Hello, Dr. Hubbard: Thank you for being part of Tinnitus Talk. Your professional expertise is very valuable and we appreciate you taking your time to help those here.
I have been wanting to ask this question of my audiologist and thought I also might ask you:
I developed extreme anxiety and rolling panic attacks a few weeks after my tinnitus onset in May 2013. I had no prior anxiety history, although had been going through three stressful years due to continued layoffs at work. I started cognitive behavioral therapy in late July 2013 to deal with the anxiety. My therapist did not have a specialty in tinnitus but was very experienced in CBT, plus was someone I had worked with before. The therapy helped me tremendously. In late April of this year, my therapist said she felt I was doing so well that I no longer needed to see her, except if necessary.
I indeed have greatly improved, although I still feel like I have not quite reached habituation. I also am in the Neuromonics program. I do have anxiety flutters from time to time, although my CBT skills usually allows me to calm them without medication. I am able to work, have a normal life, basically do everything I did pre-tinnitus.
My question: I remain interested in Mindfulness, I guess mainly because of all the attention it is getting. But at this point, would it really enhance my habituation? Would it be important to work with someone who had expertise with tinnitus patients? These professionals are few and far between, and I tend not to be very adept at online learning.
Thanks
I have been wanting to ask this question of my audiologist and thought I also might ask you:
I developed extreme anxiety and rolling panic attacks a few weeks after my tinnitus onset in May 2013. I had no prior anxiety history, although had been going through three stressful years due to continued layoffs at work. I started cognitive behavioral therapy in late July 2013 to deal with the anxiety. My therapist did not have a specialty in tinnitus but was very experienced in CBT, plus was someone I had worked with before. The therapy helped me tremendously. In late April of this year, my therapist said she felt I was doing so well that I no longer needed to see her, except if necessary.
I indeed have greatly improved, although I still feel like I have not quite reached habituation. I also am in the Neuromonics program. I do have anxiety flutters from time to time, although my CBT skills usually allows me to calm them without medication. I am able to work, have a normal life, basically do everything I did pre-tinnitus.
My question: I remain interested in Mindfulness, I guess mainly because of all the attention it is getting. But at this point, would it really enhance my habituation? Would it be important to work with someone who had expertise with tinnitus patients? These professionals are few and far between, and I tend not to be very adept at online learning.
Thanks