I got tinnitus about 4 months ago. I've been lurking your site since then, but this is my first post.
What happened: I was on a 3 hour flight while I had a bad cold. The ascent was fine; my ears depressurized to cruising altitude. But when the plane descended, my Eustachian tubes never opened once, and my head was in excruciating pain - I was terrified my eardrums would rupture, but they didn't. An hour after landing, I blew my nose and my left ear opened up. (That ear is asymptomatic.) But my right ear never opened until 48 hours after the flight.
Since then, my right ear has tinnitus at an ultra-high frequency. It sounds like an old CRT television. I've never been able to figure out what its frequency is, but it's somewhere between 11,000 and 14,000 hz.
Otherwise, I have bat-like hearing. I'm 32 but I can clearly hear those devices they install in public areas to keep teens from loitering. I'm also irritated by devices used to keep roaches or mice away.
My problem is: I would have been able to habituate a long time ago if its volume and behavior were constant, but the volume shifts wildly between 2 extremes randomly. Just when I think I'm habituated and "wow, it's effectively out of my life now!", the volume will spike by orders of magnitude, sometimes spread to the other ear, and last who knows how long? An hour? A day? A week? When I wake up tomorrow, will it be gone? One time, the "loud mode" lasted a whole week, and mysteriously went back to normal after getting drunk at a bar!
It kills me that there's no rhyme or reason why the volume changes. I endlessly analyze - ooh! I had a ham sandwich an hour earlier! It must be ham that does it!
So my question is: How do I habituate if my tinnitus is so variable?
Miscellaneous info: You know the drill - lifelong depression/anxiety; INTP; high neuroticism / low agreeableness; extremely analytical; perfectionist; I'm sure I've got one foot on "the spectrum".
What happened: I was on a 3 hour flight while I had a bad cold. The ascent was fine; my ears depressurized to cruising altitude. But when the plane descended, my Eustachian tubes never opened once, and my head was in excruciating pain - I was terrified my eardrums would rupture, but they didn't. An hour after landing, I blew my nose and my left ear opened up. (That ear is asymptomatic.) But my right ear never opened until 48 hours after the flight.
Since then, my right ear has tinnitus at an ultra-high frequency. It sounds like an old CRT television. I've never been able to figure out what its frequency is, but it's somewhere between 11,000 and 14,000 hz.
Otherwise, I have bat-like hearing. I'm 32 but I can clearly hear those devices they install in public areas to keep teens from loitering. I'm also irritated by devices used to keep roaches or mice away.
My problem is: I would have been able to habituate a long time ago if its volume and behavior were constant, but the volume shifts wildly between 2 extremes randomly. Just when I think I'm habituated and "wow, it's effectively out of my life now!", the volume will spike by orders of magnitude, sometimes spread to the other ear, and last who knows how long? An hour? A day? A week? When I wake up tomorrow, will it be gone? One time, the "loud mode" lasted a whole week, and mysteriously went back to normal after getting drunk at a bar!
It kills me that there's no rhyme or reason why the volume changes. I endlessly analyze - ooh! I had a ham sandwich an hour earlier! It must be ham that does it!
So my question is: How do I habituate if my tinnitus is so variable?
Miscellaneous info: You know the drill - lifelong depression/anxiety; INTP; high neuroticism / low agreeableness; extremely analytical; perfectionist; I'm sure I've got one foot on "the spectrum".