After a noise three weeks ago, I had hyperacusis, ear pain, and a clicking sound when I swallow, but I figured it was due to muscle tension from my panic, so I worked hard to reduce my anxiety. After a quiet weekend at home, I was feeling so much better. Then I went to work.
It's usually quiet there, but as I was walking up the stairs there was a forklift backing up going beep beep beep. My instinct was to close my ear with my finger but I stopped myself.
I told myself that if I was afraid of every high-pitched beep I would develop phonophobia, which I know I am prone to due to the nature of my OCD. From the CBT I've had for my OCD, I learned that by trying to protect myself from all perceived threats I end up dysfunctional.
Since my fear is related to my health, a fear of loud noises hurting my ears would fit in perfectly with all my other health related obsessions. So I used the ERP (exposure & response prevention) I learned from therapy. I exposed myself to the noises (which all the other people were exposed to) and prevented myself from responding by plugging my ear.
Big mistake! There must have been a good five beeps before I got to the top of the stairs and just like that the ear pain and clicking were back.
I hope this doesn't mean more damage, but I think it is damage.
I didn't want to start wearing an ear plug whenever I'm not at home because I could end up with more hyperacusis and phonophobia. With my OCD, I could end up fearing every sound, overprotecting, and keeping my anxiety high. But today made it seem like, if I'm not overprotecting, I'm underprotecting, because the entire workday was quiet except for the few seconds it wasn't, and it's those few seconds that could make me so much worse.
I feel so dumb for ignoring my instinct to protect. But OCD has ruined my instincts. If I listened to my OCD about other health-related matters, I wouldn't be able to function at all. At my worst with OCD I was afraid to touch anything. I was afraid to move. I had to abandon my faulty instincts and just do what other people were doing. But that strategy really backfired for me today.
It's usually quiet there, but as I was walking up the stairs there was a forklift backing up going beep beep beep. My instinct was to close my ear with my finger but I stopped myself.
I told myself that if I was afraid of every high-pitched beep I would develop phonophobia, which I know I am prone to due to the nature of my OCD. From the CBT I've had for my OCD, I learned that by trying to protect myself from all perceived threats I end up dysfunctional.
Since my fear is related to my health, a fear of loud noises hurting my ears would fit in perfectly with all my other health related obsessions. So I used the ERP (exposure & response prevention) I learned from therapy. I exposed myself to the noises (which all the other people were exposed to) and prevented myself from responding by plugging my ear.
Big mistake! There must have been a good five beeps before I got to the top of the stairs and just like that the ear pain and clicking were back.
I hope this doesn't mean more damage, but I think it is damage.
I didn't want to start wearing an ear plug whenever I'm not at home because I could end up with more hyperacusis and phonophobia. With my OCD, I could end up fearing every sound, overprotecting, and keeping my anxiety high. But today made it seem like, if I'm not overprotecting, I'm underprotecting, because the entire workday was quiet except for the few seconds it wasn't, and it's those few seconds that could make me so much worse.
I feel so dumb for ignoring my instinct to protect. But OCD has ruined my instincts. If I listened to my OCD about other health-related matters, I wouldn't be able to function at all. At my worst with OCD I was afraid to touch anything. I was afraid to move. I had to abandon my faulty instincts and just do what other people were doing. But that strategy really backfired for me today.