- Aug 21, 2014
- 5,049
- Tinnitus Since
- 1999
- Cause of Tinnitus
- karma
A month ago I was completely miserable, all I could think about was the ringing, constantly, obsessively.
The past couple weeks have been much better; on 'bad' days it's been on my mind maybe 20% of the time, but for most of that time, it's been more like 2%. I woke up yesterday and walked around my apartment in silence doing things for a half hour before I thought to consciously recognize the sounds a single time.
I don't think that the nature of the sound itself has changed whatsoever in that time. All that has changed is that I've gotten back on track with my meditation/exercise and I've been making sure I sleep 8-10h a night.
What is simply bonkers to me, is how variable my experience of this condition is. Right now it seems like a quiet little noise at the tippy-top bit of my audio experience, which dissolves almost completely into the sounds of the room once I let my attention expand. But, I know that if I just do nothing but focus on that sound, it will swell and swell until it seems to consume my entire spectrum.
Anyway, I'm just throwing this out there to state my own personal experience over the past couple months. We have had a lot of discussions on here about "attention" vs "volume". For me, attention is volume. Pure and simple. When I actively monitor the tinnitus perception, my brain allocates more bandwidth to it, it swallows up more and more of the sonic background in my environment, becomes impossible to ignore (and then not ignoring it just cranks it up further and further). It's a feedback loop, and I seem to start winning as soon as I stop playing the little game and just leave the sound alone and let it do its thing.
The "I can't ignore it, it's too loud!" thinking is something I know and understand all too well - but in moments of clarity, IE, right now, I know it's a sort of ludicrous statement. My entire nervous system is on fire ALL THE TIME. Millions of nerve cells are signaling across hundreds of thousands of miles of synapses. The amount of sensory information which is perceived and then scrapped before it comes to the attention of the conscious mind is absolutely staggering.
If I attend to, say, the sensation from the bottom of my right foot with HALF the energy I put into tinnitus monitoring sometimes, I quickly realize "ahh, there are too many sensations coming from my foot at all times! I can't turn them off!"
There is nothing unique about the tinnitus signal in this regard. Any sensory input which is I monitor obsessively will become problematic and seem to become much more significant than it is...
The past couple weeks have been much better; on 'bad' days it's been on my mind maybe 20% of the time, but for most of that time, it's been more like 2%. I woke up yesterday and walked around my apartment in silence doing things for a half hour before I thought to consciously recognize the sounds a single time.
I don't think that the nature of the sound itself has changed whatsoever in that time. All that has changed is that I've gotten back on track with my meditation/exercise and I've been making sure I sleep 8-10h a night.
What is simply bonkers to me, is how variable my experience of this condition is. Right now it seems like a quiet little noise at the tippy-top bit of my audio experience, which dissolves almost completely into the sounds of the room once I let my attention expand. But, I know that if I just do nothing but focus on that sound, it will swell and swell until it seems to consume my entire spectrum.
Anyway, I'm just throwing this out there to state my own personal experience over the past couple months. We have had a lot of discussions on here about "attention" vs "volume". For me, attention is volume. Pure and simple. When I actively monitor the tinnitus perception, my brain allocates more bandwidth to it, it swallows up more and more of the sonic background in my environment, becomes impossible to ignore (and then not ignoring it just cranks it up further and further). It's a feedback loop, and I seem to start winning as soon as I stop playing the little game and just leave the sound alone and let it do its thing.
The "I can't ignore it, it's too loud!" thinking is something I know and understand all too well - but in moments of clarity, IE, right now, I know it's a sort of ludicrous statement. My entire nervous system is on fire ALL THE TIME. Millions of nerve cells are signaling across hundreds of thousands of miles of synapses. The amount of sensory information which is perceived and then scrapped before it comes to the attention of the conscious mind is absolutely staggering.
If I attend to, say, the sensation from the bottom of my right foot with HALF the energy I put into tinnitus monitoring sometimes, I quickly realize "ahh, there are too many sensations coming from my foot at all times! I can't turn them off!"
There is nothing unique about the tinnitus signal in this regard. Any sensory input which is I monitor obsessively will become problematic and seem to become much more significant than it is...