- Apr 13, 2019
- 7
- Tinnitus Since
- 11/2018
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Noise exposure, stress made it worse
Hello all,
I'm a 17 year old girl with tinnitus that is most likely caused by noise exposure. The sound is a mixture of a high pitched noise through the day and ringing at night, it's not very extreme but it's very annoying when it's all silent, I always need background sounds. I also have a lot of fluid in my ears and they 'crack' when I yawn. It also feels like they're "never really fully open", as if someone's blocking it. My tinnitus has gotten a little worse since I got it because I have lower-pitched ringing now, but the loudness hasn't increased a lot. Sounds such as cutlery falling on a plate and bells ringing irritate me very much though.
I never go to concerts or festivals but there is one concert I REALLY want to see so bad. It's k-pop, so no rock and roll or metal, but I still believe the sound levels can be high there too, though I have no experience myself. I wanted to wear hearing protection but after reading a lot of horror stories here I'm genuinely scared. I paid a lot of money to get my ticket and I want to go so so bad, but I don't want to sacrifice the quality of the rest of my life over it.
So my question is: is the risk of getting a tinnitus spike after a concert -- wearing ear protection -- really as high as is being presented here? Or will I do fine with 30 dB earplugs and maybe noise cancelling headphones as well? Are there any positive experiences with going to concert while having tinnitus or do the horror storries greatly outweigh this?
Please help me out. I don't want to live the rest of my life like this, but I also don't want to enjoying life while I am still young.
I'm a 17 year old girl with tinnitus that is most likely caused by noise exposure. The sound is a mixture of a high pitched noise through the day and ringing at night, it's not very extreme but it's very annoying when it's all silent, I always need background sounds. I also have a lot of fluid in my ears and they 'crack' when I yawn. It also feels like they're "never really fully open", as if someone's blocking it. My tinnitus has gotten a little worse since I got it because I have lower-pitched ringing now, but the loudness hasn't increased a lot. Sounds such as cutlery falling on a plate and bells ringing irritate me very much though.
I never go to concerts or festivals but there is one concert I REALLY want to see so bad. It's k-pop, so no rock and roll or metal, but I still believe the sound levels can be high there too, though I have no experience myself. I wanted to wear hearing protection but after reading a lot of horror stories here I'm genuinely scared. I paid a lot of money to get my ticket and I want to go so so bad, but I don't want to sacrifice the quality of the rest of my life over it.
So my question is: is the risk of getting a tinnitus spike after a concert -- wearing ear protection -- really as high as is being presented here? Or will I do fine with 30 dB earplugs and maybe noise cancelling headphones as well? Are there any positive experiences with going to concert while having tinnitus or do the horror storries greatly outweigh this?
Please help me out. I don't want to live the rest of my life like this, but I also don't want to enjoying life while I am still young.