@demi, hyperacusis caused by exposure to loud sound gets much better in
most cases provided we treat the condition and stick with it. This can be a complex undertaking because decreased sound tolerance rarely exists as hyperacusis alone. Many people with hyperacusis develop a fear of sound or other strong beliefs and feelings about sound, and some also develop long term pain when exposed to sound. It is important for a doctor to diagnose and treat these things too.
Few things are as personal to us as our own hearing. Because decreased sound tolerance can be such a frustrating and frightening condition, and challenging to diagnose and to treat, some people choose to not get into treatment. People who choose to
not get into therapy, or do not stick with it, maintain tightly held beliefs about lifelong risk, reliance on hearing protection, permanently weakened ears, and what they regard as the illusion of true recovery. Their beliefs reflect what they may see as their new normal, and they hold onto them tightly because they also believe life as they once lived it is over.
As
@Street Spirit said, these beliefs are based on their own experience, no one else's. I wouldn't spend a minute wondering if these beliefs apply to you. They don't. Decreased sound tolerance
does get better, for real.
here2help