Hi all,
I am still trying to understand how hyperacusis works.
My situation: I had an acoustic trauma in late 2017. For a while I had quite bad tinnitus, especially in my left ear (the Morse code kind).
My tinnitus has improved a lot. Even when it spikes, it's quiet enough that it doesn't really bother me.
Pain hyperacusis remains an issue. For me, it works like this: It is triggered not by a loud sound but by tinny sound: prolonged exposure to not very loud at all music from a nearby boombox at someone's house for dinner, most recently. TV or laptop speakers, again not especially loud, can also be a problem.
Once it is triggered by this kind of event, the ears become more sensitive for awhile and react to other high-pitched sounds that don't normally bother me, like dishes, etc. The only thing that calms this down is protecting my ears for awhile from all tinny sound. Once I am less reactive, I don't have to protect from normal-level tinny sound. But I do have to avoid TV/laptops etc. at too high a volume.
Here's what I wonder about. When I am in a sensitized phase, the same sound (say, a TV) will be hurting my ears like crazy, and then when I do something like turn the dryer on and it is masked by the dryer noise, it doesn't hurt as much. So clearly, this is not an issue of volume (I am standing right next to the dryer) but the ups and downs and high spikes of the TV sound.
This correlates with the fact that my hyperacusis also generally improves when I visit big cities, where there is constant ambient noise. It doesn't matter that some of it is loud. I can be in a New York subway station, no problem. Whereas living in my quiet town, going to someone's house for dinner where they are playing low level music on a tinny boombox, that *totally* sets me off.
So I do think sometimes I *would* benefit from something like white noise generators, or some source of constant sound. Problem is, where I live, there is hardly any decent healthcare. I'm thinking I'll just buy a pink noise machine and try running it more during the day.
I am still trying to understand how hyperacusis works.
My situation: I had an acoustic trauma in late 2017. For a while I had quite bad tinnitus, especially in my left ear (the Morse code kind).
My tinnitus has improved a lot. Even when it spikes, it's quiet enough that it doesn't really bother me.
Pain hyperacusis remains an issue. For me, it works like this: It is triggered not by a loud sound but by tinny sound: prolonged exposure to not very loud at all music from a nearby boombox at someone's house for dinner, most recently. TV or laptop speakers, again not especially loud, can also be a problem.
Once it is triggered by this kind of event, the ears become more sensitive for awhile and react to other high-pitched sounds that don't normally bother me, like dishes, etc. The only thing that calms this down is protecting my ears for awhile from all tinny sound. Once I am less reactive, I don't have to protect from normal-level tinny sound. But I do have to avoid TV/laptops etc. at too high a volume.
Here's what I wonder about. When I am in a sensitized phase, the same sound (say, a TV) will be hurting my ears like crazy, and then when I do something like turn the dryer on and it is masked by the dryer noise, it doesn't hurt as much. So clearly, this is not an issue of volume (I am standing right next to the dryer) but the ups and downs and high spikes of the TV sound.
This correlates with the fact that my hyperacusis also generally improves when I visit big cities, where there is constant ambient noise. It doesn't matter that some of it is loud. I can be in a New York subway station, no problem. Whereas living in my quiet town, going to someone's house for dinner where they are playing low level music on a tinny boombox, that *totally* sets me off.
So I do think sometimes I *would* benefit from something like white noise generators, or some source of constant sound. Problem is, where I live, there is hardly any decent healthcare. I'm thinking I'll just buy a pink noise machine and try running it more during the day.