Hi All:
I have been deliberating as to whether and when to post the details of an interesting trick that I stumbled upon awhile back. As far as I know this only works for me; but I see no reason why others with a similar "type" of tinnitus should not be able to reproduce this trick.
As I have explained before, I have days when my tinnitus is simply not there---essentially silence. However, most of the time, I wake up with a mild hissing that, if left "untreated," will increase in volume and remain with me throughout the day. (I wake up noise free only about once a week.)
Empirically (I'll explain my "theory" shortly), a loud, hot shower results in my tinnitus actually disappearing for the entire day. (It typically returns after I wake up from a night's sleep.)
I am not sure if it's the noise alone (at a certain volume/frequency) or the heat; but the point at which I am sure it's going to work (I am successful about half the time), is when the the tinnitus is masked (suppressed?) during the shower. Sometimes, the trick only works for an hour or two, but often it is for the entire day.
I have tried to reproduce the effect using white/pink/brown noise and even recorded shower sounds, but to no avail. I don't know if the heat has anything to do with it. My suspicion is that this is some kind of residual inhibition.
The reason I have been reticent about discussing is that I don't want to raise people's hopes in vain.
I bring this up now because I notice a lot of discussion involving matched tones and notching. I wonder whether this finding of mine might generalize to the greater population of tinnitus sufferers, perhaps with some modifications. That is, if indeed I am fortuitously suppressing my tinnitus via a frequency match in combination with massage/heat, maybe someone could figure out a way to reproduce the effect without the shower part!
I would be thrilled if one of you tried this and were as excited as I was to find that you wound up noise free for the day! As I said, I wake up noise free once a week; however, thanks to the shower trick, I am noise free about four days out of seven, on average.
I have left out some details (like the fact that 1mg Klonopin in the evening pretty much guarantees that the trick will work upon waking), but I am happy to discuss further. Note that I keep a detailed daily diary and have statistics on my symptoms (along with many covariates) going back to when my tinnitus started almost three years ago.
-Golly
I have been deliberating as to whether and when to post the details of an interesting trick that I stumbled upon awhile back. As far as I know this only works for me; but I see no reason why others with a similar "type" of tinnitus should not be able to reproduce this trick.
As I have explained before, I have days when my tinnitus is simply not there---essentially silence. However, most of the time, I wake up with a mild hissing that, if left "untreated," will increase in volume and remain with me throughout the day. (I wake up noise free only about once a week.)
Empirically (I'll explain my "theory" shortly), a loud, hot shower results in my tinnitus actually disappearing for the entire day. (It typically returns after I wake up from a night's sleep.)
I am not sure if it's the noise alone (at a certain volume/frequency) or the heat; but the point at which I am sure it's going to work (I am successful about half the time), is when the the tinnitus is masked (suppressed?) during the shower. Sometimes, the trick only works for an hour or two, but often it is for the entire day.
I have tried to reproduce the effect using white/pink/brown noise and even recorded shower sounds, but to no avail. I don't know if the heat has anything to do with it. My suspicion is that this is some kind of residual inhibition.
The reason I have been reticent about discussing is that I don't want to raise people's hopes in vain.
I bring this up now because I notice a lot of discussion involving matched tones and notching. I wonder whether this finding of mine might generalize to the greater population of tinnitus sufferers, perhaps with some modifications. That is, if indeed I am fortuitously suppressing my tinnitus via a frequency match in combination with massage/heat, maybe someone could figure out a way to reproduce the effect without the shower part!
I would be thrilled if one of you tried this and were as excited as I was to find that you wound up noise free for the day! As I said, I wake up noise free once a week; however, thanks to the shower trick, I am noise free about four days out of seven, on average.
I have left out some details (like the fact that 1mg Klonopin in the evening pretty much guarantees that the trick will work upon waking), but I am happy to discuss further. Note that I keep a detailed daily diary and have statistics on my symptoms (along with many covariates) going back to when my tinnitus started almost three years ago.
-Golly