- Nov 12, 2019
- 60
- Tinnitus Since
- 11/2019
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Unknown - Potentially noise/stress
I have only had tinnitus about 3 weeks and I would say it was mild, although I seem to be increasingly getting a much louder ring in my right ear which is staying longer than it had previously, which I find a little worrying.
My question is, whether to listen to the tinnitus in order to get accustomed to it, or to ignore it to try and get my brain to not focus on it and hope it diminishes or goes away.
I've read about people saying that they sit and listen to their tinnitus in silence to get used to it; notice your reaction and aversion to it, notice how you want it to go away but can't, try to not see it as a threat and find peace with it and ultimately habituate to it.
Or, as an audiologist I saw told me, to try and ignore the high-pitched rings and other sounds as much as possible by playing pink noise and nature sounds to mask it, or try and stay active to avoid thinking about it. She said this was in order to try and get my brain to stop focusing on it and to hope that it disappears by trying to get the brain just to see it as a background noise that can be ignored.
Granted I have only had it a little over 3 weeks and it is mostly a mild case (although, as I said, I seem to have gotten more longer random loud spikes today, whereas previous days they had been pretty short).
So maybe it's because mine is fairly mild that I've been given that advice, because it's recent and my brain is still adjusting to it??
Not really sure which tact is best to take though, or perhaps they each have their own place?
Any thoughts or suggestions from advice you've been told/experience?
Thank you!
Michael
My question is, whether to listen to the tinnitus in order to get accustomed to it, or to ignore it to try and get my brain to not focus on it and hope it diminishes or goes away.
I've read about people saying that they sit and listen to their tinnitus in silence to get used to it; notice your reaction and aversion to it, notice how you want it to go away but can't, try to not see it as a threat and find peace with it and ultimately habituate to it.
Or, as an audiologist I saw told me, to try and ignore the high-pitched rings and other sounds as much as possible by playing pink noise and nature sounds to mask it, or try and stay active to avoid thinking about it. She said this was in order to try and get my brain to stop focusing on it and to hope that it disappears by trying to get the brain just to see it as a background noise that can be ignored.
Granted I have only had it a little over 3 weeks and it is mostly a mild case (although, as I said, I seem to have gotten more longer random loud spikes today, whereas previous days they had been pretty short).
So maybe it's because mine is fairly mild that I've been given that advice, because it's recent and my brain is still adjusting to it??
Not really sure which tact is best to take though, or perhaps they each have their own place?
Any thoughts or suggestions from advice you've been told/experience?
Thank you!
Michael