I crawled these forums when I had tinnitus/hyperacusis and they helped so I wanted to give back. This is for people who have noise-induced tinnitus. This is only since November, 2019 so a short time, but still.
I went to a loud concert and stood near a speaker without earplugs like an idiot. I woke up the next morning and was fine. Slight ear-ringing that I get after all concerts that goes away. This faded away the following week.
The following weekend, a friend visited me and we went to a bar where there happened to be live music. I wasn't close to the music but it was moderately loud. Didn't think anything of it. Next morning, my ears are ringing. It only got worse as days went on.
Within a week I had decently loud changing tones/beeps/static in both ears, as well as hyperacusis too. Dishes clanking, normal-decibal voices, etc. all made me wince. I also had burning, pain sensations in my left ear when this happened. I'm pretty sure this is because I subjected my ears to the first trauma (extreme loudness) and then went on to a second trauma within a week span.
I thought I was doomed. I got extremely anxious and this consumed me for the first month or so. I couldn't eat or think about anything else. Luckily it wasn't bad enough that I couldn't sleep (I use white noise anyway) BUT the extreme sensitivity to sound paired with the tinnitus was horrible. I was in pain and was scared of all noises. I bought earplugs and put them on my keychain (I still have them because it's a good idea for EVERYONE). I was worried I would have to live as a hermit forever and not do anything fun. I'm still young and didn't want to deal with this forever. I also thought I would go crazy because it felt like the sound was inside my brain and would never go away, that I'd go insane or something.
THE GOOD:
Within a month, I calmed down and habituated. The ringing was still there and the hyperacusis went down. When I went to any bar or restaurant, I told my friends I was going to wear earplugs and no one cared. Slowly, I stopped noticing the ringing and no longer felt sensitivity to certain sounds. Things started getting better. By January, I felt 85% better on all fronts. By now, I don't notice the ringing unless I'm in an extremely silent room. I went hiking in the woods with fresh snow fall (the quietest environment I can think of) and barely heard my tinnitus...what little ringing I had left, I barely heard. I went to the doctor and my hearing is perfect, as far as their tests could tell.
I will now be extremely careful with my ears. I have earplugs I bring everywhere. I will not go to any type of bar or club without ear protection (not that I do much of that anyway). I haven't gone to a concert and will probably wait until I consider doing that.
I just wanted to give people hope who were in the position I was in a few months ago. I can't speak for the people who have had it for years, but just know that if you're dealing with noise-induced tinnitus for a few months, it can go away. Just rest your ears, try to breathe and relax, and take care of yourself. Eat healthy food, try to get enough sleep, and exercise! Exercising was a huge stress-reliever for me. I just put in earplugs and went to the gym to sweat out my anxious energy. It didn't cure anything, but it helped.
Good luck to everyone!
I went to a loud concert and stood near a speaker without earplugs like an idiot. I woke up the next morning and was fine. Slight ear-ringing that I get after all concerts that goes away. This faded away the following week.
The following weekend, a friend visited me and we went to a bar where there happened to be live music. I wasn't close to the music but it was moderately loud. Didn't think anything of it. Next morning, my ears are ringing. It only got worse as days went on.
Within a week I had decently loud changing tones/beeps/static in both ears, as well as hyperacusis too. Dishes clanking, normal-decibal voices, etc. all made me wince. I also had burning, pain sensations in my left ear when this happened. I'm pretty sure this is because I subjected my ears to the first trauma (extreme loudness) and then went on to a second trauma within a week span.
I thought I was doomed. I got extremely anxious and this consumed me for the first month or so. I couldn't eat or think about anything else. Luckily it wasn't bad enough that I couldn't sleep (I use white noise anyway) BUT the extreme sensitivity to sound paired with the tinnitus was horrible. I was in pain and was scared of all noises. I bought earplugs and put them on my keychain (I still have them because it's a good idea for EVERYONE). I was worried I would have to live as a hermit forever and not do anything fun. I'm still young and didn't want to deal with this forever. I also thought I would go crazy because it felt like the sound was inside my brain and would never go away, that I'd go insane or something.
THE GOOD:
Within a month, I calmed down and habituated. The ringing was still there and the hyperacusis went down. When I went to any bar or restaurant, I told my friends I was going to wear earplugs and no one cared. Slowly, I stopped noticing the ringing and no longer felt sensitivity to certain sounds. Things started getting better. By January, I felt 85% better on all fronts. By now, I don't notice the ringing unless I'm in an extremely silent room. I went hiking in the woods with fresh snow fall (the quietest environment I can think of) and barely heard my tinnitus...what little ringing I had left, I barely heard. I went to the doctor and my hearing is perfect, as far as their tests could tell.
I will now be extremely careful with my ears. I have earplugs I bring everywhere. I will not go to any type of bar or club without ear protection (not that I do much of that anyway). I haven't gone to a concert and will probably wait until I consider doing that.
I just wanted to give people hope who were in the position I was in a few months ago. I can't speak for the people who have had it for years, but just know that if you're dealing with noise-induced tinnitus for a few months, it can go away. Just rest your ears, try to breathe and relax, and take care of yourself. Eat healthy food, try to get enough sleep, and exercise! Exercising was a huge stress-reliever for me. I just put in earplugs and went to the gym to sweat out my anxious energy. It didn't cure anything, but it helped.
Good luck to everyone!