Read this excerpt from a passage.

I convinced my parents to get me a music device with headphones when I was eleven. When I was fifteen, I started going to concerts at indoor arenas and large amphitheaters. At the big concerts, you could always find me next to the speakers. A year later I was also going to all-ages shows at clubs—and you know where I’d park myself. After a concert or a club gig, I’d occasionally notice ringing in my ears afterward. But by the next day it would be gone. Yet that post-event ringing gradually got louder and louder, and it took longer and longer to disappear. Then one day last year I realized that the ringing was 24/7, except when I was asleep. I also had to face the fact that, more and more often, I was asking, "What did you say?" in conversations.

My parents took me to a hearing specialist. The diagnosis was pretty straightforward: In both ears, I’d lost some hearing at one range and a lot of hearing at another. The constant ringing was connected to the hearing loss. Of course I asked the doctor, "So what can you do about it?" Her response—"The hearing loss is irreversible"—wasn’t the answer I was expecting.



What was the cause of the author's irreversible hearing loss?


Repeated listening to loud music played very closely to her ears.


The constant ringing in her ears caused damage to her hearing.


Going to all-ages shows at clubs was the main cause of her hearing loss.


A genetic problem caused her to slowly lose her hearing over a long period of time.

Repeated listening to loud music played very closely to her ears.