Kaczrowski believes that his extraordinary hearing makes it possible to play the piano. When he first hears music he learns it quickly and mimics other musicians through his ability to listen. He responded, "But you can't turn off that."
He attended St. John's University in Collegeville but encountered some of the everyday tasks of students in college to be challenging. He struggled to read because he was unable to concentrate enough to turn the pages. "I did well in college listening to professors talk," said he, explaining that he retains information better when he hears it than when he reads it.
Music continued to be a part of Kaczrowski's life and he laughed when recalling that he was the sole college student who didn't major in music to have keys to music rooms."I bothered the music people and they gave me the keys to the grand piano rooms," he said. "I just wanted keys so that I could play grand pianos. They allowed me to." Kaczrowski overcomes the difficulties in reading and graduates from St. John's in 1998 with a degree in psychology.
Kaczrowski, then 26, was an operator of high-speed printers at the time of his 26th birthday in Maple Grove. He felt like he was struggling to perform his job due the high noise level and the bright light.
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