- Apr 28, 2019
- 6
- Tinnitus Since
- 1976
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Myringotomy, perhaps? or Unknown
I'm here to share my tinnitus story. I've had tinnitus since I was a child. I first remember experiencing it after having myringotomy surgery. I remember trying to communicate what I was experiencing to my mother (and later my doctors) was very frustrating. What I heard was what sounded like a high frequency sinusoidal pitch that never ceased coming from mostly my left ear. I would emulate the sound when asked, and they kept asking me, "but does it sound like a ringing?" I didn't perceive it as a "ringing" because ringing to me sounded very different (I was seven years old...). As a result of my not labeling it thusly, I don't remember anyone discussing it further with me. Eventually, to me, the sound became the sound "of silence." Silence was a droning sound. Tinnitus is what silence sounded like... and in the rush of growing up and being a child, I conveniently forgot the whole affair.
Silence sounded like a comforting tone. I allowed that tone to lull me, anesthetize me, into an almost zen state for years during the moments when I noticed it. I truly believed that silence had a sound, and that everyone heard what I heard. It had a pitch like the gain of a stereo amplifier turned up too high. I tucked the experience of tinnitus away and was able actively turn away from it, and block it out, by concentrating on other things; however, I didn't realize that I was doing that. To add insult to injury, I turned to loud music as a means to tuck the experience away even deeper, which probably only exacerbated the issue.
So, fast-forward about 25 years. About a year ago, I started to meditate to address anxiety issues I was experiencing. Then one day (while meditating) I realized that I was holding back something, not experiencing something, and when I bore my concentration on it suddenly "Wham!" the experience of it hit me like a bus at an intersection. Now, I can't tuck it back where it used to be... and I'm actually, not even sure if that's what I should be doing.
I read the primer's advice in the forums as well as several other threads about how people pushed through their tinnitus by ignoring the experience, but that seems antithetical to everything life has taught me. I hope I'm not wrong, but it seems that being aware of it, of acknowledging it without obsessing on it, is the best means to address tinnitus; and that's been my plan, to hear it and perform in spite of it. It's been a year now... and I still seem to be grieving through that process. I decided to share my story because I'm tired of being ashamed of it, especially in light of the criticisms I've read before about how I should just "get over it" (which, I guess, might actually be some kind of sound advice (heh) that works for some people), and that talking about it, and giving it too much mental real estate, will just make the matter worse. So, I'm hoping that outing myself will help the habituation process.
Thanks!
Silence sounded like a comforting tone. I allowed that tone to lull me, anesthetize me, into an almost zen state for years during the moments when I noticed it. I truly believed that silence had a sound, and that everyone heard what I heard. It had a pitch like the gain of a stereo amplifier turned up too high. I tucked the experience of tinnitus away and was able actively turn away from it, and block it out, by concentrating on other things; however, I didn't realize that I was doing that. To add insult to injury, I turned to loud music as a means to tuck the experience away even deeper, which probably only exacerbated the issue.
So, fast-forward about 25 years. About a year ago, I started to meditate to address anxiety issues I was experiencing. Then one day (while meditating) I realized that I was holding back something, not experiencing something, and when I bore my concentration on it suddenly "Wham!" the experience of it hit me like a bus at an intersection. Now, I can't tuck it back where it used to be... and I'm actually, not even sure if that's what I should be doing.
I read the primer's advice in the forums as well as several other threads about how people pushed through their tinnitus by ignoring the experience, but that seems antithetical to everything life has taught me. I hope I'm not wrong, but it seems that being aware of it, of acknowledging it without obsessing on it, is the best means to address tinnitus; and that's been my plan, to hear it and perform in spite of it. It's been a year now... and I still seem to be grieving through that process. I decided to share my story because I'm tired of being ashamed of it, especially in light of the criticisms I've read before about how I should just "get over it" (which, I guess, might actually be some kind of sound advice (heh) that works for some people), and that talking about it, and giving it too much mental real estate, will just make the matter worse. So, I'm hoping that outing myself will help the habituation process.
Thanks!