- Jul 9, 2017
- 337
- Tinnitus Since
- 04/2017
- Cause of Tinnitus
- ? neck injury/unknown
@Lorac Thank you Lorac, this is helpful for me.The brain is VERY slowly learning to choose new neural paths and learning to pay attention to more important things.
@Lorac Thank you Lorac, this is helpful for me.The brain is VERY slowly learning to choose new neural paths and learning to pay attention to more important things.
You shouldn't worry about becoming one of us long term people. We represent a tiny portion of people with tinnitus, it's just that we are more represented in groups and forums than the majority.@Flamingo1 Yes, I am at the three month mark as well…..learning to freak out less and just ignore it, too. Still can only sleep with masking and benzo's though. Being outside is really helpful as I cannot hear it as much with the nature sounds of outside (wind, birds, cars etc.). I am worried about our long winters, though when I am indoors so much due to the cold weather (we get very cold weather November-April). However, just trying to take this day by day and enjoying being outdoors as much as I can right now.
Originally I thought this T would only last a couple of weeks for me, when I see members that have been on here for years I get a little worried I will be in the same boat as them. I would be happy with just a reduction in my T if I could, even enough to get off of the benzo's to sleep at night would be a godsend.
People with mild transient pain from a paper cut also make for a bigger group than people with severely impacting chronic pain. Knowing that makes the life of the majorly impacted none the easier. She has had tinnitus for 3 months, her tinnitus is probably going to stick long term. She should be worried.You shouldn't worry about becoming one of us long term people. We represent a tiny portion of people with tinnitus, it's just that we are more represented in groups and forums than the majority.
Sorry but you are wrong to say that. You are using your own experience and imposing it on others, it doesn't work to a script. I am in the long term group and I don't have it particularly easy but I would never dream of telling other people to worry just because of my own experience.People with mild transient pain from a paper cut also make for a bigger group than people with severely impacting chronic pain. Knowing that makes the life of the majorly impacted none the easier. She has had tinnitus for 3 months, her tinnitus is probably going to stick long term. She should be worried.
@Flamingo1 Thank you for amazon link….unfortunately this sleep machine does not not ship to Canada but maybe I can find something similar in Canada.I have my first tinnitus retraining appointment this Friday to train my brain to ignore the T. I suggest looking into it too while you're still in the early stages and there's still some plasticity in the brain.
@Steve Thank you Steve, this is helpful for me. I did not mean to sound disrespectful, just surprised that T can stay around so long for some people and praying it will not be me. However as each day passes and I see no change in it, I start to wonder if I will be long term. However this gets me really upset as the only thing that keeps me going some days is thinking it will go away or at least fade……….I do not even know exactly how I got this???What you should focus on is the huge number of people who visit, find what they are looking for, improve and move on with life.
@Steve Yes, that is what I am trying to do. I do not want to plan my life around T.It's important to understand that there is also a psychological link, obsessing over the noise, not being able to stop listening, worrying over the future of it. It's important to break that link.
Do you think if you had some new spikes along the path of T, that the chances on recovery are a lot less?You shouldn't worry about becoming one of us long term people. We represent a tiny portion of people with tinnitus, it's just that we are more represented in groups and forums than the majority.
What you should focus on is the huge number of people who visit, find what they are looking for, improve and move on with life.
You shouldn't worry about becoming one of us long term people. We represent a tiny portion of people with tinnitus, it's just that we are more represented in groups and forums than the majority.
What you should focus on is the huge number of people who visit, find what they are looking for, improve and move on with life.
People with mild transient pain from a paper cut also make for a bigger group than people with severely impacting chronic pain. Knowing that makes the life of the majorly impacted none the easier. She has had tinnitus for 3 months, her tinnitus is probably going to stick long term. She should be worried.
@Steve Yes, that is what I am trying to do. I do not want to plan my life around T.
Hi Sonic17,@Steve Thank you Steve, this is helpful for me. I did not mean to sound disrespectful, just surprised that T can stay around so long for some people and praying it will not be me. However as each day passes I and see no change in it, I start to wonder if I will be long term. However this gets me really upset as the only thing that keeps me going some days is thinking it will go away or at least fade……….I do not even know exactly how I got this???
Steve, are you the director of Tinnitus Talk? I always find your posts so encouraging and helpful.
@Steve That is awesome that you have habituated. I am trying many things, and this forum is great for ideas and support. I do believe mine will go away or at least fade……I just have to right now.For me though life goes on. It's not easy but I have broadly habituated.
But Steve can this really be a reason of worsening?I often wonder if it was mainly due to my obsessive behaviour in monitoring it.
@Flamingo1 Yes, I am at the three month mark as well…..learning to freak out less and just ignore it, too. Still can only sleep with masking and benzo's though. Being outside is really helpful as I cannot hear it as much with the nature sounds of outside (wind, birds, cars etc.). I am worried about our long winters, though when I am indoors so much due to the cold weather (we get very cold weather November-April). However, just trying to take this day by day and enjoying being outdoors as much as I can right now.
Originally I thought this T would only last a couple of weeks for me, when I see members that have been on here for years I get a little worried I will be in the same boat as them. I would be happy with just a reduction in my T if I could, even enough to get off of the benzo's to sleep at night would be a godsend.
You are very likely to improve as most tinnitus improves:
"If you are in the 'new onset' period of tinnitus (less than 6 months), you can be reassured that, for many, the natural course of tinnitus is to improve over time and most people do not go on to have persistent, bothersome tinnitus."
http://www.entnet.org/content/tinnitus
I sure hope you're right. Here I am at almost 4 months and I'm barely keeping it together. I can't help but think that any date you set up in your mind is an arbitrary number (the ones doing the survey don't truly know, some say 3 months, some say 6 months, some say a year, some say 2 years is chronic, etc.) and that the original exposure that you had dictates how long you'll have your T (provided you don't do any more damage) since the damage is already done. I've seen post after post on this very forum that those who make up a number tend to disappoint themselves and that the best course is to just accept that you've aquired the condition for life.
@GGG-DG Thank you, believing that the T will one day go away or at least fade gives me strength.
The quote I posted is not saying after 6 months, it's not gonna get better. It's just defining the new onset period. You are right there is no date. In medicine, chronic is just a convention (after 3,6,12 months). Chronic means long-lasting, doesn't necessarily mean permanent and irreversible.
As for tinnitus there is no research about this. Here's a book chapter. It's pdf so I took screenshots:
View attachment 13334
View attachment 13335
https://books.google.ca/books?id=YStcWFsxQZEC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Textbook+of+Tinnitus&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiOoMHG5JHVAhXGx4MKHWlqBRwQ6AEIJjAA#v=onepage&q=Textbook of Tinnitus&f=false
The neuroimaging study they talked about looked at people with tinnitus with less than 4 years vs more than 4 years
https://bmcneurosci.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2202-10-11
Plus even if it's permanent, it can fade away to barely audible in addition to habituation...
Thanks for the research! I just don't want to hold on to a false sense of hope for habituation. I tend to be more realist... Maybe I'll hold on for a bit longer.
I believe so yes. The brain is the most plastic organ in our body. It is constantly changing and creating new pathways. So the more you concentrate on tinnitus, see it as a threat, see it as something that will continue and be a source of anxiety then the more pathways you create.But Steve can this really be a reason of worsening?
There just aren't any hard and fast rules, it's impossible to say. I do think that you need to get back to living life as much as you can, which tinnitus often deprives you of. Part of that is doing things you enjoy and not being afraid, while making sure you don't damage your hearing. I learned that I had to stop going to really loud places, even with earplugs. Just one of those things I guess, I burnt my ears out with years of partying.Do you think if you had some new spikes along the path of T, that the chances on recovery are a lot less?
Like new loud noise exposure (even with earplugs). I tried to be super-safe for 6-7 months but I a couple of days ago went to a concert with muffs and I met my old T again that night, spiking as I've been into a rave for 10 hours.
Do you think it was too soon, do things like that jeopardize any spontaneous recovery? :'(
I believe so yes. The brain is the most plastic organ in our body. It is constantly changing and creating new pathways. So the more you concentrate on tinnitus, see it as a threat, see it as something that will continue and be a source of anxiety then the more pathways you create.
I think that if I had proper information at the tone of onset, a better understanding from the doctors, I would be a lot better than I am today - I also believe that if I didn't do all the things I do related to tinnitus I wouldn't be as bad
Virtually everything in the early days... I used to listen for it (it started as a low tone, only audible in quiet). If I was in a space with environmental noise I would plug my ears to see if it was still there, I would worry if I was going to go deaf, I worried that it would get so bad I wouldn't be able to take it any more. A general future anxiety that I actively reinforced with my patterns of thought.I would be happy if you could share with me those things you did related to tinnitus that you wouldn't do
It is a possibility but it isn't always the case, there could be a cause underlying it that you need to treat. I see you have unknown cause, have you tried to diagnose yourself or had any feedback from doctors on a possible cause?So i try to figure out if the culprit of my worsening can be my current mental state,