle."
That - and I have to say him using the internet daily actually helped as well - the processing of written information (reading, etc.) and interactions via chat, etc.
The testing was done by
Heartspring, which was founded on helping kids with auditory issues. Fortunately for me, it is here local.