If continuing drumming and headphones makes the T stay, which it would likely do anyways, so be it. "Live Fast, Die Young" - Circle Jerks
While
If continuing drumming and headphones makes the T stay, which it would likely do anyways, so be it. "Live Fast, Die Young" - Circle Jerks
Unfortunately, your ears become more fragile after a noise trauma, even if they do recover they will be at increased risk of a relapse in tinnitus or hearingloss, or if they don't, an increase of it.
The truth to the matter is that human ears have not adapted to cope with a sound source that's too close to them, low volume will only decrease the risk, but it won't stop damaging your ears, the proximity plays a role, so the longer you listen to headphone. Even at low volume prolongued chronic exposure to headphones will damage your ears.
If you occasionaly use headphones at low volume for short periods of time, the risk for permanent hearingloss will likely be low, albeit still exist in some fashion, it is still reasonable if one is reasonable with their use.
That said, using headphones of any kind, and in any duration (other than very short, very low volume exposure, such as during an audiogram), early after the onset of a noise trauma, is playing with fire.
You need to give the time for your ears to recover whatever damage is not yet irreversible, this can (and will likely) take months, (perhaps even up to a year in certain cases), and will definitely not happen overnight, by using headphones or exposing yourself to a very close source of noise, or loud noises, within the months of your trauma, you risk permanantly damaging/killing weakened earcells that could have had recovered, given time, and thus cause futher irreversible damage to your ears, something that, trust me on this, you don't want happening to you, the more damaged your ear becomes, the louder goes the tinnitus, the more frequencies it gets and the more hearingloss you get, this is how one can easily go from a mild case of tinnitus to a severe one.
Don't play with fire, keep your ears safe even if that means not using headphones for a few months, that's much better than the alternative. Headphones used to be a huge part of my life, and I am all willing to give it up for the rest of my life, if that means not increasing my tinnitus or not suffering a relapse (if it ever fully goes away).
Even more so as I have experienced what a severe debilitating tinnitus sounds and feels like, even if that was for a few days (I still have tinnitus, it's just not as severe as it was, no earlier than 5 days ago). This is not something I am willing to go through again, I still experience the occasional loud tinnitus flare, I had a reoccurence of my loud, high pitched tinnitus earlier tonight at around 5am which woke me up and lasted for hours.
I am fairly certain that had I used headphones after I noticed my tinnitus, it would still be severe and extremely loud and would not have subsided to the level it is now.
Take care of your ears and don't play with fire.