- Feb 19, 2024
- 3
- Tinnitus Since
- 102023
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Smoke alarm going off in my face
Two decades of playing music/going to shows probably set the stage, but I'd only notice my tinnitus when out hiking or underwater or something, until last October when my smoke alarm went off in my face, and now it's a constant presence, along with some hyperacusis. In the grand scheme of things, my tinnitus is comparatively mild in volume and pitch, as I can tune it out easily enough and it doesn't affect my ability to work or sleep, but it definitely screws with my ability to listen to music and do sound work (more on that below), and I have no idea if I'll be able to go see bands in the future without making it worse, even though I wear earplugs religiously.
I did a high dose of Prednisone about a month in, and noticed that it went down for 2-3 weeks after my regiment was over, but came back without any clear trigger (my guess is either a couple weeks of shitty sleep or doing a mix for a school project). Since then, it's close to as bad as it was in the beginning.
I've been in school for sound design and audio production for the last several years, and am stubbornly staying with it, as I'm sick of being a middle-aged grocery stocker. For the most part, the tinnitus doesn't affect my ability to listen critically, but whereas before I could edit or mix for hours without issue, now my ears can get quite fatigued.
My audiologist says there's an 85% chance this will go away in a year and a half — my exposure was for about four seconds at what I've estimated to be a 120 dB alarm at point blank range (in a small room, so I'm sure the reverberations might have increased the loudness), but I'm unfortunately super skeptical.
Anyways, that's my origin story.
I did a high dose of Prednisone about a month in, and noticed that it went down for 2-3 weeks after my regiment was over, but came back without any clear trigger (my guess is either a couple weeks of shitty sleep or doing a mix for a school project). Since then, it's close to as bad as it was in the beginning.
I've been in school for sound design and audio production for the last several years, and am stubbornly staying with it, as I'm sick of being a middle-aged grocery stocker. For the most part, the tinnitus doesn't affect my ability to listen critically, but whereas before I could edit or mix for hours without issue, now my ears can get quite fatigued.
My audiologist says there's an 85% chance this will go away in a year and a half — my exposure was for about four seconds at what I've estimated to be a 120 dB alarm at point blank range (in a small room, so I'm sure the reverberations might have increased the loudness), but I'm unfortunately super skeptical.
Anyways, that's my origin story.