What's up nowaday? U good?
I know this thread serves no purpose but I'm back to worrying about my ears and I don't know what else to do.
I have developed a new fear. Fire alarms. Particularly in places where I wouldn't be wearing hearing plugs like hotels. I recently had someone who doesn't have T and H tell me they had an alarm go off in a hotel room and they make those things so painfully loud that there is no way you can stay in the room. I spend a lot of time in hotels with my job...I've been fairly paranoid about something aggravating my condition, and yet it has happened to a few times by now.
I know what you mean. I used to be a very adventurous person, now it's pretty much the opposite.I used to be a dynamic person who had a social life and such, but living like that simple isn't possible any longer. I feel like one of those dinosaurs the scientists dig up - a creature that, for all practical purposes, is history.
O' I wear them very often. I wear them enough that the inside of my ear canals get irritated and start to hurt from the friction of pulling them in and out. I have a hard time finding earplugs that fit me properly because I have very large ear canals and the smaller ones do not offer substantial protection.One thing, though. I advice you to wear foam ear plugs at all times whenever you leave home. Properly inserted, they offer substantial protection, and you'll be able to hear what people say pretty well. Nothing else works against surprise incidents.
I have developed a new fear. Fire alarms. Particularly in places where I wouldn't be wearing hearing plugs like hotels. I recently had someone who doesn't have T and H tell me they had an alarm go off in a hotel room and they make those things so painfully loud that there is no way you can stay in the room. I spend a lot of time in hotels with my job...
This happened to me whilst on honeymoon in Florida. I awoke at 2am to a noise unlike anything I had heard in years. I reached for some ear muffs but they hardly seemed to cut the noise at all. I got down by the bed and tried to get under it.
The noise lasted about 30 seconds, but it was awful.
When I complained the next morning, the owner of the hotel simply shrugged and smiled. I checked out immediately and we went elsewhere
I have developed a new fear. Fire alarms. Particularly in places where I wouldn't be wearing hearing plugs like hotels. I recently had someone who doesn't have T and H tell me they had an alarm go off in a hotel room and they make those things so painfully loud that there is no way you can stay in the room. I spend a lot of time in hotels with my job...
I know what you mean. I used to be a very adventurous person, now it's pretty much the opposite.
O' I wear them very often. I wear them enough that the inside of my ear canals get irritated and start to hurt from the friction of pulling them in and out. I have a hard time finding earplugs that fit me properly because I have very large ear canals and the smaller ones do not offer substantial protection.
I don't see an obvious speaker on my smoke alarm and on my carbon monoxide alarm at my home. Are you sure you are not taping that foam over the actual intake for the sensors?I did that with my carbon monoxide alarm at home and it actually brought the decibels down quite a bit while it's still more than loud enough to get my attention anywhere in the house.
I use the Howard Leight Max 1 for a larger ear canal. They also have a smooth coating to ease insertion and removal. I figure if they are marketed for those big headed construction guys, that should be enough for me.
I don't see an obvious speaker on my smoke alarm and on my carbon monoxide alarm at my home. Are you sure you are not taping that foam over the actual intake for the sensors?
I have an old memory foam pillow that I would love to tape over those alarms in hotel rooms, but I am not sure how it would be possible, as they are usually located on the ceiling.
Every time you check out, you might want to ask the people at the reception about the last time they have had an alarm go off. You could record their answer and use them to estimate the probability of this happening...I've spent over 50 nights in hotels in 2018; no alarms ye
Every time you check out, you might want to ask the people at the reception about the last time they have had an alarm go off. You could record their answer and use them to estimate the probability of this happening...
Perhaps it is a good idea to wear earplugs whenever one is inside of a hotel... It is the least one can do... You might also want to choose motels (where one can park outside the room) to hotels where one would have to walk down a long hallway and down stairs in order to get out (although the chance of someone smoking a joint might be higher at a motel).Maybe, but all it takes is some idiot smoking a blunt in their room.
Perhaps it is a good idea to wear earplugs whenever one is inside of a hotel... It is the least one can do... You might also want to choose motels (where one can park outside the room) to hotels where one would have to walk down a long hallway and down stairs in order to get out (although the chance of someone smoking a joint might be higher at a motel).
I think I've tried those, they are better but not as good as the hearos xtreme. But it seems like the quality of the hearos xtrems have gone down. I don't like the taper on the other ones, the pointy end with the flange. I don't know why my ear canals are so large, I'm not a huge guy, I guess I'm just oddly proportioned.
That would be me (amongst others probably)To the contrary. There's a member here whose life was fucked up after a balloon popped near him causing a permanent spike.
That would be me (amongst others probably)
What I don't understand is : let's say a balloon is 160dB. Let's say a gun is also 160dB. The gun is heard far, far away. Not the balloon. I guess dB (volume) and intensity (or whatever it is called) are two different things.
Anyway yes, a balloon popped near my ears exactly 3 years ago (in a closed car, that's important) and my life has never been the same since that (I had mild H and T before, it's severe now + I lost a lot more hearing).
I just went through a very loud fire alarm at a customer's building yesterday. You know it's bad when people that don't have tinnitus are running out of the building holding their hands over their ears. I actually had a decibel meter in my pocket at the time and it was a solid 115 dB! Much louder than my home fire alarm or ones I recall at my previous place of employment. How is something that loud even acceptable in a non-emergency situation (drill testing etc.)? My head is screaming at me today.
I was about to update the post I made a year ago here: https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/two-year-anniversary.25868/ saying that I was doing a lot better, but it seems like that was premature. I'm afraid this might just put me back to square one. I know this thread serves no purpose but I'm back to worrying about my ears and I don't know what else to do.
I am very glad to hear that it Can go away after one is exposed to a fire alarm.The spike from the fire alarm went away
The only thing that comes to mind is using masking tape to tape a memory-foam pillow over it...I wish there was something I could just put over it that would dampen the sound a little if it were to go off
I am very glad to hear that it Can go away after one is exposed to a fire alarm.
The only thing that comes to mind is using masking tape to tape a memory-foam pillow over it...
Who cares - take it down before you check out.would that be considered "modifying or tampering with"
It is now one of my fears...
The spike from the fire alarm went away
I spend so many nights in hotels that this has become a new fear of mine.
How many seconds were you exposed to 115 dB? The average human ear can withstand this for a few minutes without taking damage. Some people are more vulnerable indeed, but are you? The "compromised ears" theory claiming that all T sufferers are more likely to get inner ear damage is backed by zero scientific evidence.
Plus bear in mind that the combination of noise and worriness multiplies the risk of an aggravation.
Could you please provide a link to where you got this from?