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| quote: | Originally posted by Jarvmeister
A few years ago I developed tinnitus. I wasn't sure what caused it, but I was very upset at the time, and thought it would lead to a worse symptoms.
Looking back, I was almost constantly listening to EDM and drinking a lot of filter coffee. All of a sudden, one day the tinnitus kicked in, it was almost all I could hear. Over the course of a few weeks it became better and worse, sometimes my hearing would become muffled - to say I was concerned would be a massive understatement. Eventually the erratic symptoms wore off, and the tinnitus became more constant and therefore I could get used to it, but I couldn't be in the same building as a CRT television, because of the high pitched sound that added to my tinnitus, most people can't hear it. I can also hear those rodent/cat deterrents and high pitched dog whistles - I remember walking past a cat deterrent once and it almost brought me to my feet.
I ended up going to hospital, to get thoroughly checked out. The tinnitus I'd pretty much learned to block out, but I was concerned about the future. My hearing test showed that I have ridiculously sensitive hearing, far better than what you'd consider average - and they concluded that there was no way my tinnitus was the result of hearing damage. The likelihood was that my tinnitus was just something I'd tuned into since my hearing had started to become more sensitive.
My own conclusion? During my summer of consistent EDM listening and copious amounts of coffee my hearing developed into a more finely tuned sense, and now that I'm used to it I wouldn't have it any other way - I can hear things that most others can't.
To the OP: basically, don't worry, once you get used to it it's actually quite a cool thing to have an overly developed sense of hearing. |
That's a very reassuring post . Btw, I've heard that it's possible to develop tinnitus due to problems with your jaw/joints in that area. Anyone every experienced this?
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