My own best guess is that the reason there are people who aren't bothered by tinnitus is because tinnitus vibrations don't reverberate in a major way throughout their brain and neurological system. -- For people who find it almost impossible to habituate, it's just the opposite, with their ears, brain, neurological system, psyche, etc. experiencing major reverberation 24/7. Sometimes the best they can do is "manage it", with habituation being nigh near impossible.They notice the volume increase but still don't have a reaction to it- they neither find it pleasant or unpleasant and it's only in their thoughts when they choose to think of it.
Do I understand correctly that with proper habituation you ignore your tinnitus (or your brain ignores it) and your life goes back to normal but whatever hearing loss you've had doesn't come back?
I flip flop between not caring and being happy, which I guess is habituation, and being so annoyed by this that I could care less if I just died. It's like drowning in depression and getting a gasp of air from time to time because it doesnt kill you.
I'm not sure that habituation is a permanent brain switch that stays when it happens. It's like any other thing in life I guess.
My own best guess is that the reason there are people who aren't bothered by tinnitus is because tinnitus vibrations don't reverberate in a major way throughout their brain and neurological system. -- For people who find it almost impossible to habituate, it's just the opposite, with their ears, brain, neurological system, psyche, etc. experiencing major reverberation 24/7. Sometimes the best they can do is "manage it", with habituation being nigh near impossible.
Hi @Calimike -- In my first couple of weeks or so of tinnitus onset, I couldn't sleep more than 5 min. at a time, and would then wake up to screeching tinnitus about 3x louder. Maybe got 30 min. of sleep on average a day during this time. The first thing that worked for me was taking Tylenol 4. I feel quite certain it was the codeine in it that finally allowed me to sleep. Even though I only took 1/4 tablet, I was able to get several hours of sleep that first night.It has only been two months for me. Maybe this is a set back or a low point.
OneTimePoster It is CaliMike. I know i am writing early before my two week check in but i feel i have no one else to talk to who understands. I know you dont have a miracle for me and i am not expecting anything from you or anyone else here. It has only been two months for me. The last five days feel like my first five days the T level and my brain vibrations giving me headaches. I have not done anything different that i am aware of. My family has tried to be helpful but because there is nothing they can do, i since them moving on and away from me. Im getting tired very easily and drained of energy. I bought some CBD oil today hoping it will help with the brain vibrations.
It is hard for me to have much hope at this moment. I am a 49 years old. I graduated from my university with honors. I have been self employed all my life until recently when i came back to the United States and took a job for the government. People i knew and my family would call me to help them fix problems or help them with their business so people expect me to be able just deal with anything. But i have to admit this is beating me. I am not myself. I hold back a lot of tears. I feel like breaking everything around me. I am engaged to be married but she is still overseas and has not seen me the way i am know. She knows but she has not seen me since this has happened. At this point i dont know if i can have any kind of normal relationship.
I am sorry that i dont have anything good to say. I normally find hope when other have none. I am lucky that i got to travel before this happened to me. Maybe this is a set back or a low point. Forgive me if you read this looking for hope. I did have some day better than this but i cant tell you why those days where better and these are not.
i will post again in a week and i will try and have something positive and helpful to say. Best of luck to everyone, Mike
From what I've read on this forum, it sounds like you might do better to never use ear buds again, no matter how loud--or how soft. -- Best...I will never use loud ear buds again
Hi @Jarin Maurer -- Thanks for sharing your story. This may be a bit redundant, but thought I'd paste a LINK to my earlier post on what helped me tremendously with sleep.The biggest issue for me is sleep. I tell myself I can handle anything during the day, but if I can't sleep that's when it starts getting darker and more scary.
Hey! You are right, these are the setbacks that are part of the process. They are truly the hardest things I ever experienced in my life, there were times I hoped I would never wake up again. I feel for you. BUT they are not bad things, they are needed for recovery. These are the times when a lot of progress can be made. If you can stay with all the difficult emotions and thoughts, allow the focus on the internal sounds, allow the internal sounds, allow the emotions and allow the negative thoughts to flow by. Watch them and let them drift by. Try to see it all as the very difficult, but very positive mechanism of recovery.
I had the headaches too, and a tension in my neck which prevented me to even too to the side without turning my enire body. I felt constantly very sich. Also completely drained of energy. Try to allow all of this too, try not to resist it, but let it all change you. Your body want the best for you and if you manage to give it the space do do it, you will be on the best road to recovery.
I always felt much responsibility in the lives of my loved ones, and not being able to be there fully for them scared me to death. But the priority should first be yourself, like the airplane instruction to first put the breathing mask on yourself, then on your child. If you take care of yourself, you ARE taking care of your loved ones. You could try to force yourself to be good to others, but that forcing will soon bring you down and then you can't help anyone anymore. If you want to be there for your loved ones in a sustained way which gives you energy too, then first look after yourself.
You know, a positive moment that changed my recovery for the better was when I was in a really low point and a friend came to visit. He asked how I was doing, and I tried to explain to him how hard it was to exist at that moment. It feels not done to cry in front of your friends as a man, I think it's culturally, the way we were raised. But at that moment I just didn't care anymore, I just wanted it all to end, and I cried until there were no tears left. After this I felt so extremely tired and drained, that the only thing I could do was sleep. Then after I woke up again, I felt so much better, I felt so much lighter. I learned how important it is not to keep emotions bottled up, let them out with the people you love. You will strengthen the bond you have with them in the process. It's hard to overcome those social norms, or whatever they are, but they are not always good for you.
Hope this helps you, be kind to yourself during this dark and difficult journey!
Yeah, and that getting into the best relaxed state you can get yourself in has to be rewon every day. But like you say, what other choice do we have? Thankfully, some days are better than others. I'm grateful for every one of them. -- Thanks for your updates @Calimike.Don't get me wrong I don't like this shit but there really is no choice but to just walk through this in the most relaxed state you can get yourself in.