Tinnitus blights our lives.
There is no question about that.
Internal head noise is so hateful.
Sometimes I don't even know how to survive the very moment I am living in, in order to reach the next hateful moment.
In the total absence of any effective treatment, let alone a cure, we have to look to psychological adjustments to get us by.
Unfortunately I haven't found any 'earth shattering' discoveries - but I do utilise just a couple of aids.
A first thing in the morning meditation session, when I suspend all conscious breathing, having asked my diaphragm to breath for me, which it does beautifully, at its own rate.
I hear my sounds, but notice no emotional reaction to them, for the following half hour.
That's as close to bliss as I can ever reach.
My other 'Ace in the Hole' is the age-old practice of autosuggestion.
As a desperately withdrawn child I had used autosuggestion to great effect, years before.
(But that's a whole other story.)
I have now decided to see my Tinnitus as 'normal.'
To the normal healthy person, internal head noise would be abnormal of course.
But to us poor souls with Tinnitus, it has unfortunately become the norm.
Each morning as I open my eyes, Tinnitus noise hits me with that daily realisation which is so horrible.
I just say to myself:
"Easy Dave - Hiss Normal."
By expecting Tinnitus, I effectively rob it of its shock value.
When the noise begins to bother me again, later in the day, I simply repeat my mantra,
"Easy Dave - Hiss Normal."
I repeat this several times a day.
I feel I am coming to see my sounds as normal, and therefore, more acceptable.
Psychobabble? - who knows?
All I can tell you is that it helps me folks.
Dave x
Jazzer
There is no question about that.
Internal head noise is so hateful.
Sometimes I don't even know how to survive the very moment I am living in, in order to reach the next hateful moment.
In the total absence of any effective treatment, let alone a cure, we have to look to psychological adjustments to get us by.
Unfortunately I haven't found any 'earth shattering' discoveries - but I do utilise just a couple of aids.
A first thing in the morning meditation session, when I suspend all conscious breathing, having asked my diaphragm to breath for me, which it does beautifully, at its own rate.
I hear my sounds, but notice no emotional reaction to them, for the following half hour.
That's as close to bliss as I can ever reach.
My other 'Ace in the Hole' is the age-old practice of autosuggestion.
As a desperately withdrawn child I had used autosuggestion to great effect, years before.
(But that's a whole other story.)
I have now decided to see my Tinnitus as 'normal.'
To the normal healthy person, internal head noise would be abnormal of course.
But to us poor souls with Tinnitus, it has unfortunately become the norm.
Each morning as I open my eyes, Tinnitus noise hits me with that daily realisation which is so horrible.
I just say to myself:
"Easy Dave - Hiss Normal."
By expecting Tinnitus, I effectively rob it of its shock value.
When the noise begins to bother me again, later in the day, I simply repeat my mantra,
"Easy Dave - Hiss Normal."
I repeat this several times a day.
I feel I am coming to see my sounds as normal, and therefore, more acceptable.
Psychobabble? - who knows?
All I can tell you is that it helps me folks.
Dave x
Jazzer