I've found this site fascinating and am really learning a lot about how people respond to this disorder. I was telling my wife about it and she told me that she has always had "ringing in her ears", ever since she can remember. I have whistling in mine, and whistling is something that is easy to understand. Ringing, however, isn't easy for me to understand. I asked her to describe it and she couldn't. She's told me this before, and I've never asked about it.
In some ways, I feel feel fortunate. Having had this my entire life, or as far back as I can remember, I've never had to acclimate to it. It's always just been. I do remember that when I was younger, I thought that it is something that everyone had. I can go many days without thinking about it at all. I notice it most frequently when I'm sitting around in the evenings or when it is exceedingly quiet around me. Sometimes my wife and I will be walking around the neighborhood and I'll comment on how quiet it is outside on those days when traffic noises are muffled and the air just seems still. Of course the whistling is always there, but in moments like that, it's below my conscious awareness and all I notice is the lack of sounds around me. If I shift my attention to it, it's there, loud and clear. Over the many years, I have learned to shove it in the background.
I read this story once that has always stuck with me. It was about this guy who loved to meditate. He developed tinnitus and was devastated because it ruined his ability to concentrate. All he could do was think about and focus on the phantom noises in his head. But over time, he actually learned to embrace it and use the sound as a focal point for his meditation.
To those who are just beginning this "journey", yes, it is something that one could consider terrible or awful. Over time, you do acclimate to it. It is possible to live your life with this, and to experience greater and greater moments of peace and quiet, even with it never going away. Your mind will learn to push it into the background. I read somewhere that it is only possible to truly focus on one thing at a time. I'm not sure if that's true or not, but it feels like it is to me. When focusing on the noise in my ears, it's what I hear. When I focus on something else, it becomes background noise. My point is that while I am hearing it all of the time, the only time I actually have awareness of it is when I think about it. And of course there are days when it seems louder than others. Those days can be a bit more challenging.
I am not trying to minimize anyone's experiences with this. I know that there are many who have it worse than I do. I think that with time, you can make it through the noise and discover that peace is not something that you can only have without tinnitus. I just don't believe that they are mutually exclusive.
In some ways, I feel feel fortunate. Having had this my entire life, or as far back as I can remember, I've never had to acclimate to it. It's always just been. I do remember that when I was younger, I thought that it is something that everyone had. I can go many days without thinking about it at all. I notice it most frequently when I'm sitting around in the evenings or when it is exceedingly quiet around me. Sometimes my wife and I will be walking around the neighborhood and I'll comment on how quiet it is outside on those days when traffic noises are muffled and the air just seems still. Of course the whistling is always there, but in moments like that, it's below my conscious awareness and all I notice is the lack of sounds around me. If I shift my attention to it, it's there, loud and clear. Over the many years, I have learned to shove it in the background.
I read this story once that has always stuck with me. It was about this guy who loved to meditate. He developed tinnitus and was devastated because it ruined his ability to concentrate. All he could do was think about and focus on the phantom noises in his head. But over time, he actually learned to embrace it and use the sound as a focal point for his meditation.
To those who are just beginning this "journey", yes, it is something that one could consider terrible or awful. Over time, you do acclimate to it. It is possible to live your life with this, and to experience greater and greater moments of peace and quiet, even with it never going away. Your mind will learn to push it into the background. I read somewhere that it is only possible to truly focus on one thing at a time. I'm not sure if that's true or not, but it feels like it is to me. When focusing on the noise in my ears, it's what I hear. When I focus on something else, it becomes background noise. My point is that while I am hearing it all of the time, the only time I actually have awareness of it is when I think about it. And of course there are days when it seems louder than others. Those days can be a bit more challenging.
I am not trying to minimize anyone's experiences with this. I know that there are many who have it worse than I do. I think that with time, you can make it through the noise and discover that peace is not something that you can only have without tinnitus. I just don't believe that they are mutually exclusive.