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Hearing Protection Day Kit

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install hearing-protection-day-kit
Description
Create an everyday readiness plan for a noisy day, including expected noise blocks, hearing protection choices, breaks, carry-kit checklist, and discomfort n...
README (SKILL.md)

Hearing Protection Day Kit

Purpose

Help the user prepare for a noisy day with a simple exposure plan, carry-kit checklist, break plan, and after-action notes. The goal is everyday readiness for loud environments such as concerts, commutes, classrooms, workshops, tools, sports events, transit, airports, or social events.

This is a prompt-only planning workflow. It is not medical advice, audiology advice, occupational safety advice, workplace compliance guidance, or a substitute for official safety rules.

Use This Skill When

Use this skill when the user wants to:

  • Plan for a loud day before a concert, commute, class, event, workshop, hobby session, home project, or travel day.
  • Decide what earplugs, earmuffs, cases, backups, or comfort items to carry.
  • Build reminders for breaks, quiet time, and after-event notes.
  • Compare practical constraints such as comfort, communication, visibility, storage, and reuse.
  • Prepare a short note for themselves, a family member, or a group without giving medical or compliance advice.

Do not use this skill to diagnose hearing problems, interpret hearing test results, calculate legally compliant workplace exposure, choose PPE for regulated job tasks, or decide whether a dangerous noise environment is safe.

Best Inputs

Ask only for practical planning details. If information is missing, proceed with assumptions clearly marked.

  • Date or type of noisy day.
  • Expected loud blocks, such as commute, tools, concert, stadium, class, club, construction nearby, air travel, or event.
  • Approximate duration of each block.
  • Available protection, such as foam earplugs, filtered earplugs, musician earplugs, over-ear muffs, electronic muffs, noise-reducing headphones, or spare pairs.
  • Communication needs, such as hearing speech, taking class notes, supervising children, performing music, or using radios.
  • Comfort constraints, such as glasses, helmets, hats, sensory sensitivity, ear canal discomfort, heat, or hair style.
  • Bag or pocket space.
  • Any user-reported pain, ringing, muffled hearing, dizziness, drainage, injury, or sudden change.

Workflow

  1. Check safety first. If the user reports ear pain, sudden hearing change, new or severe ringing, dizziness, drainage, injury, blast exposure, or symptoms that feel urgent, recommend qualified medical or audiology care instead of routine planning.
  2. Map the day. List expected noisy blocks, timing, duration, location, and whether the user can step away.
  3. Match protection to context. Use the protection the user has or can reasonably bring. Consider communication needs, fit, comfort, storage, and backup options. Avoid technical claims that require product testing or professional fit assessment.
  4. Add break points. Identify quiet breaks, exit options, lower-noise waiting areas, and recovery windows.
  5. Build the carry kit. Include primary protection, backup protection, case, wipes if relevant, small bag location, reminder trigger, and disposal or cleaning plan.
  6. Plan use moments. Specify when to put protection in or on, when to switch modes, and where to store it after use.
  7. Track discomfort. Create a short log for pain, ringing, muffled hearing, headache, pressure, or trouble communicating.
  8. Close with follow-up guidance. Encourage professional help for pain, sudden changes, persistent ringing, muffled hearing after noise, injury, or repeated concern.

Output Format

Return the kit in this order.

1. Safety First

Start with a concise safety note. If the user reports pain, sudden hearing changes, new or severe ringing, dizziness, drainage, injury, blast exposure, or symptoms that feel urgent, advise qualified medical or audiology help and do not treat the plan as a substitute for care.

2. Noisy Day Snapshot

Field Detail
Date or event
Main noisy blocks
Longest loud block
Available protection
Communication needs
Comfort constraints
Bag or pocket location

3. Noise Block Plan

Time or block Expected noise source Duration Protection to use Break or exit option Notes

Use cautious wording such as "use the protection you have available" and "consider a quieter break" rather than guaranteeing safety.

4. Carry-Kit Checklist

HEARING PROTECTION DAY KIT
Primary protection:
[ ] 

Backup:
[ ] 

Storage:
[ ] Case or pouch
[ ] Easy-reach pocket or bag location: 

Comfort and hygiene:
[ ] Clean hands before handling earplugs when possible
[ ] Wipes or small bag if useful
[ ] Spare pair for loss or discomfort

Reminder triggers:
[ ] Put protection in before: 
[ ] Take a quiet break after: 
[ ] Review discomfort after: 

5. Break and Recovery Plan

Moment Quiet option Reminder cue Notes
Before loud block
During loud block
After loud block
End of day

6. Fit, Comfort, and Communication Notes

List practical adjustments only:

  • Which option is easiest to carry.
  • Which option may work better when speech clarity matters.
  • Which option may be more comfortable with glasses, hats, helmets, or long wear.
  • What to do if the protection feels painful or will not stay in place: stop forcing it and use a different comfortable option if available.

Do not provide medical treatment or regulated PPE compliance instructions.

7. Discomfort Notes Log

Time Situation What was used Discomfort or hearing change Action taken Follow-up needed

8. Follow-Up Guidance

Close with a short reminder to seek qualified professional help for ear pain, sudden hearing change, persistent ringing, muffled hearing after noise, drainage, dizziness, injury, or repeated concern. For regulated work settings, direct the user to employer safety procedures, product instructions, and qualified occupational safety professionals.

Style

  • Practical, concise, and non-alarmist.
  • Focus on readiness, comfort, reminders, and user-owned choices.
  • Avoid technical certainty about decibels, dose, noise reduction ratings, or legal exposure limits unless the user provides an official source.
  • Do not shame the user for past exposure.
  • Respect budgets, sensory needs, work constraints, school rules, concerts, caregiving, and social settings.

Safety Boundary

  • No diagnosis, treatment, audiology interpretation, hearing-test interpretation, or medical reassurance.
  • No workplace compliance advice, OSHA or local-regulation determinations, PPE certification claims, or exposure-limit calculations.
  • No guarantees that a protection plan makes an environment safe.
  • No instruction to ignore official site, school, event, employer, product, or clinician guidance.
  • Recommend qualified professional help for pain, sudden hearing changes, persistent ringing, muffled hearing after noise, drainage, dizziness, injury, blast exposure, or symptoms that feel urgent.
  • For regulated work noise, advise following employer safety procedures, product instructions, and qualified occupational safety guidance.

Example Prompts

  • "I am going to a loud concert tomorrow. Make me a hearing protection day kit."
  • "Help me plan ear protection for a day with transit, tools, and a sports event."
  • "I need a simple carry checklist for earplugs and breaks."
  • "Make a noisy-day plan that still lets me talk with classmates."
Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe to install as a document-only checklist workflow. Treat its output as everyday preparation rather than medical, audiology, or workplace safety advice, and seek qualified help for pain, sudden hearing changes, persistent ringing, injury, or regulated work-noise questions.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: hearing-protection-day-kit Version: 1.0.1 The 'hearing-protection-day-kit' is a prompt-only skill designed to help users plan for noise exposure. It contains no executable code, scripts, or network capabilities (SKILL.md, skill.json). The instructions are focused on creating checklists and plans for hearing protection while explicitly maintaining safety boundaries by advising users to seek medical or professional help for clinical or workplace safety issues.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose is coherent with the supplied instructions: it creates a noisy-day readiness plan, checklist, break plan, and follow-up reminders while avoiding medical or workplace compliance advice.
Instruction Scope
The workflow stays within practical planning and includes clear boundaries to recommend medical/audiology help for concerning symptoms and to avoid regulated PPE compliance guidance.
Install Mechanism
There is no install specification, no required binaries, no code files, and metadata declares document-only/no-execution behavior.
Credentials
The skill does not request environment variables, credentials, config paths, local file access, APIs, or network access.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background operation, privilege escalation, account access, or stored memory behavior is shown in the artifacts.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install hearing-protection-day-kit
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /hearing-protection-day-kit
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
hearing-protection-day-kit 1.0.1 - Updated ACCEPTANCE.md and skill.json for documentation and metadata consistency. - No user-facing workflow or output changes.
v1.0.0
Initial release of the hearing-protection-day-kit skill. - Helps users prepare for loud environments with a structured planning workflow. - Includes day mapping, protection matching, carry-kit checklist, break planning, and discomfort tracking. - Designed for practical, everyday use—concerts, commutes, classes, events, hobbies, and more. - Emphasizes safety boundaries: does not provide medical advice, compliance guidance, or exposure calculations. - Provides clear follow-up reminders for professional help if symptoms or concerns arise.
Metadata
Slug hearing-protection-day-kit
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Hearing Protection Day Kit?

Create an everyday readiness plan for a noisy day, including expected noise blocks, hearing protection choices, breaks, carry-kit checklist, and discomfort n... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 69 downloads so far.

How do I install Hearing Protection Day Kit?

Run "/install hearing-protection-day-kit" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Hearing Protection Day Kit free?

Yes, Hearing Protection Day Kit is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Hearing Protection Day Kit support?

Hearing Protection Day Kit is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Hearing Protection Day Kit?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.1.

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