@barbb yes, definitely. My old noise is pretty stable, but as my anxiety has decreased my new sound gets very low during the day. Sometimes it may not even be there at all. Honestly at this point I am not trying to listen to it so I don't know if it's there or not! But, it's definitely there at night, much much louder at night. So yes, to answer your question it does get softer and then significantly louder. This will not stop you from habituating! Take it as a good sign that maybe things are improving… Whether it's the actual sound that's improving, or your anxiety, or your attention to it... Who cares! Take it as a positive sign and keep moving forward a little bit every day.
Also! I can't believe I didn't talk about this more in my original post. I'm not sure if you are continuing to check your T throughout the day? if you are, I really really advise you stop! I literally forced myself to stop doing it and it's amazing how much you stop paying attention to it when you stop paying attention to it!! It's also important because you are training your brain not to constantly find the sound. It's very hard for tinnitus to become a background noise when you are constantly trying to listen for it! That was a huge step in my recovery.
Also! I can't believe I didn't talk about this more in my original post. I'm not sure if you are continuing to check your T throughout the day? if you are, I really really advise you stop! I literally forced myself to stop doing it and it's amazing how much you stop paying attention to it when you stop paying attention to it!! It's also important because you are training your brain not to constantly find the sound. It's very hard for tinnitus to become a background noise when you are constantly trying to listen for it! That was a huge step in my recovery.