I figured it would be nice to have someone who actually understands this stuff to chat with.
I only recently starting hearing the noise, and you'll have to pardon me for not being up on the lingo. I was outside waiting for my SO and suddenly my left ear felt like I was descending in a plane. It filled with pressure and then slowly it subsided. But when it went away, I was left with that ringing. Like, the highest pitched ringing I can imagine. I haven't been able to find a proper analogue to describe it. It always feels like when I describe it, the description is lacking something... it never does it justice because everyone I describe it to plays it off like it's nothing. But... it's NOT nothing. I want to drive an icepick behind my ear sometimes. It's not nothing.
Anyway, over the course of about a week, it moved to my right ear and that's where it stayed. It's actually not accurate to say "right ear" because it feels like it's behind the ear, embedded firmly inside my head somewhere.
There have been good days and bad ones. Today is a bad one. The only relief I can find is in the shower or with headphones. I never listened to loud music before, and there seems to be no reason for this to have triggered. Since it started I've been to my family Doctor, had bloodwork done, and he sees nothing wrong. Of course he doesn't. They never do, do they? He said it might be connected to my hayfever, but it's been 2 months now and I haven't had terribly bad allergies.
Anyway, I have a very high whine in my head and have no idea what to try to make it subside. Sometimes I kinda "forget it" when I'm listening to a podcast and doing some Photoshop work or writing, but I'm generally very distracted by it. Especially right now, it's the worst it's been in quite some time. When it gets like this, I usually take a couple showers a day just because I know that it will be of some relief. The AC in our bedroom doesn't mask it at all. Luckily I'm unemployed right now (weird sentence, I know) so I'm not in terrible need for a good sleep schedule, but it's always difficult to fall asleep when the whine is at its worst.
It's like there's a barrier in my head, and the noise is trying to breach it. I'm such a hypochondriac anyway, that I fear what will happen when that barrier breaks. That probably makes no sense, but it does to me.
Okay, I don't have anything more to say that I can think of. This is just the first step for me to chat with people who can actually sympathize. Thanks for reading.
-Chris. 35. Toronto.
I only recently starting hearing the noise, and you'll have to pardon me for not being up on the lingo. I was outside waiting for my SO and suddenly my left ear felt like I was descending in a plane. It filled with pressure and then slowly it subsided. But when it went away, I was left with that ringing. Like, the highest pitched ringing I can imagine. I haven't been able to find a proper analogue to describe it. It always feels like when I describe it, the description is lacking something... it never does it justice because everyone I describe it to plays it off like it's nothing. But... it's NOT nothing. I want to drive an icepick behind my ear sometimes. It's not nothing.
Anyway, over the course of about a week, it moved to my right ear and that's where it stayed. It's actually not accurate to say "right ear" because it feels like it's behind the ear, embedded firmly inside my head somewhere.
There have been good days and bad ones. Today is a bad one. The only relief I can find is in the shower or with headphones. I never listened to loud music before, and there seems to be no reason for this to have triggered. Since it started I've been to my family Doctor, had bloodwork done, and he sees nothing wrong. Of course he doesn't. They never do, do they? He said it might be connected to my hayfever, but it's been 2 months now and I haven't had terribly bad allergies.
Anyway, I have a very high whine in my head and have no idea what to try to make it subside. Sometimes I kinda "forget it" when I'm listening to a podcast and doing some Photoshop work or writing, but I'm generally very distracted by it. Especially right now, it's the worst it's been in quite some time. When it gets like this, I usually take a couple showers a day just because I know that it will be of some relief. The AC in our bedroom doesn't mask it at all. Luckily I'm unemployed right now (weird sentence, I know) so I'm not in terrible need for a good sleep schedule, but it's always difficult to fall asleep when the whine is at its worst.
It's like there's a barrier in my head, and the noise is trying to breach it. I'm such a hypochondriac anyway, that I fear what will happen when that barrier breaks. That probably makes no sense, but it does to me.
Okay, I don't have anything more to say that I can think of. This is just the first step for me to chat with people who can actually sympathize. Thanks for reading.
-Chris. 35. Toronto.