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Guest48603
Guest
As someone who has had other pain conditions, I wanted to point out that listening to your body is not always the way to go. Sometimes, you have to get your body listen to you.
In 2019, I had a terrible bout of kidney stones that required surgery. It was so painful I passed out. Following that, I had constant pelvic pain, which is another syndrome that's not well understood. For sure, I thought the doctors just don't understand me and that something terrible must be happening with my body.
Then, during the pandemic, I had a terrible panic attack when I thought mother had COVID-19. I received treatment for the panic attack, which unexpectedly also temporarily resolved the pelvic pain. Which made me understand that my pain was not related to anything organic.
Back to the ears, I also get tinnitus, fullness, delayed pain as well and many sounds will just ruin my day, or more like 10 days. Opening a soda can? Slamming a door? Dropping silverware? All drive me crazy. I couldn't go to the barber, a restaurant, even the mall.
But here is the thing. Just because a sound hurts does not mean it's harmful. If you have bearing loss and suffered some traumatic injury, then yes, you do need silence to allow your ear to heal. But if your hearing is normal, then it's likely your brain is actually misreading signals coming from your ear. The more you listen to it, the worse it gets. I'd listen to the ENT and try CBT. Learning how to control your body rather than letting your body control you has helped me a great deal. It's not perfect by any means, but it's a lot better than removing yourself from life. Now, when my ear acts up, I have an internal monologue, telling myself "not now, not doing this" and so on. It doesn't always work, but it helps. Also, finding really pleasing, soft music and listening to it has helped. Now I can go to the movies again, quiet restaurants, and the barber with earplugs.
That being said, harmful sounds over 85 dB you should try to avoid. No headphones and definitely no micro suction. Ear syringing is also terrible. An occasional door slam or plate drop is unavoidable though. I'd recommend getting earmuffs and avoid ear plugs which tend to push wax in. Wax removal is associated with all sorts of problems, including tinnitus.
Hope you feel better! Don't give up, the condition is manageable. It just requires a more comprehensive approach than just avoidance.
In 2019, I had a terrible bout of kidney stones that required surgery. It was so painful I passed out. Following that, I had constant pelvic pain, which is another syndrome that's not well understood. For sure, I thought the doctors just don't understand me and that something terrible must be happening with my body.
Then, during the pandemic, I had a terrible panic attack when I thought mother had COVID-19. I received treatment for the panic attack, which unexpectedly also temporarily resolved the pelvic pain. Which made me understand that my pain was not related to anything organic.
Back to the ears, I also get tinnitus, fullness, delayed pain as well and many sounds will just ruin my day, or more like 10 days. Opening a soda can? Slamming a door? Dropping silverware? All drive me crazy. I couldn't go to the barber, a restaurant, even the mall.
But here is the thing. Just because a sound hurts does not mean it's harmful. If you have bearing loss and suffered some traumatic injury, then yes, you do need silence to allow your ear to heal. But if your hearing is normal, then it's likely your brain is actually misreading signals coming from your ear. The more you listen to it, the worse it gets. I'd listen to the ENT and try CBT. Learning how to control your body rather than letting your body control you has helped me a great deal. It's not perfect by any means, but it's a lot better than removing yourself from life. Now, when my ear acts up, I have an internal monologue, telling myself "not now, not doing this" and so on. It doesn't always work, but it helps. Also, finding really pleasing, soft music and listening to it has helped. Now I can go to the movies again, quiet restaurants, and the barber with earplugs.
That being said, harmful sounds over 85 dB you should try to avoid. No headphones and definitely no micro suction. Ear syringing is also terrible. An occasional door slam or plate drop is unavoidable though. I'd recommend getting earmuffs and avoid ear plugs which tend to push wax in. Wax removal is associated with all sorts of problems, including tinnitus.
Hope you feel better! Don't give up, the condition is manageable. It just requires a more comprehensive approach than just avoidance.