Drugs are extremely weird and unpredictable, aren't they? At one point during this, I was wondering if protracted withdrawal from previous benzo use was impacting my tinnitus (and at a point when I'd been clear of benzos for years); I took sublingual doses of Flumazenil, a partial benzo antagonist, a couple times.
I quite expected it to provoke some kind of bizarre anxiety state, but it actually made me feel calm and emotionally very detached. It had no positive impact on my tinnitus, and that night was hallmarked by an unbelievably strange sleep/dream/wake cycle that revolved around being alone in an apartment and wanting my wife. Then I would wake up enough to realize I was alone in bed but she was in the next room asleep on a couch... and then I was back in the dream apartment alone trying to find her. This was overall a somewhat unpleasant experience, but it was interesting enough to recall in some detail years later.
I also should add, I think some of the coping skills I learned around meditation to tolerate distress states, and yoga and trigger point release and devices to manage TMJ specifically, were pretty instrumental in recovery — and I don't know if the drugs by themselves would do nearly as much. When things get into "bad" now I can't really go and take more drugs, but I can always sit down and meditate more.
This I thoroughly envy. I meditated on and off many years in my life, mostly awareness of breathing, starting with body scans. I also tried to meditate on the tinnitus but I managed to do it only for four months. The constant worsening made me so restless that in the end I was simply sitting through 20-30 minutes of torture every day and at some point I could not take it any more.
On benzos, I was hoping they would help me. I need to buy 10-12 years to my kids, then it will be all right whatever happens. I had been on Pregabalin for about 2 years, but tinnitus was worsening all the time, so the doctor at some point switched me to Clonazepam. I have started at 0.25 mg and then got to 0.5 mg. It worked for two weeks but then lost all effect and the worsening started again. The tinnitus became more and more high pitched and louder in a way it had never been even under pregabalin. The neurologist suggested two possibilities, either come off if I feel I can make it, wait and see what happens off drugs, or if I can't make it because I'm too ill then let's try to increase to 1 mg. I tried 1 mg for a couple of days but the tinnitus didn't get better, I could sleep more but as soon as I woke up the noise would be even worse, I was scared and moved back to 0.5 mg. My understanding (but it could be wrong) is that benzos are not like antidepressants, their effect should be immediate? If two days at a raised dosage don't do anything, does that mean that benzos are not helping and I should try to come off, or should one stay on the raised dose for longer? I read your past experience and you mentioned you had almost given up when finally the 2 mg dosage started being effective for you.
@birdy has a similar story, it took her three weeks for the effect to show up and kill her tinnitus. I'm surprised by this as I had thought benzos effects were immediate.
Sorry for the long post and I'm not asking for medical advice, but based on your experience, is it possible that the effect of benzo dosage increase on tinnitus may take days/weeks to show up and that, at the beginning, there may be even worsening? My dilemma in the last 9 months has been understanding whether I'm in tolerance withdrawal or simply I need a larger dose to stabilize (like
@birdy, who had to raise dosage a few times and finally found the stable spot at 4 mg). I'm aware you also have Gabapentin in the cocktail, that's something I will discuss with my neurologist if things get totally desperate, which I'm not very far from.
Other than that I always appreciate your posts, I wish meditation were as effective for me. I am trying to teach it to my kids, as you are doing. I want them to be able to resort to it. Body scans seems already to help them when they are a little stressed by school.