My Success Story: Habituation *Is* Real

Has your tinnitus gotten better or quieter over time? Do you have hyperacusis?
Yes, it has slowly decreased in intensity along with my hyperacusis. On my mild days (1 or 2 a week) it's almost like I don't have tinnitus and my hyperacusis just about vanishes. The 2 are definitely linked for me. For me I think tinnitus is truly a malfunction or maladaptation of the brain's auditory system.
 
You're exactly right! You just have to accept that it is there. So glad you've reached that point :)

It does start off little by little. First you realise you haven't noticed it for 10 minutes. Then the minutes somehow turn into hours, and so on.

Yes! Totally do not keep trying to measure any changes. It doesn't help. It won't help. For months, I was obsessed with plugging my ears to hear if the sound was different - which of course, it never was.
These sorts of habits are unhealthy, and make it harder to habituate. As soon as I stopped doing this, I started forgetting about my tinnitus.

Sometimes, I still can be a bit annoyed by the sound, but not overly. Right now I'm experiencing a spike which means I can hear my tinnitus over lots of things, Including the tv. But whatever I guess! Like I said before, absolutely nothing I can do about it.

The "no longer feeling devastated by it", is a massive turning point. And like you, that's where I am at. As I mentioned above, I'm experiencing a spike at the moment, but the increase in sound doesn't devastate me now, like it would have, six months ago.

X
It was somewhat difficult for me because I caused my own tinnitus. So I had to sort through all the feelings of regret and guilt associated with it. I never lost hope of recovering from this. I would hold onto to memories of how I used to be, but I vowed not just get better, but better than before. Having tinnitus has given me a new perspective. More of an appreciation for life and things around me. I realize now how quickly everything can be lost. But, as we lose I think we also gain. Even with diabolical tinnitus I continued to work, exercise, and just put one foot in front of the other, and hope for brighter days. My faith in God has also helped to pull me through.
 
I'd say approximately 2 years or so. My tinnitus has very slowly decreased in intensity. I don't know if it's because of healing, habituation, or a combination of both.
Thank you for the reply.
Yes, it has slowly decreased in intensity along with my hyperacusis. On my mild days (1 or 2 a week) it's almost like I don't have tinnitus and my hyperacusis just about vanishes. The 2 are definitely linked for me. For me I think tinnitus is truly a malfunction or maladaptation of the brain's auditory system.
I think mine are linked too, the intensity of both fluctuates massively which makes me think it can't be an "ear injury" which would just remain consistent?
 
My hyperacusis and tinnitus are in no way related on a daily basis. Tinnitus is worse in my left ear but I only have pain hyperacusis in my right ear. Yesterday I had an abnormally lower tinnitus day (I rarely get good days) but I was wearing ear plugs under ear switched off headphones in the shower because the pain was well and truly present.

I also don't get how if pain hyperacusis is linked to anxiety and emotions, how I only have it in one ear. It has to be linked to damage?

I cannot find a pattern at all.
 
May I ask how you were doing after the first year?

I am still struggling a lot. Sometimes it goes away for a few days but always returns.
After the first year I wasn't doing well. Tinnitus had gotten better but was still pretty intense. Hardly any habituation. Many people on this thread suggest that intensity and loudness do not impact ones ability to habituate. As my tinnitus has mellowed out I feel it's much easier to ignore. It's like pain levels. More intense pain is more debilitating. That being said everyone's tolerance is different. I have a demanding job as a middle school teacher as well. I feel that if I didn't have to work I may have dealt with it better. My tinnitus has never "went away" for a few days. At first it was one day a week of low tinnitus, then mostly severe. Now it's moderate with a couple mild days a week.
 
But the actual tinnitus is *nothing*, just a paper tiger. When the anxiety is under control, tinnitus appears for what it is: a ghost. Noisy, but harmless.
Well said.

And your story is familiar, much like my story and many other stories. Thank you for sharing this!
 
I'm 3 years in this month and that's how my habituation developed. I remember I was lying in bed on a Saturday morning unable to sleep in. In that moment I started to just let it go. I'm at the point where I can go quite awhile without noticing my tinnitus. Then just a shift in thought will bring it to my attention. I no longer feel devastated when that happens. I just hear it, and move on. Also, I no longer actively listen to my tinnitus. I don't try to pick out the different tones, or fluctuations.
This a exactly how it works. Because you stop caring, you stop noticing and you start forgetting that it's there, even if it's there 24/7 unchanged.
 
I was a bit sceptical about 'habituation' when I first got tinnitus 2 years ago and thought I would just be stuck in a hell like situation for life - I think it was a good 6 months before I was starting to adapt to having tinnitus, and it's still almost certainly as loud now as it was originally but I have got used to it so do not notice it all the time.
 
Today my tinnitus is 5 weeks old, and still haven't been able to habituate, I can only hope that I can get better. I have faith but it's hard and I often break down. Can anyone give me any advice what I should in the initial stages of my tinnitus and how I can lead into habituation?

I feel guilty as I did this to myself by taking ototoxic ear drops and lots of antibiotics and Ibuprofen to overcome what was apparently an ear infection. I never knew what ototoxic meant up until now. Hopefully some sound advice can get on the right path.
 
I habituated to my tinnitus slowly.

I have had tinnitus for 26 years and until recently I never paid it much attention.

However, four weeks ago it spiked in my left ear following a hysterectomy four weeks before the louder tinnitus started.

I'm hoping I will habituate again x
 
Same here, nights and mornings are the worst. The feeling of dread and hopelessness is still there for me 6 months in.
In my first 6 months the worst part was not being able to sleep properly or not at all. At some point I thought that if only I could sleep well again, I would be able to deal with everything else.

Now I sleep very well and if I don't, it is not because of my tinnitus. There was a turning point when I realized that my tinnitus was not actually preventing me from sleeping, it was the anxiety that kept my adrenaline levels up which was the actual cause of not being able to sleep. Once I came to this realization, my anxiety faded away quickly and I was able to sleep without a problem, same as before tinnitus. That has never changed. Even on very loud days, I fall asleep without any problems.
 
Dear fellow ringers.

My tinnitus started in 2015. I went through the all too common period of deep anguish, leading to a relatively severe anxiety crisis and depression (for which I got treated). I had it all: the constant ringing, sensitivity to noise, the hyper attention, the feeling of despair... even went to suicidal ideation. I purchased every gimmick to try to mask it. Got better, then had one relapse that was also pretty bad. Then habituation happened. In a very few shot weeks I went from bedridden to living again. My tinnitus is *exactly* the same, it has not disappeared, nor diminished. It's 24/7. It is relatively loud, I couldn't find something that could cover it. But I dont' really seem to care anymore. Tinnitus is not more annoying that the floaters in my eyes, or the weight of my clothes...

I don't write that to brag or 'rub it' in anyone's face, but to tell you that *yes*, habitation is a thing. Yes, it is indeed very possible, and actually virtually certain, to lead a perfectly normal and happy life again. I was at the bottom of the anxiety well, and that's what I actually treated. When I took care of the anxiety, habituation just happened. The thing that helped me the most was to force myself to lead a normal life as much as possible, and then things got better and better by the day. Force yourself to talk to your spouse, to play with your kids, to go to work, to walk the dog, fold the laundry etc. some kind of ad hoc behavioral therapy I suppose. Before long, you will get better: 2 minutes, then 15 minutes, one hour, and then all the time.

So hang in there my friends. My tinnitus-induced anxiety was the worst that happened to me, frankly (and my wife and I are both cancer survivors). But the actual tinnitus is *nothing*, just a paper tiger. When the anxiety is under control, tinnitus appears for what it is: a ghost. Noisy, but harmless.
Thanks for writing this! It's what I needed to read today. :)
 
Dear fellow ringers.

My tinnitus started in 2015. I went through the all too common period of deep anguish, leading to a relatively severe anxiety crisis and depression (for which I got treated). I had it all: the constant ringing, sensitivity to noise, the hyper attention, the feeling of despair... even went to suicidal ideation. I purchased every gimmick to try to mask it. Got better, then had one relapse that was also pretty bad. Then habituation happened. In a very few shot weeks I went from bedridden to living again. My tinnitus is *exactly* the same, it has not disappeared, nor diminished. It's 24/7. It is relatively loud, I couldn't find something that could cover it. But I dont' really seem to care anymore. Tinnitus is not more annoying that the floaters in my eyes, or the weight of my clothes...

I don't write that to brag or 'rub it' in anyone's face, but to tell you that *yes*, habitation is a thing. Yes, it is indeed very possible, and actually virtually certain, to lead a perfectly normal and happy life again. I was at the bottom of the anxiety well, and that's what I actually treated. When I took care of the anxiety, habituation just happened. The thing that helped me the most was to force myself to lead a normal life as much as possible, and then things got better and better by the day. Force yourself to talk to your spouse, to play with your kids, to go to work, to walk the dog, fold the laundry etc. some kind of ad hoc behavioral therapy I suppose. Before long, you will get better: 2 minutes, then 15 minutes, one hour, and then all the time.

So hang in there my friends. My tinnitus-induced anxiety was the worst that happened to me, frankly (and my wife and I are both cancer survivors). But the actual tinnitus is *nothing*, just a paper tiger. When the anxiety is under control, tinnitus appears for what it is: a ghost. Noisy, but harmless.
I am curious about your hyperacusis. You cannot habituate to hyperacusis so what has been the progression in relation to it? Is it the same or has it calmed down to some degree?
 
It's improved quite a bit I would say. Still there on louder tinnitus days, but better.
I am happy to hear it. I have noticed that I am able to be in certain environments (restaurants) without too much difficulty whereas only a month go, I was very hesitant to even attempt it.
 
What constitutes stable tinnitus? I see that a lot here but is this a medical definition or just a term we use in the community?
Stable tinnitus is as @Wrfortiscue and @AnthonyMcDonald have described.

Some people believe spikes in tinnitus are a natural part of the condition but they're not. Those affected with this anomaly usually have noise-induced tinnitus and the reason the tinnitus spikes is because the auditory system is oversensitive to sound. This oversensitivity can manifest itself as hyperacusis with or without pain.

Some people may have noxacusis which I believe is a more acute variation of hyperacusis which is the underlying root cause of the problem caused by noise trauma to the auditory system. I had this 26 years ago and it was completely cured using white noise generators as part of TRT. My tinnitus is variable but it does not spike.

A person can successfully habituate to noise-induced tinnitus but if they are is still oversensitive to sound, whether it's hyperacusis or noxacusis, spikes will usually become a long term problem. Unfortunately the longer spikes persist the more difficult they usually are to treat.

Michael
 
Stable tinnitus is as @Wrfortiscue and @AnthonyMcDonald have described.

Some people believe spikes in tinnitus are a natural part of the condition but they're not. Those affected with this anomaly usually have noise-induced tinnitus and the reason the tinnitus spikes is because the auditory system is oversensitive to sound. This oversensitivity can manifest itself as hyperacusis with or without pain.

Some people may have noxacusis which I believe is a more acute variation of hyperacusis which is the underlying root cause of the problem caused by noise trauma to the auditory system. I had this 26 years ago and it was completely cured using white noise generators as part of TRT. My tinnitus is variable but it does not spike.

A person can successfully habituate to noise-induced tinnitus but if they are is still oversensitive to sound, whether it's hyperacusis or noxacusis, spikes will usually become a long term problem. Unfortunately the longer spikes persist the more difficult they usually are to treat.

Michael
Hm, is it possible to have noise induced tinnitus but have it moderately stable?

The only reason I ask is because I have a step father and my brother who have tinnitus but they seem to carry on in their lives the same as before. They both reportedly believe their tinnitus is caused by noise (gun range, loud music, headphones). When I first got my very own tinnitus (noise) the first thing I did was research online which led me to these forums where people would spike very easily. This led me to believe I would too! I would only say in recent months did I realize I have more of what you describe as stable tinnitus (this is barring the fact that I did not go to noisy events or if something was moderately noise I would wear hearing protection).

Now, after this morning where I was exposed to an extremely loud alarm at close range I can ONLY imagine that I will spike very soon. I have not had a severe or even moderate spike in the two years with tinnitus, but I really can't imagine how it wouldn't spike seeing as the alarms for robbery are 120+ dB, much louder than fire alarms. Also the fact it was in very close range to my ear/head. I am very devastated that it may make my relatively stable tinnitus unstable. My situation reveals this fickleness of hearing and also that sound can often be out of our control. However, some small part of me wants to cling to hope that I will somehow squeak by in this accident unscathed. However the discomfort in my left ear is saying probably not! As I know delayed spikes are quite common...

I should add I never experienced hyperacusis or noxacusis, just phonophobia. I also started with what I would describe as mild - moderate tinnitus. It has basically been the same since I've gotten it, maybe recently went down a bit in volume from me taking care of it so well.
 
Hm, is it possible to have noise induced tinnitus but have it moderately stable?
You make an interesting point. It is quite possible to have noise-induced tinnitus and for it to be moderately stable or completely silent for most of the time and only heard in very quiet surroundings.

In its simplest form a person affected by noise-induced tinnitus will usually make a full recovery within 6 to 18 months with or without seeing an audiologist for specialist treatment. Hyperacusis (oversensitivity to sound) often accompanies the condition but not always. If hyperacusis is present this can also go away by itself. However, if it persists as mentioned in my previous post then specialist treatment is required, otherwise it can become a long term problem causing spikes in the tinnitus even though a person has habituated. Some people can develop psychological problems that are associated with hyperacusis and are covered in my thread: The Complexities of Tinnitus and Hyperacusis.

Your brother and father like many people have successfully habituated to tinnitus and able to carry on with their life. This has probably resulted in them completely forgetting about it for most of the time unless it's brought up during conversation. It all depends how severe the tinnitus is and how much a person's mental and emotional wellbeing is affected by it. This is not often talked about but is so vitally important, because tinnitus is an integral part of our mental and emotional wellbeing and cannot be separated from it.

Whilst tinnitus forums and other social media sites are good in terms of offering help and support to those having difficulty managing the condition, a person needs to be careful as they could find themselves caught up in the emotional turmoil that tinnitus can create, simply by reading the difficulties that some people go through trying to cope with it on a daily basis. Of course some people are able to cope with this better than others.

You describe your tinnitus as mild to moderate and don't experience any hyperacusis which is good, but are concerned about phonophobia. Try taking up a new interest or hobby to help direct your thoughts away from tinnitus. If you don't go out much, I suggest trying to and socialise. This promotes positivity and helps takeaway your focus on tinnitus.

Please go to my started threads and read: Acquiring a Positive Mindset, The Habituation Process, How to Habituate to Tinnitus.

All the best,
Michael
 
Hm, is it possible to have noise induced tinnitus but have it moderately stable?

The only reason I ask is because I have a step father and my brother who have tinnitus but they seem to carry on in their lives the same as before. They both reportedly believe their tinnitus is caused by noise (gun range, loud music, headphones). When I first got my very own tinnitus (noise) the first thing I did was research online which led me to these forums where people would spike very easily. This led me to believe I would too! I would only say in recent months did I realize I have more of what you describe as stable tinnitus (this is barring the fact that I did not go to noisy events or if something was moderately noise I would wear hearing protection).

Now, after this morning where I was exposed to an extremely loud alarm at close range I can ONLY imagine that I will spike very soon. I have not had a severe or even moderate spike in the two years with tinnitus, but I really can't imagine how it wouldn't spike seeing as the alarms for robbery are 120+ dB, much louder than fire alarms. Also the fact it was in very close range to my ear/head. I am very devastated that it may make my relatively stable tinnitus unstable. My situation reveals this fickleness of hearing and also that sound can often be out of our control. However, some small part of me wants to cling to hope that I will somehow squeak by in this accident unscathed. However the discomfort in my left ear is saying probably not! As I know delayed spikes are quite common...

I should add I never experienced hyperacusis or noxacusis, just phonophobia. I also started with what I would describe as mild - moderate tinnitus. It has basically been the same since I've gotten it, maybe recently went down a bit in volume from me taking care of it so well.
Yes it's possible. I lived years with stable tinnitus after blowing up my right ear.
 

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