My pleasure Jovita. I've had T for well over 10 years, but I originally habituated. I Totally phased it out; it was still there but I just didn't acknowledge it at all. Kind of hard to explain.
In July last year my T spiked which took me out of my habituated state. It was my fault though because I didn't use ear plugs and I'm a musician. You should be fine as long as you use ear plugs at any loud events.
Now I believe my T is louder, it likely is, but I'm not 100% any more. I don't have trouble sleeping whatsoever ( I did at the onset of the spike but it was anxiety driven) this is because my brain is used to having T on a subconscious level. The initial spike REALLY effected me. I became depressed and very anxious which made it WORSE. I had no choice but to try my very best to cope. Slowly but surely I started to have better days and weeks. In fact, some weeks have passed and I've felt amazing, basically habituated, just never gave T any thought at all. I don't quite understand yet why I keep going back to thinking about it, but I'm pretty sure it's my mood that's having the detrimental effect. I've said this before on here; my best time since the spike was after I did a charity event for the local children's hospital, we raised a lot of money and I felt amazing. The whole event went so well and we packed the place. I had the best 3 weeks for a long time and T became a distant memory for a while.
The reason for this is because I kept myself focused on something that I felt was very important at the time which lifted my mood and perspective. There was a lot at stake which practically forced my T onto the back burner.
My goal now is to get there permanently, which I believe I will. You have to believe because there's no other choice. On the bad days you just have to fake it until you make it, and make sure you keep your hobbies going and get out a lot.