I eat a lot of cheese. Mainly cheddar or mozzarella and it has not affected my tinnitus but I read recently that all cheeses are high in salt. Not sure if this is true but I know salt is bad for tinnitus.
So has anyone had any bad reactions with cheese?
I used to eat cheese very rarely. I noticed that every single time I have it, I get a significant (albeit temporary) T spike. However, if you haven't noticed anything like that, then I don't think you need to worry about it.So has anyone had any bad reactions with cheese?
Drive at whatever speed makes you happy, overthinking is what leads to car crashes.Eat what you want to eat, overthinking is what leads to spikes....
Drive at whatever speed you feel like, overthinking is what leads to car crashes.
I am not saying that If speeding is wrong Then the implication is that eating the wrong food will cause a spike.False equivalence fallacy... Just stop.
I am not saying that If speeding wrong Then the implication is that eating the wrong food will cause a spike.
I am explaining what your argument sounds like to me. The proof that your statement is wrong is not my statement, it is the experiences of the numerous people who found that certain foods trigger a spike every single time.
I've never seen any posts here about anyone getting spikes from electromagnetic fields.and electromagnetic fields
I've never seen any posts here about anyone getting spikes from electromagnetic fields.
I also don't think anyone said that they got a spike after being exposed to scanner beeps. People said that they found those sounds to be grating, and some of us advised them to stay away from any sounds that they find grating. I had done that, and now I am ok with most of those sounds. I've read a number of posts by people who pushed themselves and ended up continuing to suffer from hyperacusis (a lot of the time it gets worse for them).
No need to do screenshots, as you can quote the post, and then people can see it in context. In this case, what I was responding to wasAnd here's ANOTHER screen-shot of you Mr. Bauer, this time arguing that a scanner beep can damage your hearing!
and YES if you place something Right By Your Ear, IT CAN do some SERIOUS damage. I learned this from personal experience. In addition, I never said that it would damage hearing. All I said is that it can lead to one getting T (or getting a spike if one already has T).I stupidly held the scanner closer to my face because the scanner wasn't reading the card and a loud BEEP went off near my ears when it finally scanned
He never said that he noticed a pattern that EMF gave spikes to him. He just said that he was concerned about being surrounded by EMF, and was going to change that.I've just been reading about EMF's from computers. I've been looking at posts here for a few months and can't believe this is the first time I've come across the subject. At first I freaked . . . because I'm surrounded by computers and monitors day and night. However, after researching more thoroughly, I've calmed down a little.
Nevertheless, as soon as I'm back in the office . . . first thing I'm doing is putting by desktop computer on the floor, instead of it being a couple of feet from my head!
No need to do screenshots, as you can quote the post, and then people can see it in context. In this case, what I was responding to was
and YES if you place something Right By Your Ear, IT CAN do some SERIOUS damage. I learned this from personal experience. In addition, I never said that it would damage hearing. All I said is that it can lead to one getting T (or getting a spike if one already has T).
And here is another post that you quoted
He never said that he noticed a pattern that EMF gave spikes to him. He just said that he was concerned about being surrounded by EMF, and was going to change that.
No need to do screenshots, as you can quote the post, and then people can see it in context. In this case, what I was responding to was
and YES if you place something Right By Your Ear, IT CAN do some SERIOUS damage. I learned this from personal experience. In addition, I never said that it would damage hearing. All I said is that it can lead to one getting T (or getting a spike if one already has T).
And here is another post that you quoted
He never said that he noticed a pattern that EMF gave spikes to him. He just said that he was concerned about being surrounded by EMF, and was going to change that.
I think of a grating sensation (when the ear is not well) following a sound, as pain that one feels after one, say breaks a leg. Both seem to be a signal from the body to stop doing what you are doing. Ignoring those signals might interfere with healing.why do you protect for them? Because it's annoying? Doubt it...
Then how do you explain the screen-shot I attached?
Go ahead, make my day.else I'm going to humiliate both of you.