New Victim at Age 19 — Can Having Headphones on Most of the Time Cause Tinnitus?

when do U use your earplug. Do recommend earplug when going town or collage?
I think earplugs are a good idea under the following circumstances (assuming you can't simply avoid those noisy places):

When walking by a busy street used by trucks and motorcycles

When you Have to walk through some place that has live music

If you Have to spend something like half an hour at a place where many people talk loudly (e.g., a cafeteria or a hallway)

Underground parking garages and stairways often have heavy metal doors that can slam. In closed spaces it could be traumatic.
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What you could do is wear your earplugs to college for a week or two. During that time, you could be mindful of the noises there. If during that trial period you aren't exposed to loud noises that would have made you wish that you were wearing earplugs, then it seems stop wearing earplugs there.
 
Is it normal for people with tinnitus to feel like your ear is clogged or blocked..I got my ear wax removed as well but still my ear feels blocked doesn't feel free like other ear..
And I feel like my ear is sensitive now... when ever there is any sound it irritates my ear. It this normal? Will the the blocked feeling and irritation eventually fade away or get better as time progress... irritation is killing me. I've been to Gp and hospitals and all they say is "give some time and it will eventually heal. Don't get exposed to any loud sound for long period of time".... I tried to ask for EMT but they were like give some time and if it doesn't get better go to gp and get refer to EMT. Also they said something about if you feel dizziness, vomiting and headache you should directly come to hospital. So far i haven't encounter any of these but anyone in here experienced it?

Help!..... blockage and my ear gets irritated even when some talks to me. it is just me or my tiiii sound feels ..just feels like it's kinda calmed down and I am able to sleep somehow. I don't use any white noise which I was recommended by hospital. I am able to stand 1 on 1 in silent with my tinnitus without having breakdowns. Please any info about the ear irritation and feeling blockage. It's been a week now..

I have caused so much problem to my mom since my tinnitus started. She is always there at night with me when I can't sleep and always come to check me if I'm sleeping well even tho she got morning shift. Always there when I have mini breakdown.
I just want to end this soon as possible and stop her worries and take care of her. When ever I think about this at night I get mini breakdown always....
It sounds like you are dealing with Tinnitus and Hyperacusis which are kinda like sisters to each other. The "plugged and or blocked" feeling is very common with this, especially with Hyperacusis. I too suffer from both, and I fully understand your feeling of despair and panic, especially at your age. I also agree with others here that you need to take a deep breath and try and calm down and allow some time to pass to see where this thing will settle down. I am pretty sure what you are feeling now in your head will calm down some, but will in all likelihood remain to some degree. You really need to see a good GP doctor who will recognize your concern and anxiety over this and recommend not only a good ENT doctor to assess your ears, but also possibly someone in the medical field who can give you some counseling to help you mentally deal with this. The anxiety that you are experiencing right now is of course normal, but will only cause you to focus on the T which will make it worse. You really need to get some help in dealing with the anxiety that you are experiencing.

This forum is a good source to get some practical help on how to go on with your daily life without becoming consumed with the T every minute of the day. But first things first. Get some professional medical consultation to make sure there isn't some obvious thing that you and we are missing concerning your very personal case. In a few weeks/months you will know much more than you do now. So again, don't panic. How you feel right at this time will be changing. Stay in touch with this forum and let us know how things go with your GP and ENT.
 
I got my tinnitus about 2 weeks ago when I mixed music for long hours for 3 days and apparently I had it slightly too loud.

Now. Give rest to your ears! No headphones in a month. No caffeine and alcohol. You will lose some sleep because of tinnitus. Alcohol and caffeine do not help.
 
I got my tinnitus about 2 weeks ago when I mixed music for long hours for 3 days and apparently I had it slightly too loud
Do you use headphones for mixing the music?
Are the headphones you use how high quality, and for how many hours do you use them for?
 
Do you use headphones for mixing the music?
Are the headphones you use how high quality, and for how many hours do you use them for?

I use speakers and headphones. I have Beyerdynamics DT880 Pro headphones and Adam Audio T5V studio monitors.

I did about 8-12 hours per day, I guess I did not let my ears rest enough. I was also doing some mixing in 5khz-12khz So I guess that was extra straining for my ears.

My computer is so loud, I had to turn up the volume a bit to hear those frequencies better and this is the result.
 
I did about 8-12 hours per day,
My case is similar to yours.

I used headphones for 2 weeks, long hours, at lowest volume.

There are so many victims like us, who thought that headphones are safe, but ears are very fragile.

Keep me updated if it gets better or goes away.

I don't understand why humans made headphones and loud speakers :android:
 
My case is similar to yours.

I used headphones for 2 weeks, long hours, at lowest volume.

There are so many victims like us, who thought that headphones are safe, but ears are very fragile.

Keep me updated if it gets better or goes away.

I don't understand why humans made headphones and loud speakers :android:

My ears did not warn me at all. All the time doing music I heard very well and felt no pain. Then suddenly I noticed my ears ringing.. It was too late.

My condition has improved a bit. It is better than week ago. I got some Prednisolon from my ENT so I think that is helping. Also resting ears is important now...
 
@Strife_84 @JohnFox @Bill Bauer will resting your ear from loud noises will eventually heal or completely fade? Do you know anyone who's tinnitus completely faded? Seems like it doesn't fade away..

I work in a part time restaurant m and will exposing to loud sound may trigger tinnitus to be permanent?
 
is there any evidence that it may fade away? I know people experience mini tinnitus after long flight or concert that it usually go in a day or 2 but tinnitus like ours that didn't Fade away in weeks or months. Is there still chance for ours to fade ?
 
will resting your ear from loud noises will eventually heal or completely fade?
There haven't been any scientific studies about what behaviours promote healing of T patients, and what behaviours reduce the chance that healing will take place.

Some people on this forum report getting exposed to noise and not getting worse, or even experiencing fading. It is not clear whether those people who did not get worse, might have gotten better. It is also not clear whether those who got exposed to noise and got better would have experienced even more fading (or faster healing) had they been more careful.

Other people get exposed to noise and experience severe or even permanent setbacks. See the posts I quoted in the first post on
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/learn-from-others-mistakes.29437/

It appears that when you expose yourself to noise you reduce the Probability of getting better/not getting worse (as some are ok after the noise, but not everyone is ok).

Check out


I didn't read all the above comments, but did peruse a fair amount of it, and ran across many good points on both sides of the argument. What strikes me is there seems to be an underlying assumption (of course I may be wrong on this) that all brains and neurological systems are created equal. The way I see it, that's simply not the case, so everybody's way of dealing with tinnitus and/or hyperacusis is going to have to be highly individualized.

I read a book many years ago called "Adrenal Syndrome". A lot of the book touched on the residual resiliency of people's adrenal glands as they respond to life's stresses. Very low resiliency often resulted in months/years of chronic debilitating exhaustion following a stressful event(s) in their lives. Very high resiliency indicated essentially the opposite. The author broke this down into some rough numbers:

25% of people have low resiliency, meaning normal life stressors will often send them into some degree of a tailspin.
25% of people have high resiliency, meaning that no matter how severe a stressor comes into their lives, they will be able to cope without becoming debilitated to any degree.
50% of people fall somewhere inbetween.

I believe there are some kind of corresponding numbers for a person's brain and neurological resiliency as well, which can greatly affect the ability to cope with tinnitus. (I believe adrenal resiliency also plays a major role in our ability to cope). -- Based on these assumptions, it's pretty easy for me to conclude that what may be overprotection for one person will be underprotection for another, and vice versa.

I think the main point to understand for someone new to tinnitus is that their path forward is going to be a lot of "testing the waters". Generally, IMHO, it's going to take a few weeks or months to get important insights that will help us achieve a healthy balance. In all likelihood, most people are going to learn from experience when their over-protecting or under-protecting.

I've come to believe however, that in those early months, if one is going to err in either direction, it should be toward overprotection. It just seems to me the consequences of underprotection (which could result in permanent injury) in those early times are much more dire than the consequences of overprotection--which as I understand, generally results in temporary setbacks.

Doing a number of things to better support the brain and neurological system and the body's stress response (adrenal glands) is quite high on my list of recommendations I would make to anybody with tinnitus. Doing so might even prevent phonophobia or OCD, etc., as we go through our learning curves -- Just my 2 cents worth.
Relative newbies to tinnitus are likely to find all the information/opinions above quite confusing. So here are a few common-sense rules to follow:

1. The best protection of all is avoidance. Even the best earplugs can't guarantee complete hearing protection so those relatively new to tinnitus are best advised to avoid prolonged loud noise exposure - especially amplified sound at for example live concerts and sports events. This may involve lifestyle changes.

2. When in doubt, use hearing protection. In the many tasks we all do through the week, some will inevitably involve exposure to noise - which may be at higher levels than we at first realise - so using hearing protection for many of these is only sensible.

3. Build quiet into your day. It's not a good idea to be wearing hearing protection all the time - so you need to give your ears a break by ensuring that there will be quieter times during your day when hearing protection isn't necessary.This may involve changing your routine. Use soft masking noise and light music (not using headphones) to avoid "silence" where tinnitus is most noticeable.

4. Don't stress about stress. Tinnitus newbies are forever being told that the thing which makes tinnitus worse is stress. But while it's true that how you are feeling at a particular moment can make tinnitus temporarily louder, it won't have a lasting effect. But prolonged loud noise exposure can make tinnitus permanently louder. So don't stress about stress - but do be concerned about noise.

is there any evidence that it may fade away?
The short answer is - yes. Numerous members here report fading that gets them to the "can hear it only in quiet rooms" stage. Some report getting to hear silence again.

For the long answer, check out the multiple links to studies on seven pages of the thread below
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/spontaneous-recovery-stats-many-recover-3-studies.21441/
 

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