Listening with Heart in Lanarkshire
In late February 2026, We Love Lanarkshire published a feature called “Listening With Heart in Lanarkshire”, sharing our story as an independent hearing clinic rooted in the community. It was a moment of real pride for us – not because it was about recognition, but because it reflected what matters most at Audibility: taking time to listen, understand, and care for people as individuals.
Being seen for how we listen
When you work in hearing care every day, it’s easy to focus on tests, technology, and treatment plans. The We Love Lanarkshire piece did something different: it noticed the quieter things – the conversations before and after an appointment, the way we try to put people at ease, and the importance of feeling heard as well as hearing well.
For us, that felt deeply true. Whether someone is anxious about their first hearing test, worried about a loved one, or frustrated after years of struggling to access support, the starting point is always the same: listening without rushing, and meeting them where they are.
Rooted in Motherwell, caring across Lanarkshire
The feature also highlighted something we care about enormously – our connection to Motherwell and the wider Lanarkshire community. Audibility was never meant to be “just another clinic”. From the beginning, the aim was to build a place that feels local, approachable, and genuinely part of the area it serves.
Every day we see how hearing affects real lives here: conversations at the door, family gatherings, work, volunteering, caring for others. Being included in a community platform like We Love Lanarkshire felt like a reflection of that shared story – not just our work, but the people and places we’re privileged to support.
Why this kind of recognition matters
External recognition is never the goal in itself, but it does matter – especially in healthcare. When a local, independent platform takes the time to speak with us and share what we do, it helps people feel more confident about reaching out. It also shows that hearing care is not distant or corporate; it is personal, local, and grounded in relationships.
For anyone who has been unsure about taking the first step, seeing a familiar Lanarkshire voice talk about Audibility can make that step feel a little smaller and a little safer.
Read the full feature
If you’d like to read the original article, you can find it on the We Love Lanarkshire website:
Listening With Heart in Lanarkshire – We Love Lanarkshire
We’re grateful to everyone who contributed to the piece, and to every patient, family member, and professional who has trusted us with their hearing so far. It’s a privilege to be part of this community.