Sure, here's everything I do during a severe setback:@chinup, could you please post a more detailed account of what you did to improve so much?
Your story really is interesting and it could help others in a similar situation.
Did you avoid sound for a while by any chance?
1. Initially I wear heavy duty foam earplugs during all waking hours (this is torture because it magnifies my tinnitus 10x but it has to be done).
2. Avoid as much sound as possible during the day, but particularly avoid anything from a small, cheap speaker like the plague. No talking on a phone, no watching tv thru built-in tv speakers, no laptop speakers, etc. Try to avoid horns, yells, alarms, blaring music... just common sense stuff that is clearly dangerous for us
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3. Sleep with a pink noise track looping on Spotify. I use my soundsystem, not headphones or cheap speakers. The speakers are about 8-10 away from me. Low volume. This gives me a little noise exposure each night so that I can start to slowly desensitize. It also drowns out my tinnitus thankfully.
4. Regularly throughout each day I consume ginger in some form. There's no special trick or recipe or preparation. I've found that everything benefits me, from ginger ale to ginger beer to ginger tea to ginger gummies to ginger honey. Fresh ginger as well of course. This really prevents my noxacusis burning from getting too bad. It doesn't seem to affect my stabbing pain loudness hyperacusis which is what most folks have when they talk about hyperacusis. So if there are loud sounds it still hurts like hell but only temporarily.
5. Spend a ton of time in the woods on hikes. I work from home due to my conditions so I can go out into nature in the middle of the day thankfully. This helps my mental health immensely.
6. As the months tick by I slowly start to reintroduce myself to sound. I switch from heavy duty foam earplugs to musician's earplugs. I listen to tv at low volumes thru a nice stereo system. I play games at low volume. I continue to consume ginger and avoid cheap speakers and super loud sounds. If my ears hurt I go back to protecting with heavier earplugs and avoid stuff for a few days. It's a drawn out process but I do think protecting 24/7 forever is not the answer.
7. Gradually I reintroduce music at low volumes, mostly chill stuff and very little electric guitar.
8. As the months continue and the improvement continues I gradually reintroduce slightly more energetic music. Eventually I can listen to 75-80% of music but I still avoid old recordings and stuff like metal or grunge rock.
9. Around the 5-6 month mark I start going to low-key bars or restaurants once or twice a week with hearing protection. For some reason the din of a bar/restaurant really helps my hyperacusis the next day. It's like a reset or something. Others around the internet have spoken about this mysterious effect. I also start to listen to tv at something closer to medium volume. I start to watch more sports with the volume on. I think once you get the initial constant noxacusis under control you start to benefit from exposing more and more. At least that's how it works for me thus far. More exposure is benefiting me at this point. But nothing crazy.
9. I try to avoid caffeine and chocolate and stuff as it spikes my hyperacusis.
10. Mentally I do some visualization techniques where I imagine myself listening to really loud guitar music and loving it and not being afraid or in pain. I have no clue if this helps at all but it's 5-10 minutes every couple days so it's not a huge investment. When you start doing this you'll be amazed how hard it is to not associated imagined loud volumes with pain, it's quite sad actually.
In general I do think time is the MOST important factor, and the second most important factor is avoiding sound over 80 dB at all costs, as well as avoiding harsh sounds such as the cheap speakers at any volume. Again I've had to rearrange my life significantly due to this condition. I work from home, I live in a chill college town instead of a major city, I haven't traveled much (thankfully COVID-19 made this not much of a big deal the past couple years), I don't have kids yet, etc. You may not be in a position to do all of the things I've done, but hopefully you can get some help from this.
Also I'm not a doctor or a hearing professional. Use these techniques at your own risk and be careful; we are all different. If it was as simple as popping some ginger every day this wouldn't be a worrisome condition at all...