- Aug 21, 2014
- 5,049
- Tinnitus Since
- 1999
- Cause of Tinnitus
- karma
I had a useful and somewhat instructive experience yesterday.
I have a friend who had never heard of "tinnitus". When he heard me complaining about it at one point, he asked "oh, like the high pitched TV-screen sound I can hear loudly when it's quiet? Huh! I always assumed that was normal, I've had it forever and I don't think about it much at all".
I have always assumed that part of the reason he "doesn't think about it" must be that his is quieter than mine and thus easy to ignore. Makes sense, right? Of course, even when mine was much, much quieter and I couldn't hear it in most environments, I still bugged the fuck out about it, but still... if he's not bothered at all, it must be easy to mask, right?
So yesterday, I was hanging out with him outside his apartment. We were sitting 80' or so above a busy road, so there was a ton of ambient traffic noise. It was a windy day, so there was a lot of wind noise. Then his HVAC kicked on, and we were sitting right next to the thing -- probably 70 db at least, not deafening or scary, but loud and cutting through a huge swath of frequencies. I figured that there must be no way he could hear his head sounds in this environment, since it had gotten loud enough to make mine a bit hard to pick out of all the noise, so I asked him, and he said "oh yeah, I mean, it's a very high pitch sound, you know? So I can hear it sort of above and beyond and over all these things".
So, from that, I became pretty convinced that my friend's volume is roughly the same as mine... and yet, he's never been on a tinnitus forum, did not know what the word meant, and doesn't see this as any kind of obstacle or difficulty.
I'm not saying that my T didn't bother me less when it was quieter, and I'm not saying it wouldn't bother me more if it got louder... there's a reason I carry earplugs around with me all the time! But, different people process sound very differently, and reaction and conscious machinery around perception, clearly has a ton to do with how people categorize and experience things. So that again comes down to, "freaking the fuck out about tinnitus is probably the worst thing you can do, because you wire your brain to freak the fuck out about it better and better."
I have a friend who had never heard of "tinnitus". When he heard me complaining about it at one point, he asked "oh, like the high pitched TV-screen sound I can hear loudly when it's quiet? Huh! I always assumed that was normal, I've had it forever and I don't think about it much at all".
I have always assumed that part of the reason he "doesn't think about it" must be that his is quieter than mine and thus easy to ignore. Makes sense, right? Of course, even when mine was much, much quieter and I couldn't hear it in most environments, I still bugged the fuck out about it, but still... if he's not bothered at all, it must be easy to mask, right?
So yesterday, I was hanging out with him outside his apartment. We were sitting 80' or so above a busy road, so there was a ton of ambient traffic noise. It was a windy day, so there was a lot of wind noise. Then his HVAC kicked on, and we were sitting right next to the thing -- probably 70 db at least, not deafening or scary, but loud and cutting through a huge swath of frequencies. I figured that there must be no way he could hear his head sounds in this environment, since it had gotten loud enough to make mine a bit hard to pick out of all the noise, so I asked him, and he said "oh yeah, I mean, it's a very high pitch sound, you know? So I can hear it sort of above and beyond and over all these things".
So, from that, I became pretty convinced that my friend's volume is roughly the same as mine... and yet, he's never been on a tinnitus forum, did not know what the word meant, and doesn't see this as any kind of obstacle or difficulty.
I'm not saying that my T didn't bother me less when it was quieter, and I'm not saying it wouldn't bother me more if it got louder... there's a reason I carry earplugs around with me all the time! But, different people process sound very differently, and reaction and conscious machinery around perception, clearly has a ton to do with how people categorize and experience things. So that again comes down to, "freaking the fuck out about tinnitus is probably the worst thing you can do, because you wire your brain to freak the fuck out about it better and better."