Hi all. Beware, LOADS of text ahead.
So. I just returned from the appointment with the Osteopath like 5 minutes ago. The last 5 minutes I was lying in the quiet and listening.
First: Today in the morning, I actually noticed that the tinnitus was not very strong, following the scale @Renfrey was using before, last week after the "relapse" it was a 5 (noticeable), today it was a 3 (between noticeable and not noticeable). So I actually did a very loose, chilled WHM exercise, maybe 30% the effort that I did when I got it. Tinnitus went back to 4-5 after the exercise. I know it may be a bit reckless, but I really wanted to have a comparison.
I went to the appointment and I told the osteopath about the idea that WHM might be resulting in the tinnitus and explained to her our idea of the over-excited of the auditory cells. She was interested and VERY helpful, answering all my questions and explaining what she does.
Her response was that I'm not the first patient with tinnitus she was taking care of, though she never heard of WHM before. She was basically using the same techniques with me that she was using with patients who came in with tinnitus being a direct cause of stress (which was also the suspicion in my case in the beginning, but I will address that in a couple of lines).
From here: please note that I'm only trying to reproduce what she told me. As I can't remember every single detail I'm giving it as I remember it. It will clearly be slightly distorted from what she said EXACTLY.
The purpose of these techniques is to work with the blood circulation in the areas of parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems (addressing the areas of the the neck and lower back respectively).
The techniques is of course too complicated to explain within 15 minutes, but basically she not-quite-massages certain areas in the neck, gently pushing at certain points. She can also feel the pulsation of the Liqueur (The nerve-liquid, flowing through our spinal cord and skull), and the speed of this pulsation is depending on how "excited" the nervous system is. Now this is extremely interesting for me. As mentioned in my post before, I hear two tinnitus tones. One is constant and high pitched, the other one is lower and is NOT constant and changes and vibrates. It's like a fridge or a hard drive in a computer, sort of. And I have noticed before that especially this lower tone is changing in its intensity (and its vibration speed) depending on how irritated I was. And when my stress level started to reduce in January, so did the "fridge" start to work in the quieter mode. Now this does not prove anything, but it might be that this tone is direct render or what my nervous system is doing.
Now. She promised to send me the name of a book that addresses the techniques of osteopathy where, she said, we will be able to find more explanation on how osteopathic methods work. I'm not sure if one of us will be able to use this technique directly, as osteopathy is not something one learns in a couple of weeks, yet we might be able to figure out some details that will help us to at least reduce the symptoms and maybe also better understand what happens to us. I will post it here when I get the email from her.
Also she said that what we can do ourselves to reduce "exciting" of the nervous systems is Yoga (Yin yoga helped me a lot actually), meditation, progressive muscle relaxation... these things, you know. @MrC6688, that's probably why caffeine makes it worse for you. Caffeine makes it also worse for me, and so does being hangover (Alcohol creates inflammation and stress to nervous system).
What also helped me a lot was practicing 5.5-breathing (5.5 seconds breathing in and 5.5 seconds breathing out). I stumbled upon this breathing exercise a few times in various literature (also on Joe Rogan's Podcast, James Nestor, author of the book "Breathe" mentions this technique, but with 6 seconds). Then I bought an app called Prana Breath, that allows you to program your own breathing patterns and programmed it. I had the impression that it proactively reduced stress and I also fell asleep much easier with it. I suspect it has exactly the opposite effect on the nervous system as WHM. Give it a try.
Finally, after we talked she did again this whole technique on me. I was listening closely to tinnitus, as it was changing during the practice. It first got slightly stronger and then gradually reduced to barely noticeable. I pushed it in the morning to the level of 4-5 and after I returned home I was lying in my bed with hearing protection on and I actually had to actively listen in to find that low pitched tinnitus tone. The high pitched one reduced as well.
So I'm now very much sure, that we are are on the right track and that practicing yoga, meditation, healthy lifestyle can reduce our complains (even though I'm actually pretty sure that getting rid of it fully will be hard to impossible, I still believe that it is very much possible to find solutions to monitor it and keep the tinnitus at the scale level of 1-2).
Anyway, it turned out that I indeed still have another appointment left. The osteopath said she will also look into the WHM and let me know next time what she thinks about it and its side effects.
I for myself will monitor my tones very carefully and see how they change with stress level changes and if the pulsation of the low tone is linked to it.
What are your ideas?
Shall we write a collective letter to Wim Hof and see if he responds on what he suggests to do as a countermeasure?
P.S.
@MrC6688 if you are actually looking into going to an osteopath, make sure you find someone who treats tinnitus as well. Osteopathy seems to be a veeeeery broad variety of techniques and not all of them will address what you need.
P.P.S.
Oh yes, one thing still remains fully unclear to me and the osteopathy did not seem to help with this one much.
It's the pressure we all experience inside our ears. Even though right after my relapse I went to an ENT and he did not measure any increased pressure, even though I felt it very well and I do now, after I did the light WHM exercise today in the morning.
P.P.P.S.
And one more thing. I don't expect that the change in tinnitus through one session today will permanently repair it. I believe by tonight it will return. It is somewhat a gradual improvement, even though, right after the osteopathy sessions it reduces a lot, but it seems to be iterative, with every session of osteopathy, breathing, meditation or yoga giving a short-lived instant effect but also a small improvement on the large scale.
So. I just returned from the appointment with the Osteopath like 5 minutes ago. The last 5 minutes I was lying in the quiet and listening.
First: Today in the morning, I actually noticed that the tinnitus was not very strong, following the scale @Renfrey was using before, last week after the "relapse" it was a 5 (noticeable), today it was a 3 (between noticeable and not noticeable). So I actually did a very loose, chilled WHM exercise, maybe 30% the effort that I did when I got it. Tinnitus went back to 4-5 after the exercise. I know it may be a bit reckless, but I really wanted to have a comparison.
I went to the appointment and I told the osteopath about the idea that WHM might be resulting in the tinnitus and explained to her our idea of the over-excited of the auditory cells. She was interested and VERY helpful, answering all my questions and explaining what she does.
Her response was that I'm not the first patient with tinnitus she was taking care of, though she never heard of WHM before. She was basically using the same techniques with me that she was using with patients who came in with tinnitus being a direct cause of stress (which was also the suspicion in my case in the beginning, but I will address that in a couple of lines).
From here: please note that I'm only trying to reproduce what she told me. As I can't remember every single detail I'm giving it as I remember it. It will clearly be slightly distorted from what she said EXACTLY.
The purpose of these techniques is to work with the blood circulation in the areas of parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems (addressing the areas of the the neck and lower back respectively).
The techniques is of course too complicated to explain within 15 minutes, but basically she not-quite-massages certain areas in the neck, gently pushing at certain points. She can also feel the pulsation of the Liqueur (The nerve-liquid, flowing through our spinal cord and skull), and the speed of this pulsation is depending on how "excited" the nervous system is. Now this is extremely interesting for me. As mentioned in my post before, I hear two tinnitus tones. One is constant and high pitched, the other one is lower and is NOT constant and changes and vibrates. It's like a fridge or a hard drive in a computer, sort of. And I have noticed before that especially this lower tone is changing in its intensity (and its vibration speed) depending on how irritated I was. And when my stress level started to reduce in January, so did the "fridge" start to work in the quieter mode. Now this does not prove anything, but it might be that this tone is direct render or what my nervous system is doing.
Now. She promised to send me the name of a book that addresses the techniques of osteopathy where, she said, we will be able to find more explanation on how osteopathic methods work. I'm not sure if one of us will be able to use this technique directly, as osteopathy is not something one learns in a couple of weeks, yet we might be able to figure out some details that will help us to at least reduce the symptoms and maybe also better understand what happens to us. I will post it here when I get the email from her.
Also she said that what we can do ourselves to reduce "exciting" of the nervous systems is Yoga (Yin yoga helped me a lot actually), meditation, progressive muscle relaxation... these things, you know. @MrC6688, that's probably why caffeine makes it worse for you. Caffeine makes it also worse for me, and so does being hangover (Alcohol creates inflammation and stress to nervous system).
What also helped me a lot was practicing 5.5-breathing (5.5 seconds breathing in and 5.5 seconds breathing out). I stumbled upon this breathing exercise a few times in various literature (also on Joe Rogan's Podcast, James Nestor, author of the book "Breathe" mentions this technique, but with 6 seconds). Then I bought an app called Prana Breath, that allows you to program your own breathing patterns and programmed it. I had the impression that it proactively reduced stress and I also fell asleep much easier with it. I suspect it has exactly the opposite effect on the nervous system as WHM. Give it a try.
Finally, after we talked she did again this whole technique on me. I was listening closely to tinnitus, as it was changing during the practice. It first got slightly stronger and then gradually reduced to barely noticeable. I pushed it in the morning to the level of 4-5 and after I returned home I was lying in my bed with hearing protection on and I actually had to actively listen in to find that low pitched tinnitus tone. The high pitched one reduced as well.
So I'm now very much sure, that we are are on the right track and that practicing yoga, meditation, healthy lifestyle can reduce our complains (even though I'm actually pretty sure that getting rid of it fully will be hard to impossible, I still believe that it is very much possible to find solutions to monitor it and keep the tinnitus at the scale level of 1-2).
Anyway, it turned out that I indeed still have another appointment left. The osteopath said she will also look into the WHM and let me know next time what she thinks about it and its side effects.
I for myself will monitor my tones very carefully and see how they change with stress level changes and if the pulsation of the low tone is linked to it.
What are your ideas?
Shall we write a collective letter to Wim Hof and see if he responds on what he suggests to do as a countermeasure?
P.S.
@MrC6688 if you are actually looking into going to an osteopath, make sure you find someone who treats tinnitus as well. Osteopathy seems to be a veeeeery broad variety of techniques and not all of them will address what you need.
P.P.S.
Oh yes, one thing still remains fully unclear to me and the osteopathy did not seem to help with this one much.
It's the pressure we all experience inside our ears. Even though right after my relapse I went to an ENT and he did not measure any increased pressure, even though I felt it very well and I do now, after I did the light WHM exercise today in the morning.
P.P.P.S.
And one more thing. I don't expect that the change in tinnitus through one session today will permanently repair it. I believe by tonight it will return. It is somewhat a gradual improvement, even though, right after the osteopathy sessions it reduces a lot, but it seems to be iterative, with every session of osteopathy, breathing, meditation or yoga giving a short-lived instant effect but also a small improvement on the large scale.