So I came down with T about a year and a half ago and like many of us, I had a difficult time dealing with it at first. I had the typical quasi suicidal emotional reaction like many of us because I thought there was no way in hell I would live the rest of my life with this condition. I went to my GP and an ENT but they basically told me there was nothing they could do. Like most of us, I researched online in vain for a cure while hoping T would go away on its own. Unfortunately, the condition hasn't gone away completely for me and I've accepted that T is here to stay.
Over the past year and a half the T has gone quieter and my mind is thinking less and less about this condition to the point where my T has become an almost complete non-issue. I have realized that the fact that I had this condition bothered me a lot more than the actual noise because 95% of the time, I can't hear the noise due to the background noise masking it. Yes I have the occasional spike which I can shut down by using the anti-T application on General Fuzz's website.
At this point, even late at night when I'm in my office and it's absolutely dead quite. I can't "hear" the T because by mind has completely tuned it out. When I put my pillow to my ear in bed, I hear the T but it doesn't bother me. To be brutally honest, I don't know that I would really care if my T went away. Life would still be the same for me.
I still don't know know why I came down with T. I don't have much of a history of loud noise exposure, my hearing is normal, I don't have ear pain, or vertigo, or H. Maybe blood pressure meds but otherwise, it's a complete mystery.
For those early in their journey to habituation, I offer the following advise:
1) Trust that your condition will get better. Don't be alarmed by extreme stories of people killing themselves. The overwhelming majority of us will revert back to our pre-T mental state whether or not T goes away.
2) Hold off of the devices. There are a multitude of devices on the market that purport to cure or help you habituate to T. In my opinion, these expensive devices only serve to exploit your desperation for a cure. Your mind will eventually habituate on its own rendering these devices uneccessary. There are also free alternatives like General Fuzz's website: http://www.generalfuzz.net/acrn/
3) If see seek medical attention, be sure to go to a T specialist. Many GP's and ENT's don't know how to deal with T.
4) Protect your hearing going forward. Avoid ototoxic drugs and improve your health to increase the possibility that you can get off drugs or reduce their dosage.
5) You really have to believe that your mind will eventually tune out the noise. Life will go on. Believe me, life does go on.
Good luck,
-TwinGlocks-
Over the past year and a half the T has gone quieter and my mind is thinking less and less about this condition to the point where my T has become an almost complete non-issue. I have realized that the fact that I had this condition bothered me a lot more than the actual noise because 95% of the time, I can't hear the noise due to the background noise masking it. Yes I have the occasional spike which I can shut down by using the anti-T application on General Fuzz's website.
At this point, even late at night when I'm in my office and it's absolutely dead quite. I can't "hear" the T because by mind has completely tuned it out. When I put my pillow to my ear in bed, I hear the T but it doesn't bother me. To be brutally honest, I don't know that I would really care if my T went away. Life would still be the same for me.
I still don't know know why I came down with T. I don't have much of a history of loud noise exposure, my hearing is normal, I don't have ear pain, or vertigo, or H. Maybe blood pressure meds but otherwise, it's a complete mystery.
For those early in their journey to habituation, I offer the following advise:
1) Trust that your condition will get better. Don't be alarmed by extreme stories of people killing themselves. The overwhelming majority of us will revert back to our pre-T mental state whether or not T goes away.
2) Hold off of the devices. There are a multitude of devices on the market that purport to cure or help you habituate to T. In my opinion, these expensive devices only serve to exploit your desperation for a cure. Your mind will eventually habituate on its own rendering these devices uneccessary. There are also free alternatives like General Fuzz's website: http://www.generalfuzz.net/acrn/
3) If see seek medical attention, be sure to go to a T specialist. Many GP's and ENT's don't know how to deal with T.
4) Protect your hearing going forward. Avoid ototoxic drugs and improve your health to increase the possibility that you can get off drugs or reduce their dosage.
5) You really have to believe that your mind will eventually tune out the noise. Life will go on. Believe me, life does go on.
Good luck,
-TwinGlocks-