larsxe wrote:
It gives a good introduction how hearing is connected to emotional states, and thus how tinnitus stays with you when seen as a problem. If you stop seeing it as a problem, "subcortical filters" will filter out the noise generated by your brain.
this makes so much sense to me. My (dear departed) band was, for a time, known as one of the loudest bands in Boston. This was due primarily to Sam (the other guitar player besides myself) and his HiWatt Double stack - two 100 Watt Hiwatts into two 4x12s. I had my Dean Markley 100W head (into one, later two 4x12s) cranked up pretty high just to hear myself. Of course the drummer had to hit his snare extra hard so we could hear him. The poor bass player was mostly inaudible.
I tried wearing earplugs, but I just could not do it. So, 6 or 7 years of this has taken its toll. When I think about it, I can hear a ringing in both ears. But _only_ when I think about it. It does not keep me up at night, and I hear very well, despite heading into my mid-40s.
Maybe I got lucky, and I am sure Roger Miller has it worse than me, but I swear, if I don't think about it, it never bothers me.