- Jul 9, 2023
- 97
- Tinnitus Since
- 07/2023
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Too many Rush concerts
It started with a concert in which I wore foam earplugs. The first lesson, foam earplugs are crap. But I'm a lifelong musician, I've been around loud music and always wore earplugs. So I think my onset was just as much of a result of long-term exposure as it was the one incident.
My first 10 days were hell. It was screaming loud 24 hours a day. I couldn't sleep for more than an hour or two and would jolt awake from the sound. My wife said I looked like a zombie and I felt like one. I was reaching despair like most of you.
The first relief came when I saw an ENT, who noticed my ears were clogged with earwax. After pulling large chunks of what looked like a tootsie roll, I felt immediate relief. By the time I left the office, my volume had dropped from an 8 to a 5. By nighttime, it was a 2 or 3. He told me impacted earwax will increase the volume of ringing, so anyone new to this should look into that.
In the weeks after I would experience quiet days, "quiet" meaning volume of a 1 or 2... 1 only barely noticeable in dead silence, or 2, barely noticeable in regular activities. This has remained my baseline.
I still get spikes. I mark on a calendar the bad days with a color code for moderate or severe. I average about 10-12 days a month of ringing. 2-3 of them severe.
I won't tell you my life was perfect before this. I was the type of person who suffered from depression and always looked for something to feel bad about. So on my good days, I appreciate life on a whole new level. I go out of my way to enjoy life, my family, and everything. In a way, tinnitus has taught me to appreciate life in a way I may never have. Now the bad days are bad, but I've learned to get on with it and do what I have to do. I can work, interact, and ignore the sound for periods. Not completely, I don't think that is possible. But I know better days are coming and that gets me through it.
Sometimes I feel like I'm improving, other times I feel like it's getting worse. Last month I had 15 good days in a row. That was twice what I had ever experienced. Then it was followed by 15 awful days and December ended up being my worst month yet.
I used to sleep with a fan and the sound of insects on my Bluetooth speaker. It was annoying the shit out of my wife so I stopped. I now sleep in complete silence. My tinintus fades when I fall asleep, on bad days it returns about 5-6 am. On good days I wake to silence. I had problems with sleep before, so my sleep is somewhat normal.
My spikes are naps. Alcohol, coffee, salt sugar don't seem to have any effect. But I've backed off drinking and try to eat healthy.
I know I'm not as bad as others, but it's changed my life drastically. I can never play in a band again or go to a concert. Music is my passion. I've avoided exercise for fear it will cause a spike. I have to avoid loud indoor restaurants, and no more bars, movies. It's an adjustment. I have molded earplugs for church and any situation that seems too loud.
But again, I try to stay positive. I consider myself lucky I got this at a time when we have the first treatment around the corner and potential cures on the way. I look at where I am now compared to where I was when I first got this. My life has improved dramatically. It's not going to kill me and I'm confident one day the ringing will be gone forever.
My first 10 days were hell. It was screaming loud 24 hours a day. I couldn't sleep for more than an hour or two and would jolt awake from the sound. My wife said I looked like a zombie and I felt like one. I was reaching despair like most of you.
The first relief came when I saw an ENT, who noticed my ears were clogged with earwax. After pulling large chunks of what looked like a tootsie roll, I felt immediate relief. By the time I left the office, my volume had dropped from an 8 to a 5. By nighttime, it was a 2 or 3. He told me impacted earwax will increase the volume of ringing, so anyone new to this should look into that.
In the weeks after I would experience quiet days, "quiet" meaning volume of a 1 or 2... 1 only barely noticeable in dead silence, or 2, barely noticeable in regular activities. This has remained my baseline.
I still get spikes. I mark on a calendar the bad days with a color code for moderate or severe. I average about 10-12 days a month of ringing. 2-3 of them severe.
I won't tell you my life was perfect before this. I was the type of person who suffered from depression and always looked for something to feel bad about. So on my good days, I appreciate life on a whole new level. I go out of my way to enjoy life, my family, and everything. In a way, tinnitus has taught me to appreciate life in a way I may never have. Now the bad days are bad, but I've learned to get on with it and do what I have to do. I can work, interact, and ignore the sound for periods. Not completely, I don't think that is possible. But I know better days are coming and that gets me through it.
Sometimes I feel like I'm improving, other times I feel like it's getting worse. Last month I had 15 good days in a row. That was twice what I had ever experienced. Then it was followed by 15 awful days and December ended up being my worst month yet.
I used to sleep with a fan and the sound of insects on my Bluetooth speaker. It was annoying the shit out of my wife so I stopped. I now sleep in complete silence. My tinintus fades when I fall asleep, on bad days it returns about 5-6 am. On good days I wake to silence. I had problems with sleep before, so my sleep is somewhat normal.
My spikes are naps. Alcohol, coffee, salt sugar don't seem to have any effect. But I've backed off drinking and try to eat healthy.
I know I'm not as bad as others, but it's changed my life drastically. I can never play in a band again or go to a concert. Music is my passion. I've avoided exercise for fear it will cause a spike. I have to avoid loud indoor restaurants, and no more bars, movies. It's an adjustment. I have molded earplugs for church and any situation that seems too loud.
But again, I try to stay positive. I consider myself lucky I got this at a time when we have the first treatment around the corner and potential cures on the way. I look at where I am now compared to where I was when I first got this. My life has improved dramatically. It's not going to kill me and I'm confident one day the ringing will be gone forever.