- Sep 5, 2015
- 718
- Tinnitus Since
- 2015 resolved, 4/20 L ear, increase 2/21
- Cause of Tinnitus
- 2015,noise,2020-21 SNHL
OK this is a novel but there are two success stories in this post and I hope it helps somebody.
While reading all the success stories looking for hope and inspiration, it occurred to me that for people who are either new to tinnitus, or like me, are having a new presentation of it, stories about small victories can be very meaningful. They say improvement with tinnitus is measured in months not days. You can imagine that in the early stages reading success stories about people who habituated after 6, 9,12 months, 2 years can feel like an eternity. So we must focus on the small victories along the way.
My first success story:
I was diagnosed with bilateral tinnitus after a loud concert in 2015. After a period of about a year where I mostly masked and slept with a sound pillow, I noticed that the sound had disappeared and I no longer needed those items. I realize now that my tinnitus was quite mild and easily masked, which helped me cope tremendously. I had my hearing tested and it was fine. The noise in my ears sounded something like a light saber / tonal ring. I was devastated and visited this site often. I can't say that I woke up one morning and it was gone. It was just a normal progression where I stopped turning on the sound machine and my sound pillow broke and I never replaced it. People have asked me " did you habituate or did it really go away? " I'm here to tell you it really went away. I know this because I could completely occlude my ears on a pillow and not hear a thing. So there is hope!
Since 2015, I protected my ears with custom earplugs. I lived life normally and never gave it another thought. And regrettably, I never came back here and wrote a success story. I feel badly about that as it had crossed my mind several times to do so.
Fast forward to 2020. In mid April I developed what sounded like an echo in my left ear. Then I noticed a low tone ring. It is easily masked by most ambient noise. I have aural fullness and pain and pressure in the ear. Sometimes pain in both ears, but mostly the left. I, of course, went through all the anxious emotions, couldn't sleep, ruminating about it, couldn't understand why after protecting my ears these past few years this was happening to me. I went to the ENT and had my hearing retested and I have mild loss at one tone in the left ear. Right ear is fine. Then about four weeks ago I started to notice a bilateral high-pitched hiss. I experience it more in the right ear but it is bilateral. At times it sounds like a high-pitched whine like maybe a cicada would make. But I also noticed that it was relatively mild, although due to the pitch I could hear it over other things. Over the last two weeks it has fluctuated wildly. It can fluctuate within a day. So if it isn't annoying enough to hear it over almost everything because of the high pitch ( not able to mask), I also have no idea if it's going to be quiet or loud. Again the anxiety was through the roof. I could sleep due to the sound pillow and sleep medications and that's probably the only thing that has kept me sane. But for the past two weeks I haven't been able to eat and have been living with a constant pit in my stomach, which starts from the minute I open my eyes in the morning. I have no experience with fluctuating tinnitus. Some morning msg I can bare,y notice it. Other days it is very intrusive. It definitely has a somatic component and it can be made worse by just moving my neck a certain way, clenching my teeth, yawning, moving my jaw, pressing behind my ear lobe. The noise itself is not unfamiliar to me. I have experienced it off and on when I yawn or when I'm sick and my ears are blocked. I have been to the ENT and I have no fluid in the ears, no wax, no problems. This presentation is indeed a mystery. According to my ENT "sometimes the ears do what they want to do. " Now we all know this isn't about my ears, it's about my brain. I've read countless success stories. Made use of the ATA's support line and spoken to a number of people who have long habituated to intrusive tinnitus. I have racked my brain trying to figure out what causes my bad days versus my good days. Or what causes my good morning to turn onto my bad afternoon. I looked at foods, alcohol, salt sugar. I can't figure it out. There seems to be no rhyme or reason. Maybe TMJ or neck issues, which I have been having since February. Who knows?
The point: The small victories. Yesterday, after having a nice lunch with some friends my quiet morning/afternoon turned into a very loud early evening. I had to drive my son and three of his friends to baseball practice last night that was an hour away. I had to wait over two hours for them and then drive them home. The whole time my ears were ringing away. I heard them over the air conditioner in the car, over the radio, over the boys talking in the car. But I did it! And I didn't have a panic attack. I managed! I got through it, It didn't break me! I woke up this morning and my ears were still singing away and I knew it was going to be a bad ear day. However, I manage to shop for food, have my parents over for a Father's Day lunch, and take my son shopping for some summer clothes. And the cicadas in my ears were hissing or whining away depending on the minute. It was annoying as hell. And I soooo wished it would just stop. But I had things to do and I have my life to live. So yesterday, as I noticed the volume and intrusiveness start to perk up knowing that I had to make that long drive with the boys, I knew it had to be mind over matter. I sat back and I said I have to make friends with this noise. I know that may sound crazy but I actually read it here somewhere. Now that doesn't mean that tomorrow I won't have a tough day where I will cry and be frustrated and exhausted from dealing with this constant noise while I'm trying to work. But for me, it was a huge victory to get through last night and most of today with some degree of success. Yes the ringing was constantly on my mind. But I could take moments and forget about it while I was focused on other things I needed to do and I am only really a month in. And who knows, tomorrow could be a good ear day.
So I just thought I would come here and write this because I think my journey is going to be one of many ups and downs. And if we don't recognize the small victories we don't have anything to sustain us during the long months while we wait for habituation and for our brains to realize that this noise needs to be sent to the background. I still hope and pray that it will actually go away or that it related to my jaw or the neck problems That. Ignite be fixed but if it doesn't, I am sure at some point I will come out on the other side. And hopefully I will be able to come back and write a success story where I'm able to say that I almost never hear it at all unless I look for it.
To all of you with the patience to have read this long post, best of luck, and I hope some of you find this helpful.
While reading all the success stories looking for hope and inspiration, it occurred to me that for people who are either new to tinnitus, or like me, are having a new presentation of it, stories about small victories can be very meaningful. They say improvement with tinnitus is measured in months not days. You can imagine that in the early stages reading success stories about people who habituated after 6, 9,12 months, 2 years can feel like an eternity. So we must focus on the small victories along the way.
My first success story:
I was diagnosed with bilateral tinnitus after a loud concert in 2015. After a period of about a year where I mostly masked and slept with a sound pillow, I noticed that the sound had disappeared and I no longer needed those items. I realize now that my tinnitus was quite mild and easily masked, which helped me cope tremendously. I had my hearing tested and it was fine. The noise in my ears sounded something like a light saber / tonal ring. I was devastated and visited this site often. I can't say that I woke up one morning and it was gone. It was just a normal progression where I stopped turning on the sound machine and my sound pillow broke and I never replaced it. People have asked me " did you habituate or did it really go away? " I'm here to tell you it really went away. I know this because I could completely occlude my ears on a pillow and not hear a thing. So there is hope!
Since 2015, I protected my ears with custom earplugs. I lived life normally and never gave it another thought. And regrettably, I never came back here and wrote a success story. I feel badly about that as it had crossed my mind several times to do so.
Fast forward to 2020. In mid April I developed what sounded like an echo in my left ear. Then I noticed a low tone ring. It is easily masked by most ambient noise. I have aural fullness and pain and pressure in the ear. Sometimes pain in both ears, but mostly the left. I, of course, went through all the anxious emotions, couldn't sleep, ruminating about it, couldn't understand why after protecting my ears these past few years this was happening to me. I went to the ENT and had my hearing retested and I have mild loss at one tone in the left ear. Right ear is fine. Then about four weeks ago I started to notice a bilateral high-pitched hiss. I experience it more in the right ear but it is bilateral. At times it sounds like a high-pitched whine like maybe a cicada would make. But I also noticed that it was relatively mild, although due to the pitch I could hear it over other things. Over the last two weeks it has fluctuated wildly. It can fluctuate within a day. So if it isn't annoying enough to hear it over almost everything because of the high pitch ( not able to mask), I also have no idea if it's going to be quiet or loud. Again the anxiety was through the roof. I could sleep due to the sound pillow and sleep medications and that's probably the only thing that has kept me sane. But for the past two weeks I haven't been able to eat and have been living with a constant pit in my stomach, which starts from the minute I open my eyes in the morning. I have no experience with fluctuating tinnitus. Some morning msg I can bare,y notice it. Other days it is very intrusive. It definitely has a somatic component and it can be made worse by just moving my neck a certain way, clenching my teeth, yawning, moving my jaw, pressing behind my ear lobe. The noise itself is not unfamiliar to me. I have experienced it off and on when I yawn or when I'm sick and my ears are blocked. I have been to the ENT and I have no fluid in the ears, no wax, no problems. This presentation is indeed a mystery. According to my ENT "sometimes the ears do what they want to do. " Now we all know this isn't about my ears, it's about my brain. I've read countless success stories. Made use of the ATA's support line and spoken to a number of people who have long habituated to intrusive tinnitus. I have racked my brain trying to figure out what causes my bad days versus my good days. Or what causes my good morning to turn onto my bad afternoon. I looked at foods, alcohol, salt sugar. I can't figure it out. There seems to be no rhyme or reason. Maybe TMJ or neck issues, which I have been having since February. Who knows?
The point: The small victories. Yesterday, after having a nice lunch with some friends my quiet morning/afternoon turned into a very loud early evening. I had to drive my son and three of his friends to baseball practice last night that was an hour away. I had to wait over two hours for them and then drive them home. The whole time my ears were ringing away. I heard them over the air conditioner in the car, over the radio, over the boys talking in the car. But I did it! And I didn't have a panic attack. I managed! I got through it, It didn't break me! I woke up this morning and my ears were still singing away and I knew it was going to be a bad ear day. However, I manage to shop for food, have my parents over for a Father's Day lunch, and take my son shopping for some summer clothes. And the cicadas in my ears were hissing or whining away depending on the minute. It was annoying as hell. And I soooo wished it would just stop. But I had things to do and I have my life to live. So yesterday, as I noticed the volume and intrusiveness start to perk up knowing that I had to make that long drive with the boys, I knew it had to be mind over matter. I sat back and I said I have to make friends with this noise. I know that may sound crazy but I actually read it here somewhere. Now that doesn't mean that tomorrow I won't have a tough day where I will cry and be frustrated and exhausted from dealing with this constant noise while I'm trying to work. But for me, it was a huge victory to get through last night and most of today with some degree of success. Yes the ringing was constantly on my mind. But I could take moments and forget about it while I was focused on other things I needed to do and I am only really a month in. And who knows, tomorrow could be a good ear day.
So I just thought I would come here and write this because I think my journey is going to be one of many ups and downs. And if we don't recognize the small victories we don't have anything to sustain us during the long months while we wait for habituation and for our brains to realize that this noise needs to be sent to the background. I still hope and pray that it will actually go away or that it related to my jaw or the neck problems That. Ignite be fixed but if it doesn't, I am sure at some point I will come out on the other side. And hopefully I will be able to come back and write a success story where I'm able to say that I almost never hear it at all unless I look for it.
To all of you with the patience to have read this long post, best of luck, and I hope some of you find this helpful.