- Apr 28, 2021
- 1,881
- Tinnitus Since
- 1999
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Trauma
Yep, that is the way it goes. Some days better than others has been the most common experience from my reading about people with tinnitus. It took me at least a few months using the method to get to where I thought I probably had gotten all I could from the process in terms of reduction in my sounds entering my consciousness.Struggling a bit with this. some days it's not as intrusive where I can go long periods without thinking about it, but on intrusive days it's nonstop.
I will, thank you for the information and help!Yep, that is the way it goes. Some days better than others has been the most common experience from my reading about people with tinnitus. It took me at least a few months using the method to get to where I thought I probably had gotten all I could from the process in terms of reduction in my sounds entering my consciousness.
Now years later I still practice the method at least a few times a day. One is typically when I wake and shortly after getting out of bed. Another is when I get into bed at night. Then a few times during the day but many days none. Maybe now the method acts as a bit of a security blanket if you will that is a message to my unconscious to take it easy and not be concerned which keeps my tinnitus sounds out of my consciousness.
All I can say for you is the method is not a quick fix and you may never get to never having your tinnitus never enter your consciousness again but then again maybe that will happen for you. Also I use other methods as well when needed. I would say keep at it myself.
That's fantastic! How would you describe your tinnitus before?I received this advice from a kind stranger.
This method have totally changed my life.
This is no exaggeration.
The person gave me a number of sources and I randomly tried the "Back to Silence" method first.
I'm a pretty cynical person by trade so when I read it I thought there is no way this is going to work but thought I would just give it a go. I did what the in the video told me to do, acknowledged whether the tinnitus was bothering me, if it was ok, stopped measuring it etc and noted down the number of times it was happening on my phone. As well as noting down my emotion.
Oh my days!
The ringing has massively dropped off and most days I'm not hearing it. I can sit in a silent room for the first time in nearly a year and not have the usual all consuming anxiety come over me about the noise in my ear.
If I focus on it, it's still kind of there ever so slightly in the background and at night I prefer to have some white noise to drop off to sleep but its not at the forefront of my mind as it had been.
Maybe this is a widely known method but I'm totally astonished that this has worked. Anyone who hasn't come across this needs to give it a go.
Part of me is still worried this is just a lull, that's its something else making it go and that it's going to come back but it's been so much lower for the past week that I'm hoping this is it. I'll just keep going with the method and see where it goes but this has been incredible.
This thing has dominated my thoughts for 11 straight months. I have driven my wife insane, I got so down at times, cried a fair bit and even resorted to repeatedly hitting the side of my head like a mad man.
For now my tinnitus is not there and so just wanted to say a huge thank you again to the person that suggested this method and would recommend anyone giving this ago.
Sweet! Sounds like progress to me. Maybe a little bit of mindset I picked up in CBT would be useful as well he says with a smile. At least is was from me in thinking about tinnitus as follows:Update:
Back to Silence has significantly helped reduce my tinnitus volume and the intrusiveness by at least 50%. I just keep having a habit of finding myself monitoring it when I don't hear it or worrying it's going to get worse later. Guess I need more time. Most of my tones I don't mind, it's just one that does bother me a bit.
Thanks, those are some great quotes!Sweet! Sounds like progress to me. Maybe a little bit of mindset I picked up in CBT would be useful as well he says with a smile. At least is was from me in thinking about tinnitus as follows:
"God (or maybe "My Unconscious", or "Universe" if God does not work for you), grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference."
Tinnitus sounds(s) are definitely something I can't control. They will do what they do and I can accept that is the way it is and that does not mean I have to be conscious of them all the time or even some of the time so I work on the part which is something I can control.
Also dive into this one a bit as well:
"What you resist not only persists, but will grow in size." —Carl Jung
Read up about this one here:
''What we resist, persists, embrace it & will dissolve''
Then on the worrying about it will get worse element I keep this in mind:
"I have been through some terrible things in my life, some of which actually happened." —Mark Twain
"How much pain have cost us the evils which have never happened!" —Thomas Jefferson
Enjoy!
So glad for your improvement, I hope it gets even better.Update:
Back to Silence has significantly helped reduce my tinnitus volume and the intrusiveness by at least 50%. I just keep having a habit of finding myself monitoring it when I don't hear it or worrying it's going to get worse later. Guess I need more time. Most of my tones I don't mind, it's just one that does bother me a bit.
You write well in English so not so lousy seems to me. I agree with you as well that this thread has contributed to me in adjusting to having tinnitus and I thank all who have contributed to it. I am happy to be able to give back if I can make a difference for someone. It is a gift people give me to allow me to make a contribution to them if I can.I just want to thank all who contribute to this thread.
I am lousy at English; I am Chinese educated so I read and re-read this thread many times over try to get as much as possible out of this thread.
May you all be well and happy always. God bless you.
I keep returning to this thread each time I relapse, but it does give me hope that I may be able to habituate again one day.This is an important and most helpful success stories thread.
We have more control over our bodies with our thoughts than was once thought to be the case. It's well accepted that stress, anger, rage and other negative emotions can make us sick, even give us heart attacks. Cortisol levels increase, oxygen deprivation occurs at muscle sites, etc. The thoughts in our heads change our bodies physically. I bring this example up because I bet that 90% of the people here would agree with this mechanism. Research on how the brain works has also discovered links between memories and emotions and the effects on our bodies in positive ways as well as negative. It is now understood that our brains are constantly being rewired in reaction to these thoughts and emotions - neuroplasticity. Sure, happy thoughts can't fix everything. We can't regrow a limb because we have a positive attitude because our bodies do not possess that ability but we can affect many other things. We become what we imagine, what we want to become. A positive attitude imagining success actually changes the wiring of our brains. This positive effect on actual physical problems is seen in stroke victims where the loss of proper speech for instance is repaired through proper training, maneuvers to rewire the brain to avoid the damaged area. When my mother-in-law had a major stroke 5 years ago, my wife asked the doctor what could help her paralysis and speech problems. He outlined a series of training and stimulation exercises and said that many hours per day focused on this would help her but people rarely do this. After a lengthy family meeting and agreement by all of us my wife moved in with her mother who lived alone and worked with her every day for 6 weeks and she is now completely normal with no apparent effects of her stroke except the pacemaker she needed for the heart rhythm problems that started that day. Hers is a dramatic example, maybe not typical but it shows what is possible. In the beginning she would forget to open her eyes and could not form words. She had partial paralysis of one side of her body. She lacked emotion and empathy. Now she's normal mom again. My wife has since passed away but I go over every night for dinner and we solve jumble puzzles together. She is 83 and beats me half the time. She does not say oh I had a stroke, I can't solve jumble puzzles anymore, she says oh good you brought jumbles, let's get to work.I keep returning to this thread each time I relapse, but it does give me hope that I may be able to habituate again one day.
Thanks for the great post. Makes perfect sense to me George.We have more control over our bodies with our thoughts than was once thought to be the case. It's well accepted that stress, anger, rage and other negative emotions can make us sick, even give us heart attacks. Cortisol levels increase, oxygen deprivation occurs at muscle sites, etc. The thoughts in our heads change our bodies physically. I bring this example up because I bet that 90% of the people here would agree with this mechanism. Research on how the brain works has also discovered links between memories and emotions and the effects on our bodies in positive ways as well as negative. It is now understood that our brains are constantly being rewired in reaction to these thoughts and emotions - neuroplasticity. Sure, happy thoughts can't fix everything. We can't regrow a limb because we have a positive attitude because our bodies do not possess that ability but we can affect many other things. We become what we imagine, what we want to become. A positive attitude imagining success actually changes the wiring of our brains. This positive effect on actual physical problems is seen in stroke victims where the loss of proper speech for instance is repaired through proper training, maneuvers to rewire the brain to avoid the damaged area. When my mother-in-law had a major stroke 5 years ago, my wife asked the doctor what could help her paralysis and speech problems. He outlined a series of training and stimulation exercises and said that many hours per day focused on this would help her but people rarely do this. After a lengthy family meeting and agreement by all of us my wife moved in with her mother who lived alone and worked with her every day for 6 weeks and she is now completely normal with no apparent effects of her stroke except the pacemaker she needed for the heart rhythm problems that started that day. Hers is a dramatic example, maybe not typical but it shows what is possible. In the beginning she would forget to open her eyes and could not form words. She had partial paralysis of one side of her body. She lacked emotion and empathy. Now she's normal mom again. My wife has since passed away but I go over every night for dinner and we solve jumble puzzles together. She is 83 and beats me half the time. She does not say oh I had a stroke, I can't solve jumble puzzles anymore, she says oh good you brought jumbles, let's get to work.
I had major plumbing removed due to prostate cancer including the main valve for urine control. I have friends that still need to wear diapers because they lack control from this operation. My brain was capable of repairing the process and learned how to use new muscle control to perform the function of the missing valve at the base of the bladder. Why do I have 100% control and the next guy does not? Skill of the surgeon is involved but I committed to the process, fully convinced that my body could learn to do this and it did. My buddies are still wearing pads and talk a lot about the fear of losing control, the image that they review in their head every day is that they will never have control over this function.
Tinnitus is real and it causes major suffering for many people. There is more than one mechanism and it's not completely understood yet but one thing is clear, our brains and the extended neurological network has fabricated sounds that don't exist. I believe that neural pathways can be changed starting with our thoughts and emotions about the sounds. If we accept this condition and think of it as something like any other chronic illness like say arthritis and understand that it cannot actually hurt us, it just is. We don't fear it, we don't obsess about its presence, we don't monitor it, we don't describe it, we don't compare it. Instead we believe that it's no big deal and can be made to be unimportant, to not affect our lives. Spikes come and go, the noises change. It can go away and return. No problem, I am going to think about this as the many noises all day long from the jackhammers, car horns, people yelling and whistling on the streets of a busy city where I don't even notice them anymore. Some people would not live anywhere else. I might even call tinnitus my old friend like my brother-in-law does. I will imagine it unimportant and that my brain can rewire away from this. I will focus on what is good in my life, what I can enjoy when this becomes unimportant. These are phantom sounds that don't exist and I have control over how my brain and nervous system handles this.
All the best,
George
What confuses me is the point raised about describing our emotion even if it is a negative one?Update:
Back to Silence has significantly helped reduce my tinnitus volume and the intrusiveness by at least 50%. I just keep having a habit of finding myself monitoring it when I don't hear it or worrying it's going to get worse later. Guess I need more time. Most of my tones I don't mind, it's just one that does bother me a bit.
You may be right about the assertion "...may reinforce a negative pathway" aspect. Assuming you are right, then one has to look at is the risk of reinforcing the negative pathway in the short term worth the positive outcome of reducing the frequency of negative emotions arising if/when one reaches habituation through the use of the Back to Silence method in the long term. I would say the further one goes up in the stages of habituation see here:What confuses me is the point raised about describing our emotion even if it is a negative one?
I'm concerned a negative emotion may reinforce a negative pathway?
What exactly do you say when you hear your tinnitus?
@nay, I am sorry that you are suffering.Has anyone tried this while they've been having weird fluctuations and new tones? The idea behind this seems sound and it's similar to what my therapist and audiologist are suggesting, but it's really hard to not monitor the tinnitus itself when you keep getting new tones (I've had a few in the last few months, some have gone, some are still here, at least for now) and have some sound distortions. Especially because I never had issues like this before this year (and I've had tinnitus a long time).
I have been recently diagnosed with OCD which certainly makes the new tones and distortions have a stronger grip on my mind. The new tones because one of them isn't always there, and because they're new, I'm hoping they go away soon. The distortions because it's not always clear whether I'm hearing a distortion or whether the source sound actually sounds like that. And because the distortion kinda sounds like one of my new tones and I mix them up sometimes (see where I'm going with this?)
At the same time, I've seen posts on this thread talking about this method still working when spikes flare up, so if it can work despite spikes, why not new tones and distortions I guess? Especially since it may be the obsessive monitoring that caused these issues to get worse in the first place. And certainly this worked for the original poster, who was in a pretty bad place (which is what matters, not the ins-and-outs of his tinnitus right?)
I guess I'll make a ENT appointment too just in case, but not pinning many hopes on that.
Just feelings towards it. I say:What confuses me is the point raised about describing our emotion even if it is a negative one?
I'm concerned a negative emotion may reinforce a negative pathway?
What exactly do you say when you hear your tinnitus?
This is just me, maybe not quite what you should say. I think oh there you are, sup? Get in line behind cancer, see ya later cuz I got shit to do. If I hear a new sound I think oh wow that's a good one. Later, I got shit to do. Then I get busy with something constructive or arrange for some time with a loved one who cares about me. Then if at all possible, I don't talk about this.What confuses me is the point raised about describing our emotion even if it is a negative one?
I'm concerned a negative emotion may reinforce a negative pathway?
What exactly do you say when you hear your tinnitus?
Ok, so you're not counterbalancing it with a positive word...Just feelings towards it. I say:
I hear my tinnitus and it's bothering me.
I hear my tinnitus and it's not bad at all.
Tinnitus is making me feel down today.
And so forth.
Can relate.Struggling a bit with this. some days it's not as intrusive where I can go long periods without thinking about it, but on intrusive days it's nonstop.
Yeah you're right. The point is to not give it attention and if you do, just note your feeling and move on. It's kinda like retraining the brain to lessen it as a threat. I'm still not 100% but it has helped. Some days I'm so bad I just have to fight anxiety. Better days have been more frequent though.Ok, so you're not counterbalancing it with a positive word...
I'd ensure you say then *I feel bothered* rather than *it is bothering me* (if we are describing feelings).
Yeah allow it time, it's not easy for everyone that's for sure lol.Can relate.
Yesterday easier. Today... challenging.
OOPS.That's fantastic! How would you describe your tinnitus before?
Terry,We don't describe tinnitus. That's the old way.
- Terry