noise sensitivity examples

Hi!

I'd be really grateful if readers would reply with examples of noises that have an effect on them, and what the effect is/feels like.

I have tinnitus and have had it since I was very young. I'm 54 and remember, as a child of something like 8/9/10 (which is the limit of my memory rather than the point at which it began), experiencing snaps and pops etc that would wake me at the point of nodding off. Of course, I didn't know what this was at the time. For many years, I thought silence had a sound - that in the absense of attributable noises, silence manifested itself as, in my case, modulating sine waves with a touch of distortion produced by two or more oscillators (this description is based on synthesiser sound generation).

I am awaiting an autism diagnostic assessment, so may not be autistic, and have been curious about an auditory experience I experience, which I don't believe is a manifestation of tinnitus since it is triggered by external sounds.

For example, one of our cats climbs up the ladder to get onto my son's bed and the ladder shifts slightly. I hear the sound of the wood shifting and experience it as I imagine everyone might. Then, the tiniest split second later, the sound cracks as though it has been amplified five times its actual volume and I experience a jolt in my head that rapidly decreases in amplitude. I experience this effect frequently, following fairly quiet audible events such as light switches being flipped. I think it is usually click based sounds that trigger it and the effect is always the same, more or less pronounced. That is, sometimes the jolt is fairly mild and other times it is quite disconcerting. In all cases the effect is momentary.

I can't determine, from what I've read here and there, if this is what is meant by noise sensitivity and I'm interested to hear others' experiences of being disturbed by sound.

Nic

Parents
  • Electrical appliances - I can hear transformers, LED lights and various other things as a very high pitched whine which I can’t escape from.

    Clocks and watches ticking and lots of other random specific little noises.

    Other people using noisy headphones or, worse, playing music or videos on their phone without headphones.

    Loud music - unless I’ve chosen to listen to it (odd but I’m told this is common in autistic people).

    Basically any kind of sound that I can’t get away from. These sounds slice through my head like a blade that irritates all the nerve endings in my head - sorry it’s hard to describe.

    It makes  me incredibly anxious and if it continues my vision starts to distort and I may have either a meltdown or a panic attack (although these are uncommon - I generally remove myself or put noise cancelling headphones on before it gets to this).

  • I don’t know why I can’t quote, but I remember having distorted vision and hearing very often in McDonald’s when I worked there. I checked the possibility that my panic attacks, falling on the ground, hyperventilating and crying could be related to heart issues, diabetes or epilepsy. Turned out nothing of it. These repetitive high pitch noises blended my brain. Even this summer I went to McDonald’s for a coffee. Decided it was my last time there after waiting several minutes in this noise and awful smell of roasted beef and bacon (sorry if someone likes it, for me it’s hard to breathe) Then I wondered how I even endured that for so long 10 years ago. 

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  • I don’t know why I can’t quote, but I remember having distorted vision and hearing very often in McDonald’s when I worked there. I checked the possibility that my panic attacks, falling on the ground, hyperventilating and crying could be related to heart issues, diabetes or epilepsy. Turned out nothing of it. These repetitive high pitch noises blended my brain. Even this summer I went to McDonald’s for a coffee. Decided it was my last time there after waiting several minutes in this noise and awful smell of roasted beef and bacon (sorry if someone likes it, for me it’s hard to breathe) Then I wondered how I even endured that for so long 10 years ago. 

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