This will be long... sorry.
I don't do well with forums. I'm anti-social by nature, hate following rules, and hate closed minds. There are a fair number of closed minds here, so I was never going to post.
Trigger warning: if you don't agree with some of my beliefs, cool... I respect it, but I'm not here to argue it, and will not respond.
I don't believe that habituation works for all, but I do believe it works for some to some extent. I certainly believe tinnitus can be attenuated both positively and negatively by psychological state and attention gating, and I believe causative factors may be countless. I even subscribe to the theory that many cases are perfect storms of many causative factors. I also believe it can be caused by any single factor if the threshold is high enough.
I have no real experience with hyperacusis, and cannot speak on it from personal experience. I do not believe my method would be successful for hyperacusis.
I have no experience with pulsatile tinnitus, and cannot speak on it from personal experience. I do not believe my method would be successful for pulsatile tinnitus.
I believe in basic naturopathy, in the sense that (all) drugs, even synthetic, are derived or synthesized from natural ingredients, and it would be profoundly obtuse to believe that certain natural compounds in certain combinations at certain concentrations couldn't benefit medical conditions.
That being said, it's my personal belief that (for most), once persistent tinnitus sets in, a few supplements aren't going to "do the trick".
I believe CBT, TRT, counseling, yoga, mindfulness, masking... all have their place, and I myself used some or all of these early in my journey. I do not believe that these are curative, or significant inducers of remission. I believe they are supportive measures.
A quick re-visit to habituation: I think it is achievable for some in some cases. I think for changing tone/frequency type tinnitus, and for multiple sounds with frequent new or different tones or pitches or for somatic types, that this is less likely, as attention-gating modification fails in most cases where the perceived sound is not consistent in nature.
I am going to be very selective in who I respond to. I have no interest in "proving" anything to anyone. I just don't care enough. If you intend to comment just to tell me I'm stupid, cool... no answer. Would you like to comment that it's the first time you've heard from me, and with no "before" story, or chronicles of my journey, you are doubtful? Awesome... I support and defend your right to do so. Still... no answer.
Let me briefly explain. I (may) have read absolutely every post on Tinnitus Talk, certainly 95% plus. This done on sleepless nights while my life fell apart around me. It has left me with a profound love, compassion, and empathy, and indebtedness for (and to) those here, and this indebtedness is the SINGULAR driver of my post.
I can't explain enough how little I care to argue or defend myself.
I am an intelligent man, not prone to fits of fancy, no tendency for the dramatic, and understand the process to reasonably eliminate variables, and arrive at probable causal relationships.
I'm not claiming to be a scientist. I am not claiming to have run multiple center double-blinded studies with huge bases... lol.
The claim is that I found a route to remission (currently at just over 1 year) for MYSELF.
This does not mean it will work for you, although I believe it would have the highest odds of working for people whose circumstances are similar to mine... for obvious reasons.
As (likely) with any tinnitus treatment, probably the earlier the better, as I believe it's an attention-gating issue once it begins.
Me:
Life literally fell apart. I was useless to myself, spouse, kids, job...
Anyway... I eventually made plan. A trusting doctor was a big help. If you can't find one, I recommend those telehealth apps which you can usually bullshit your way through because they just want the $100 they get for writing and sending the script.
I definitely asked for some things that, while not on the controlled substances schedule, COULD be dangerous, and that I could NOT technically demonstrate a need for.
My doctor was a "right-to-try" supporter... so I had an easy go.
My "cocktail" was some specific supplements (almost all you have seen before on here) combined with a powerful vasodilator, an anti-clot medication, an antihistamine which is also used off-label for anxiety, all in a short course together.
I followed this with a hypertension medication, and Varenicline. Both low-dose and long-term.
No more tinnitus. No bullshit.
I didn't name some of the specific drugs/supplements, as they may be different for everyone depending on what other drugs or supplements you are on, and I didn't want to be the reason for anyone hurting themselves.
I don't do well with forums. I'm anti-social by nature, hate following rules, and hate closed minds. There are a fair number of closed minds here, so I was never going to post.
Trigger warning: if you don't agree with some of my beliefs, cool... I respect it, but I'm not here to argue it, and will not respond.
I don't believe that habituation works for all, but I do believe it works for some to some extent. I certainly believe tinnitus can be attenuated both positively and negatively by psychological state and attention gating, and I believe causative factors may be countless. I even subscribe to the theory that many cases are perfect storms of many causative factors. I also believe it can be caused by any single factor if the threshold is high enough.
I have no real experience with hyperacusis, and cannot speak on it from personal experience. I do not believe my method would be successful for hyperacusis.
I have no experience with pulsatile tinnitus, and cannot speak on it from personal experience. I do not believe my method would be successful for pulsatile tinnitus.
I believe in basic naturopathy, in the sense that (all) drugs, even synthetic, are derived or synthesized from natural ingredients, and it would be profoundly obtuse to believe that certain natural compounds in certain combinations at certain concentrations couldn't benefit medical conditions.
That being said, it's my personal belief that (for most), once persistent tinnitus sets in, a few supplements aren't going to "do the trick".
I believe CBT, TRT, counseling, yoga, mindfulness, masking... all have their place, and I myself used some or all of these early in my journey. I do not believe that these are curative, or significant inducers of remission. I believe they are supportive measures.
A quick re-visit to habituation: I think it is achievable for some in some cases. I think for changing tone/frequency type tinnitus, and for multiple sounds with frequent new or different tones or pitches or for somatic types, that this is less likely, as attention-gating modification fails in most cases where the perceived sound is not consistent in nature.
I am going to be very selective in who I respond to. I have no interest in "proving" anything to anyone. I just don't care enough. If you intend to comment just to tell me I'm stupid, cool... no answer. Would you like to comment that it's the first time you've heard from me, and with no "before" story, or chronicles of my journey, you are doubtful? Awesome... I support and defend your right to do so. Still... no answer.
Let me briefly explain. I (may) have read absolutely every post on Tinnitus Talk, certainly 95% plus. This done on sleepless nights while my life fell apart around me. It has left me with a profound love, compassion, and empathy, and indebtedness for (and to) those here, and this indebtedness is the SINGULAR driver of my post.
I can't explain enough how little I care to argue or defend myself.
I am an intelligent man, not prone to fits of fancy, no tendency for the dramatic, and understand the process to reasonably eliminate variables, and arrive at probable causal relationships.
I'm not claiming to be a scientist. I am not claiming to have run multiple center double-blinded studies with huge bases... lol.
The claim is that I found a route to remission (currently at just over 1 year) for MYSELF.
This does not mean it will work for you, although I believe it would have the highest odds of working for people whose circumstances are similar to mine... for obvious reasons.
As (likely) with any tinnitus treatment, probably the earlier the better, as I believe it's an attention-gating issue once it begins.
Me:
- 46 years old
- Bilateral/pure tone/high-frequency/fairly steady Hz/persistent/LOUD (severe to catastrophic)/a somatic component in that certain muscular movements or pressures could slightly alter pitch/volume.
- 1 year
- Moderately overweight
- Undiagnosed but likely high blood pressure
- Undiagnosed but likely high cholesterol
- Probably ADD
- No depression
- No anxiety (prior to or after tinnitus)
- All forms of cognitive therapy (minimal results - didn't last)
- Meditation (no results)
- Yoga (no results)
- Exercise (usually worsened)
- Masking (minimal results - didn't last)
- Habituation (did not work for me - although I may not be the best candidate because it was SO loud that I could hear it over ANY distraction)
Life literally fell apart. I was useless to myself, spouse, kids, job...
Anyway... I eventually made plan. A trusting doctor was a big help. If you can't find one, I recommend those telehealth apps which you can usually bullshit your way through because they just want the $100 they get for writing and sending the script.
I definitely asked for some things that, while not on the controlled substances schedule, COULD be dangerous, and that I could NOT technically demonstrate a need for.
My doctor was a "right-to-try" supporter... so I had an easy go.
My "cocktail" was some specific supplements (almost all you have seen before on here) combined with a powerful vasodilator, an anti-clot medication, an antihistamine which is also used off-label for anxiety, all in a short course together.
I followed this with a hypertension medication, and Varenicline. Both low-dose and long-term.
No more tinnitus. No bullshit.
I didn't name some of the specific drugs/supplements, as they may be different for everyone depending on what other drugs or supplements you are on, and I didn't want to be the reason for anyone hurting themselves.