Well, I am kinda past the anxiety stage, I am too tired and depressed (well, my anxiety went up during hyperacusis spike). I can't find much to distract myself, so in effect yes, I am still monitoring the noise, which keeps me trapped I guess. I am not sure I attach a lot of emotion to the sound per se, either - I am just constantly sad, resigned and depressed that I have it. I can't find an escape, though.
I am sorry to say it is true that some people can't habituate. One does not have to be on forums like Tinnitus Talk to know that. Then it is a bit of a paradox. To escape, one has to stop trying to escape, get into acceptance that tinnitus is likely here to stay has been my experience personally and in my readings on the topic of getting to habituation.
In reading your post, I am reminded of what one philosopher type I read said something like the following... close quote: "Life is empty and meaningless and it does not mean anything that life is empty and meaningless." Human beings keep bringing some kind of meaning to life and the things in life including things like tinnitus. The founders of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy said feelings come from thoughts thus how you think about things drives how you feel and act. That reminds me of this quote as well:
"Whether you think you can or you think you can't, your right." — Henry Ford
Whenever my "self-talk" in my head says to me or I read "I can't," I always think of this quote. I really have to look at what my self-talk is saying to me.
Well, all the above is easy to write and much more difficult to implement to be sure. From reading what you write, it seems working with Dr. Hubbard is better than your status quo so if you can work with him I sure would go for it. I wish you well.
Can Back to Silence work for high-pitched tinnitus that can be heard even while in the shower?
Sure it can. Of course it does not work for everyone. Also it depends on what you mean by "work for". If you have not read say the last 20 or 30 posts yet, I think you will have a better idea about what this approach is all about and why it can work for (depending on what you mean by work for) someone regardless of the type of tinnitus. If you have more questions, ask away as many want to be of help to you. Just follow the method and see what happens. You have nothing to lose I figure. See here:
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... the total will go down over time) and each emotional response in a word or two on paper is best, review your paper weekly to see the change in your responses.
Once you get to less than 5 or 10 incidences per day, you can stop writing them down and only do it in your head since you do not have to speak it aloud to get the result. If you don't want to write it down, that is OK, give it a try just verbally and see how it goes. If you do not notice a decrease in incidences over time, then begin to write them down to keep a count even if it is only a hash mark to keep the count.