Per...Wow, how do I keep all this brief?! I'll give you the bare bones answers and realize there is a lot more between the blanks. In fact maybe I should follow IWLM's post about tips living with tinnitus for 40 years, as I've had it for 58 years! another time though.
No, I have never experienced any quiet periods since I first got tinnitus. Volume levels have stayed constant at each new "jump up", at that new level. However, when I first got tinnitus (the medium-high pitched, classical, EEEEEEEE type) it was quiet enough that I only heard it in relative silence. I almost had to listen for it. Plus as a kid I adapted pretty quick anyhow. Too many snakes to catch and games to play so it did not slow me down.
With each successive jump up the volume
objectively increased. However, with the second jump up there was in retrospect, only minor hyperacusis that must have faded off after a few years. I know this because I went to quite a few loud Halloween parties for a major winery I used to work for in the 80's and early 90's and I could handle it. The tinnitus would ring a little louder when I lay down (maybe a bit 'inebriated'
perhaps) to sleep, but was normal volume next morning. Also I joined a modern dance troupe in the late 90's (a late bloomer!) and was obviously fine on stage with music and clapping and all that stuff for nearly 10 years.
Thus I lived a normal life with this pretty loud 'tinnitus only'. (In fact semi-loud tinnitus only is a helluva lot easier to live with than T with hyperacusis added!). I would always protect with earmuffs when weed-whipping or driving heavy machinery though, and I did not go to rock concerts, etc. without earplugs.
Then came the ototoxic antibiotics in 2006. Whole new ball-game! MUCH louder tinnitus + hyperacusis and MUCH harder to live with. Serious protection. Serious devastation of my normal life. No dance! I was crushed.
But...over 6 years it finally went down enough and I adapted enough that I was able to dance again and even be on stage, (which is actually quieter than being in the audience), though did stick my fingers in my ears when the clapping got too much. I could not dance with earplugs in - too old too clumsy, so I was 'unprotected'. Amazing. I
never thought I would get there again.
Fourth jump up, 2012.....Arrrggggggggggggggg! This is REALLY LOUD!!! It is almost all I hear and it is constant, and it "bings up" in mini-spikes at any trigger like a knife hitting a ceramic plate at the dinner table (I use wooden plates now). It does not "spike" like I read about here...just very short-lived then back to base volume. However, I avoid
any chance of further damage as there is the massive fear of: "What if it goes up even higher???!!!" Which it can...as it has...four darn times!!!
Yeah, I'm trying to keep it short...but the STRESS aspect.
Well, stress does nothing to my tinnitus on a volume level. Does not change it at all. In fact if stressed with some crisis I actually get a little more distracted from the tinnitus because I have this emergency to deal with, or whatever. This may be less common than with most T sufferers. Sleep though helps me to cope as if lack of it I get more worn down and weaker. The volume however does
not change, just "me".
The MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE...Ha, ha. Well, it's not funny really, but my mother told me at age 6 that "They" would find a cure for "the ringing" in no time, as the guys in white coats were solving all the world's problems at light speed! This was the era of DDT, antibiotics, white bread for all, etc., etc., etc.
So I'm still waiting! Though for sure there is a LOT more awareness about it than there was in the 1950's. No doubt about it. Hell, it seemed like my dad and most of the men who had been through WWII had "ringing in the ears" (for obvious reasons). The solution was to 'man up', grin and pretend you were fine. Huh, maybe that's why so many drank themselves into oblivion each night. Hard to tell as it seems like colonial Africa ran on alcohol consumption!
"Basta"..."Genug"...Enough... Hope this answers your questions.
Best, Zimichael