Hi everyone. I am 25 and have been a professional musician (drummer) for about 7 years and a (loud) music lover for basically my whole life. I am currently suffering from moderate noise-induced tinnitus and sound sensitivity.
I want to please ask before I continue that anyone responding to this refrain from verbalized judgment and "you should have worn earplugs". I promise I've already kicked myself more than any of you possibly could, and it doesn't help anything. I understand that my tinnitus is essentially self-caused and I take responsibility for that.
While I have pretty much always worn earplugs during my own sets, I have not always worn them while other people were playing. I got more and more lax with them as I realized that cheap earbuds made live music sound worse. I never bothered to get expensive ones, unfortunately. I elected to instead just position myself far enough from the players that it didn't feel too uncomfortable. I also frequently listen to fairly loud music at home and in the car, which I think tricked me into thinking that the average show was not *that* much worse.
I did have some minor tinnitus prior to this, probably caused by allergies and fluid in the ears. Hardly bothered me. I had noticed years ago that my tinnitus spiked a bit after gigs or practicing even with protection. I convinced myself that this was not too concerning. Then, over the past couple of years, I started going on moderately extended tours of the US. The longest one was about 5 months, during Spring of last year. Most of the time during others' sets, I was not wearing earplugs.
Now just in the last year or so, my tinnitus has become an inescapable concern for me. Whereas previously I could only hear it in near-complete silence, I now notice it in any area that does not have a constant, notable source of white noise. There are also two tones now; the high pitched one that I've had since almost as long as I can remember, and a louder mid-pitch that is the one that is really bothering/scaring me. It's gotten bad enough that I leave a fan on in my room at all times and spend the bulk of my at-home time in that room. Fortunately, I don't notice it much at work because one of the lights in my office hums noticeably.
This year I have made a point of ALWAYS wearing earplugs to ALL shows. But within the past few months, I have additionally noticed an increased sensitivity to sound. I've noticed it is harder for me to enjoy listening to some music I previously loved, and that certain frequencies aggravate me. It was at its worst when I was at a training class at work and the instructor was speaking over a moderately loud intercom speaker. I actually had to cover my right ear as much as possible during that class because it just drove me nuts (my right ear seems a bit worse and the speaker was on the right side).
I'm beginning to seriously look into any and all possible treatments that may lower the volume of my tinnitus. I have found that this one trick works for me, but only provides very temporary relief (http://health.learninginfo.org/tinnitus.htm). Hopefully this will help give someone here an idea of what longer-term solutions might work for me. I am interested in AudioNotch and "Notched White Noise Therapy" (https://www.audionotch.com/faq), but I have not tried it yet. I have also heard from a few people that AudioNotch worked for them until they went to another show (even with earplugs) and then the tinnitus reset and didn't decrease with further treatment.
Do I have any hope at all??? I'm feeling extremely desperate and worried that I'll have to give up my music career just to make this go away. I'm honestly not sure if life would be worth living for me if I had to give that up. I'm also not sure if it's worth living with this constant dial tone in my ears. Back in the day, I was naively willing to sacrifice a bit of hearing to enjoy music the way I wanted, but I didn't properly account for this possibility.
Any piece of advice or comfort helps. I'm willing to try anything that will allow me to keep pursuing my musical passions. I know I sound like a dumb whiny kid who's getting what he deserves, and I am. But I need some kind of hope to hold onto right now.
Thank you.
I want to please ask before I continue that anyone responding to this refrain from verbalized judgment and "you should have worn earplugs". I promise I've already kicked myself more than any of you possibly could, and it doesn't help anything. I understand that my tinnitus is essentially self-caused and I take responsibility for that.
While I have pretty much always worn earplugs during my own sets, I have not always worn them while other people were playing. I got more and more lax with them as I realized that cheap earbuds made live music sound worse. I never bothered to get expensive ones, unfortunately. I elected to instead just position myself far enough from the players that it didn't feel too uncomfortable. I also frequently listen to fairly loud music at home and in the car, which I think tricked me into thinking that the average show was not *that* much worse.
I did have some minor tinnitus prior to this, probably caused by allergies and fluid in the ears. Hardly bothered me. I had noticed years ago that my tinnitus spiked a bit after gigs or practicing even with protection. I convinced myself that this was not too concerning. Then, over the past couple of years, I started going on moderately extended tours of the US. The longest one was about 5 months, during Spring of last year. Most of the time during others' sets, I was not wearing earplugs.
Now just in the last year or so, my tinnitus has become an inescapable concern for me. Whereas previously I could only hear it in near-complete silence, I now notice it in any area that does not have a constant, notable source of white noise. There are also two tones now; the high pitched one that I've had since almost as long as I can remember, and a louder mid-pitch that is the one that is really bothering/scaring me. It's gotten bad enough that I leave a fan on in my room at all times and spend the bulk of my at-home time in that room. Fortunately, I don't notice it much at work because one of the lights in my office hums noticeably.
This year I have made a point of ALWAYS wearing earplugs to ALL shows. But within the past few months, I have additionally noticed an increased sensitivity to sound. I've noticed it is harder for me to enjoy listening to some music I previously loved, and that certain frequencies aggravate me. It was at its worst when I was at a training class at work and the instructor was speaking over a moderately loud intercom speaker. I actually had to cover my right ear as much as possible during that class because it just drove me nuts (my right ear seems a bit worse and the speaker was on the right side).
I'm beginning to seriously look into any and all possible treatments that may lower the volume of my tinnitus. I have found that this one trick works for me, but only provides very temporary relief (http://health.learninginfo.org/tinnitus.htm). Hopefully this will help give someone here an idea of what longer-term solutions might work for me. I am interested in AudioNotch and "Notched White Noise Therapy" (https://www.audionotch.com/faq), but I have not tried it yet. I have also heard from a few people that AudioNotch worked for them until they went to another show (even with earplugs) and then the tinnitus reset and didn't decrease with further treatment.
Do I have any hope at all??? I'm feeling extremely desperate and worried that I'll have to give up my music career just to make this go away. I'm honestly not sure if life would be worth living for me if I had to give that up. I'm also not sure if it's worth living with this constant dial tone in my ears. Back in the day, I was naively willing to sacrifice a bit of hearing to enjoy music the way I wanted, but I didn't properly account for this possibility.
Any piece of advice or comfort helps. I'm willing to try anything that will allow me to keep pursuing my musical passions. I know I sound like a dumb whiny kid who's getting what he deserves, and I am. But I need some kind of hope to hold onto right now.
Thank you.