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
  • I don’t have tinnitus, but unwanted loud noises have always been a problem to me. As a child I struggled with fireworks - loved watching them, but the sound was painful. Loud motorbikes going past is also painful to the point that it makes me angry as it hurts my mind (if that makes sense) and not just my ears. Was fine going to clubs as a young person as the loud music was what I wanted to experience, but when forced to listen to music at times that I haven’t chosen it hurts and I can’t really think and become angry inside. I’ve always hidden those feelings though and just remained silent, hoping it would stop soon or that I would be able to leave. Silence is certainly deafening to me - I can’t stand absolute silence and I hate working environments where you could hear a pin drop.

Reply
  • I don’t have tinnitus, but unwanted loud noises have always been a problem to me. As a child I struggled with fireworks - loved watching them, but the sound was painful. Loud motorbikes going past is also painful to the point that it makes me angry as it hurts my mind (if that makes sense) and not just my ears. Was fine going to clubs as a young person as the loud music was what I wanted to experience, but when forced to listen to music at times that I haven’t chosen it hurts and I can’t really think and become angry inside. I’ve always hidden those feelings though and just remained silent, hoping it would stop soon or that I would be able to leave. Silence is certainly deafening to me - I can’t stand absolute silence and I hate working environments where you could hear a pin drop.

Children
  • This is me, fireworks, motorbikes, sirens, balloons popping... horrendous. But I absolutely love loud trance music in a club, I can get high on it!

  • I moved few years ago to Germany, here in the small town fireworks are not as colorful as they were in my city, that noise indeed is painful. But here it’s a third word war I call it. Three and two years ago I cried and begged them to stop (I was alone in the kitchen so no one heard my cries) I couldn’t understand why I was crying. Now it makes sense. This year I plan to plug my ears properly and not suffer finally.