I'm new to tinnitus and have only had it a week; sorry if the answer is somewhere in this thread but it's 24 pages so I'll ask again:
What if you describe to yourself how you feel, but no more than 5 seconds later you find yourself checking for the noise again? Do you just describe again? And again? Multiple times in the span of a minute? And just keep doing that until you find yourself checking less?
It seems very similar to cognitive behavioral therapy I do regarding catastrophic thoughts related to my panic disorder: "Acknowledge, and dismiss." Dismiss as in stop thinking about it after acknowledgement, not dismiss as in the opposite of acknowledgement.
So should I just say "I acknowledge my tinitus. It makes me feel [insert feeling]." and that's it, as much as needed? Multiple times a minute if it gets to that point? Is there anything else you include in your formula?
Do you do it when you "look" for your tinnitus and don't notice it too? "I acknowledge my tinnitus. I don't hear it right now. That makes me happy."
Sorry to hear of you having tinnitus now. If you don't know the cause and it has only been a week, if you have not gone to an ENT doctor it might be a good idea to do that. Although in my experience rare, they might be able to discover a cause that can end it. Also, for example, tinnitus could be related to TMJ thus a dentist might be consulted.
But on to your questions, I will answer them more specifically with my take second below. While I am not Terry, I have posted the following in the thread and Terry liked it. Hope it helps:
Here is the "bottom line" on how to implement the Back to Silence method from researching the Back to Silence String:
The "Back to Silence" method calls for not measuring the sound(s), not to monitor the tinnitus sound(s) or focus on it, do not describe the sound(s) or compare the sound(s).
Another way to think about it is to follow the four "don'ts" of the Back to Silence method:
1 - Don't measure it
2 - Don't monitor it
3 - Don't describe it
4 - Don't compare it
Do the following:
1 - STOP talking about tinnitus, measuring it, comparing it, describing it, and thinking about it.
2 - When you hear the sound(s), tell yourself, "I hear it, I feel .........." (insert your true emotion)
3 - make a note of this incidence (just put a hash mark for instance and add them up daily) and each emotional response in a word or two on paper, review your paper weekly to see the change in your responses.
If you are in a position (like say driving a car, in meditation, in bed getting to sleep or up in the night etc.) where you can't note down your occurrence then do it verbally and add a hash mark and note later in writing if you can recall it.
Now, to more specifically address your questions I would say if it works for you to keep your focus off the tinnitus to say every 5 seconds "I hear my tinnitus and I feel XXXX." then I would do that although it seems impractical to write it down so do it silently speaking to yourself, not written down. I personally did not do it every five seconds. I sort of considered an "incident" as when I would say it. An "incident" might be five or 10 minutes in the beginning or 3 to 5 hours as my brain got better at ignoring my tinnitus sounds (plural for me).
With respect to "when you look for your tinnitus. Well, first don't be looking for it of course. But if you do look for it and hear it well just do the statement "I hear my tinnitus and I feel XXXX." I would not be acknowledging that I was not hearing it myself. I still hear it from time to time 5 or so years after I found this method. Some days several times a day or sometimes I notice it has been all day or even several days since I last heard my tinnitus. Either way I just say the statement to myself silently these days.
Hope this hits the spot for you.