I'll try and give it a go then. Again, English is not my mother tongue, so there probably will be a few things I can't express the exact same way that I would in French, making it sound a bit awkward.
I won't go into all the process, doctors that I consulted and everything, I'll focus on how I trained my brain.
I first had tinnitus when I was 15. It was probably due to some kind of auditory weakness that I have, combined with loads of musical practice (rehearsals, concerts, recording, etc.) To be honest, we still don't know why some people have tinnitus while others don't. There are many musician friends that I have who still attend concerts/open mics every night with no hearing protection whatsoever and who don't have tinnitus at all. It's just like that. Same goes for people working with loud tools in the industry. We just don't know. Science doesn't know.
Now, why am I introducing my story this way? Well, because I believe the point I'm trying to make is of huge importance in managing tinnitus. "It's just how it is. People have it, others don't". Seems like a standard statement right? Well, ask yourselves how many times you probably have wondered why it's happening to YOU and not to others. Worse, why it's happening to you and not to your relatives. Ask yourselves how many times you've suffered from people around you not being able to capture what you are going through, how many times you feel like you are alone, trapped in your own noisy mind.
Then, take a second and think about this sentence: "I am OK with the fact my ears are broken. I am OK with the fact that I won't function like others do. I accept I will not live the way I used to. Other people, the people I love, that I live with, will keep on living the life they know, but I won't, and I am OK with it."
"It's just how it is".
Now: this is the key. Nothing more, nothing less.
Just love who you are.
If you don't love who you are, you're trapped. I could have used another word instead of "trapped", but I won't, but the f** word would fit
I could write a book (people probably have before me) about why this is the key and all the unconscious process behind it, but it would be of no importance. Most people wouldn't read it anyway because, again, the problem we face as tinnitus sufferers is that we believe "It's all about broken us".
It's not.
There is no cure for tinnitus as of today. It's a fact. Now, the sounds in your head or ears might get better at some point, or might get worse, or might stay the same. You. Cannot. Know.
How are we all dealing with this?
Again, take a second and think about it: "I cannot consciously do anything about the ringing. It's not my conscious brain that is turning the volume up or that will put it down. My will has nothing to do with it."
The tinnitus process is unconscious: for some reason, something in your brain, somewhere, decided at some point it had to turn the volume up for you to consciously hear electrical stimuli. It is not a sound. You perceive it as real, but it is not a sound.
Some deaf people do not have tinnitus after noise traumas. The same part of the unconscious brain decided it was not worth turning the gain up.
Why? Who knows.
But let's again think about it: if your conscious mind cannot do anything because it's unconscious, what can help?
Well, telling your unconscious mind (synonymous: instincts, other parts of yourselves) that you still love him/her/it despite the fact it is sending you auditory hallucinations.
Do you see I'm not even going esoteric or mystic here? I'm just being very, very, very pragmatical: take 20 minutes every morning and every evening and talk to your instincts/subconscious/unconscious/parts of yourselves (or whatever you want to call them) and tell them you understand they're trying to do their best for you, but it's just not the greatest way they could.
Forgive this part of yourself who's trying his best.
Maybe this part is just turning the volume up to tell you to care more about yourself? Is it telling you to be nicer with your ears? It is telling you "Dude, really, your hearing system is broken you know? Just wanted to let you know."
For whatever reason the volume is going up, it is all happening at an unconscious level.
Some people, more pragmatic than myself, will probably think "Oh well, he's talking bullshit now, it's not working like this."
Well... let me give you a brief fact. As a hypnologist, I'm closely looking at any neuroscientific research about the brain; 2 months ago, there was a neuroscientific study (using fMRIs) to try and understand how hypnosis could modify perceptions and where it happens in the brain.
Volunteers were suggested in the hypnotic state they would turn deaf and wouldn't hear the sounds incoming from headphones. In the hypnotic state, you're not sleeping, you can talk, walk, do anything. The myth about "sleeping during hypnosis" is just a myth.
After hours of training to go into an hypnotic state, music was played to volunteers with headphones. The volunteers couldn't hear anything.
The proof was given with fMRI indicating that, of course, the sound was perceived at an unconscious level somewhere in the brain, that the sound waves did actually go through the ears and in the brain, but there was a specific place in the brain when the stimulus just vanished, was shut down (not reaching the conscious mind).
To put it more simply: volunteers did hear 80 dB music unconsciously, but not consciously.
Now remember these deaf people that suffered noise traumas but do not have tinnitus?
Your unconscious mind if way way more powerful than your conscious mind. If you treat it with the respect it deserves, it will help you. Can it shut down all of your tinnitus sounds? Yes, of course it can, you would just need a lot of hypnotic training with a professional (I'm not talking 10 or 20 sessions with esoteric gurus or light-therapist and "magical healing specialist", I'm talking about working with hypnologists that can teach you to love every part of you who are. Because maybe if you love every part of yourself, than maybe... just maybe, you can start a discussion with it and ask it to do you a favor and shut down the noise).
If your brain can make 80 dB music vanish, it can make a hiss/low hum/static/pure tone tinnitus vanish as well. OF COURSE it can.
But you can make a quicker and easier choice, as I did: detach emotion from pain, detach emotion from tinnitus. The result is the same: you don't care about tinnitus because you love the person you are. You just have tinnitus like you have blue, green or brown eyes, white, black or brown skin.
You can read Milton Erickson's work (psychiatrist from the 20th century who "created" modern hypnosis). Thousands of pages. Long, but useful. Or consult a real professional. Or maybe become one yourself?
EDIT: the study didn't employ fMRI, but high density EEG. I'll post some really important information here, but it's in French. You can translate. It's about the conscious process of hearing sound.
Résumé de la physiologie de la perception auditive
La signification et la portée de ces résultats nécessite le rappel suivant : la perception auditive d'un stimulus extérieur débute dans l'oreille interne où les variations de pression de l'air induites par ce son sont converties en impulsions électriques, puis se poursuit dans les différents relais neuronaux des voies auditives avant de gagner le cortex auditif vers 15 millièmes de seconde. A partir de cette entrée en scène du cortex, la perception auditive enchaîne trois étapes sérielles principales que l'on peut identifier à l'aide des outils de neuro-imagerie fonctionnelle tel que l'EEG.
Premièrement, les régions auditives dites primaires construisent activement une carte mentale des caractéristiques acoustiques du son perçu. Cette première étape est identifiable notamment par une onde cérébrale (l'onde P1 qui survient moins de 100 millièmes de seconde après le son). Puis des régions auditives primaires et secondaires qui calculent en temps réel les régularités statistiques de la scène auditive à l'échelle de la seconde écoulée, – et qui anticipent donc quels devraient être les sons suivants -, détectent à quel point ce stimulus transgresse leurs prédictions.
Cette deuxième étape est identifiable par une onde cérébrale découverte vers la fin des années 1970 : la MMN (MisMatch Negativity) ou négativité de discordance (vers 120 et 200 millièmes de seconde). Enfin, vers 250-300 millièmes de secondes après le son, la représentation neuronale du stimulus auditif gagne un vaste réseau cérébral qui s'étend entre les régions antérieures (préfrontales) et postérieures (pariétales) du cerveau.
Cette troisième étape est identifiable par l'onde P300. Fait crucial, alors que les deux premières étapes corticales de la perception auditives opèrent de manière inconsciente, la P300 est la signature de la prise de conscience subjective de ce son qui devient alors rapportable à soi-même : «
J'entends le son X ».