Newly registered and first time post. Today, my two anniversary of getting tinnitus from a loud concert (worse in left ear... kind of a scrambled signal/distant bells ringing as opposed to a tone). I relied on this forum a lot in the first few months and thank you all for sharing. I thought I would share my two year experience with tinnitus.
The first month or so I kept waiting for it to go away and then months 2 and 3 were very traumatic when I realized it may never go. I had emotional problems and it affected me big time, I had to build my life back one step at a time over the course of several months from when I hit bottom.
I read here a few times that it takes about a year to habituate. I would agree with that timeline because in the first year it does get better month by month, but I would probably say that it took me 18 months before I had no panic-related issues with it, and about 2 years to fully habituate to where I am now, which I think is in the category of pretty much fully habituated, i.e., "not giving a shit" about it and living normally, and no more PTSD about the fateful concert, and realizing if I hear louder ringing (sometimes when I wake up from a nap that tends to happen) that it's a temporary phenomenon and not new damage or a sign of worsening.
I only hope that I can help people who are new to T realize that there is hope and as much as it sucks, you are not alone and others have been there and fought hard to make it through the rough timeline to habituation. You can do it! The best advice I got was just to take one day at a time and get through what you need to do today.
One last topic I'd like to comment on is the challenge of getting back to normal in terms of relationship with sound in the environment. At first, I believe I had serious hyperacusis and found so many things like the sound of a TV or maybe someone listening to a video clip on a phone, very irritating (I'll call it "irritation factor") and I was panicked if a fire truck went by and would not listen to music on headphones or go back to a concert (I'll call it "fear of more damage factor"). Use your own best judgment and gather all the information you can to help you with these issues - but for me, I believe these things are psychological more than something physical going on in the ear. The irritation factor has faded slowly for me on the same timeline to habituation. The fear of more damage factor I think I got better for me much faster. After a little while I stopped living my life worried that there were cochlear cells hanging in the balance between life and death depending on how careful I continued to be. I live my life now with perspective that what could damage my ears now is the same that could have damaged my ears at any time prior to this. So for example I have no problem listening to music with headphones (I use Beats Studio) and had no problem going back to concerts pre-COVID19 with proper protection (I use Earpeace plugs, which are great, if I had them in 2018 I would probably not be in this situation. My wife had Earpeace plugs at the same concert and she is fine.)
Stay strong friends! Much love and support.
The first month or so I kept waiting for it to go away and then months 2 and 3 were very traumatic when I realized it may never go. I had emotional problems and it affected me big time, I had to build my life back one step at a time over the course of several months from when I hit bottom.
I read here a few times that it takes about a year to habituate. I would agree with that timeline because in the first year it does get better month by month, but I would probably say that it took me 18 months before I had no panic-related issues with it, and about 2 years to fully habituate to where I am now, which I think is in the category of pretty much fully habituated, i.e., "not giving a shit" about it and living normally, and no more PTSD about the fateful concert, and realizing if I hear louder ringing (sometimes when I wake up from a nap that tends to happen) that it's a temporary phenomenon and not new damage or a sign of worsening.
I only hope that I can help people who are new to T realize that there is hope and as much as it sucks, you are not alone and others have been there and fought hard to make it through the rough timeline to habituation. You can do it! The best advice I got was just to take one day at a time and get through what you need to do today.
One last topic I'd like to comment on is the challenge of getting back to normal in terms of relationship with sound in the environment. At first, I believe I had serious hyperacusis and found so many things like the sound of a TV or maybe someone listening to a video clip on a phone, very irritating (I'll call it "irritation factor") and I was panicked if a fire truck went by and would not listen to music on headphones or go back to a concert (I'll call it "fear of more damage factor"). Use your own best judgment and gather all the information you can to help you with these issues - but for me, I believe these things are psychological more than something physical going on in the ear. The irritation factor has faded slowly for me on the same timeline to habituation. The fear of more damage factor I think I got better for me much faster. After a little while I stopped living my life worried that there were cochlear cells hanging in the balance between life and death depending on how careful I continued to be. I live my life now with perspective that what could damage my ears now is the same that could have damaged my ears at any time prior to this. So for example I have no problem listening to music with headphones (I use Beats Studio) and had no problem going back to concerts pre-COVID19 with proper protection (I use Earpeace plugs, which are great, if I had them in 2018 I would probably not be in this situation. My wife had Earpeace plugs at the same concert and she is fine.)
Stay strong friends! Much love and support.