- Jun 15, 2017
- 1
- Tinnitus Since
- February 2017
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Started with ear infection.
I got tinnitus earlier this year after coming down with a horrible respiratory infection that somehow became an ear infection. After not being able to hear much of anything for about two weeks, my hearing slowly came back. As it did, I started to hear very nice music in my left ear. I never could figure out what the tune was, but it involved strings, horns, an organ and was quite nice.
A few days later, my right ear decided to join in, but instead of music, or even a single tone, it channeled sirens. Lots of them. It sounded as if dozens of fire trucks and police cars are on their way to a major disaster.
Reading up on tinnitus I learned that the sounds I was hearing were generated by my brain trying to fill in for the silence. Why my brain decided to tune to sirens is beyond me, and the aural details of the sirens, complete with blaring horns of fire trucks, was amusing -- to an extent.
My hearing wasn't all that good to begin with, but I'm pretty much back to where it was before the infection. The tinnitus is quieter, but still there.
I have have a few moments of peace each morning when I first wake up. But as soon as I wonder, "Hey, where'd the tinnitus go," the sirens start up again. That makes me think that it literally is now all in my head and there should be ways to tell my brain to move on to other things. Or at least change the sirens to something less dramatic.
Has anyone successfully used bio-feedback, meditation or other brain exercises to tell the brain it can stop providing noise after your hearing has returned?
A few days later, my right ear decided to join in, but instead of music, or even a single tone, it channeled sirens. Lots of them. It sounded as if dozens of fire trucks and police cars are on their way to a major disaster.
Reading up on tinnitus I learned that the sounds I was hearing were generated by my brain trying to fill in for the silence. Why my brain decided to tune to sirens is beyond me, and the aural details of the sirens, complete with blaring horns of fire trucks, was amusing -- to an extent.
My hearing wasn't all that good to begin with, but I'm pretty much back to where it was before the infection. The tinnitus is quieter, but still there.
I have have a few moments of peace each morning when I first wake up. But as soon as I wonder, "Hey, where'd the tinnitus go," the sirens start up again. That makes me think that it literally is now all in my head and there should be ways to tell my brain to move on to other things. Or at least change the sirens to something less dramatic.
Has anyone successfully used bio-feedback, meditation or other brain exercises to tell the brain it can stop providing noise after your hearing has returned?