I just happen to have an update here. In fact, quite major, at least for me...
Until recently, I did not try your exercises yet because I was still doing the ones that I found myself, and my recent neck pain made me believe that something was wrong in the neck itself: I wanted clarity there first before I would "expiriment" with the neck more. So, I decided to go through with an MRI, which was done last Monday. (By the way, not intending to give the ENT's here any fuel on hearing damage accusations, I wanted to prevent that as much as possible. I found a silent MRI, type 3T, out in the corner in the Netherlands here. Worked out very well, including the provided hearing protection, it didn't make more sound that a loud vacuum cleaner.)
As it turns out, the MRI showed no damage at all. To be frank, this felt like a bit of a disappointment at first: I honestly hoped I would get a clear visible indicator of the neck pain (and perhaps T cause). However, I happened to talk to my physio the day after, and he was quite enthusiastic about the result: to him, this was the last part of evidence we needed to confirm that the only issue here is muscle strain. He encouraged me to try new exercises to find (and treat) the other muscles that are responsible for both the pain and my T.
So naturally, this Tuesday evening I checked out this topic again, before I went to bed. I watched the first video and tried to focus on what parts of my neck hurt the most (which was a bit hard to do, as it felt like everything in the area hurt). Eventually, I concluded that the part below the skull (like mentioned in the video) did give complaints, so I tried that exercise, and the one in the other video as well. The pain and T got a slight spike afterwards, but I ignored it and went to sleep.
In what felt like the next moment, my alarm sounded: apparently I slept for 8 hours straight. Kinda odd since I normally wake up at least once in between, and I wasn't that tired yesterday... but ok.
The next thing I noticed was a lack of tones. I did hear one slight hiss on the left side of my head (comes up occasionally, nothing new), but both tones that I've been hearing most of the time in my left and right ear could not be traced. Even when firmly burrowing my ear into the pillow: there was nothing but the slight static.
Right after, I acknowledged that my pain was reduced a lot. Not completely gone, but definitely unlike other mornings I had in these past weeks. Just to give it an indication, let's say 30% of what it used to be.
Well, this could all be a coincidence: I've had real quiet days before as well, and on occasion I slept long. As the tone in my right ear has a reactive nature, I had no doubt it would slowly "boot up" in the car or during work again. I got up and headed to work.
My next strange experience was in the parking garage, and this one did nearly convince me that something had changed. First up, after turning off the music in the car, there was still no tone in my right ear, which is uncommon. Next, and this is a bit hard to really explain what it feels like... but when walking in the garage, I suddenly realized I could localize where all the sounds originated. This has been an issue for certain frequencies in the last 9 months, but the problem just... vanished. Every minor sound, every engine, every voice, they came from exactly the place where I thought they should be.
Skipping through the rest of the story: this situation remained exactly the same up to the evening. Around 20:00, already being at home for a while, I finally started to hear the tone in my right ear again: faint, but now it was there. Excluding the occasionally hisses (which usually don't last more than an hour, and were not noticed during work that day), it felt like I'd been T-free for at least 12 hours, where the max had been 3 hours before. I'd had no issues with any kind of T reactivity at all, the tone was still gone when I arrived at home: normally I have to sit in the living room for at least 30 minutes for it to lower again. Where my previous neck exercises eliminated 6 of my 12 sounds, they only reduced the reactivity. This exercise apparently hit the spot and completely vaporized it.
Thursday has been the same experience, but with a 7-hour straight sleep and tone at 21:00 instead. As one would expect, I kept doing the exercise for the area beneath the skull before heading to bed.
A minor setback occurred yesterday, where I somehow caught a cold: this reduced my sleep back to 4 hours, and caused the right-ear tone to appear a bit more frequently, though still not for more than one hour straight. Sound reactiveness has not returned even in the slightest, and most of the neck pain has diminished. As the third day mark has passed, I definitely believe this exercise did this for me.
Did I mention that the tone in my right ear was the first sound I had when this whole T ordeal started, and that its nature (reactive & going up and down in volume every second) made this tone the worst by far? It was the hardest sound to get used to, and of all the sounds, this one annoyed me the most.
Seriously, I've had the week of my life here. By the way, I'm also writing this whole piece while having silence in my bedroom
To set one thing straight, and also to explain why I don't consider it my success story (yet?):
I'm not cured yet. This night was another 4 hour sleep again, though probably simply due to the cold I caught, which makes it harder to stay asleep. The static noises/hisses are still there, but these are really minor and not noticeable during the day at all. I'm sure that I will need to continue my current neck exercises and switch to new ones every once in a while: the process in total could still take months. I'm also working on my walking/sitting postures, gonna start doing sports, etc: all kinds of thing one could think of to reduce the muscle strain and to increase the muscle strength. In the end, I will need to hit every single muscle that is responsible for a sound, and I'm sure that some of these muscles will be harder to locate than the ones so far.
Yet again, I also want to simply enjoy life again. I'm not gonna spend every minute thinking about the remaining hisses and exercising to get rid of them: there is a whole world out there, and I'm gonna live it. My treatment for the remaining T can wait until set time periods of the week.
I'm extremely grateful that I can feel this alive again. @Aharant,
so much for sharing your success story! This helped me out a lot, and I will make sure I share mine as well once I recovered fully.
To everyone else:
keep the hope alive. I know that with so many causes of T, it can be hard to find relief, especially if hearing loss is included. Yet again, research in physiotherapy has been catching up in the last few decades, and knowledge wíll increase for other sectors as well. For those of you that happen to have a sore neck, please, at least try to do exercises with it for a few weeks. I'm not saying it will cure you, but if there is a relationship then it could bring some relief, and in the "worst" case it excludes a possibly related factor. In the end, you need to have as much data as possible to know what area of your body needs a "fix".