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
  • Hi nicm

    I feel like my sound sensitivity has become worse as I have grown up (now 38).

    Noises like cars, motorbikes, trains etc. seems to have increased in decibels 10 fold to what they used to be. I usually wear my Loop Earplugs when I am outside the house - especially when I am walking to and from my car at work as it's on a busy retail site near a dual carriageway - taking them off when I get inside the car and then cranking up my music loud enough to dull out the other engines, but still able to listen to my own car.

    Fireworks and gunfire - fireworks especially as I feel like the sound is going right through my body and I either completely freeze up or I completely panic to the point of being sick. Once when some really loud fireworks went off from a neighbour's house - I actually tried to run to my safe space (my bedroom), but ended up knocking myself out on the living room door (but could still hear the fireworks going off - strangely) and giving myself mild concussion in the process. If I hear gunfire on the TV - I usually just mute it (if I know when to) or just freeze in my chair until I feel more comfortable - or wear my Loops again if I have them nearby (which I normally just keep a set on the arm of the chair so I can just pop them in when needbe.

    But I also can really hear things like clocks ticking, pencils being used on paper etc. and other 'quiet' things that most NT's can't hear.

    My favourite sounds though are music, birds singing, hearing my cat purring from the other end of the room, or even in a different room lol (and close up too) and gentle noises like water from a river/stream/sea etc. 

    I haven't officially been diagnosed as autistic yet - but everything I've ever questioned about myself fits, so waiting for my first appointment now I've done the AQ10 and AQ50 test - hopefully next year.

    Hope that helps.

    Mweekie xx

Reply
  • Hi nicm

    I feel like my sound sensitivity has become worse as I have grown up (now 38).

    Noises like cars, motorbikes, trains etc. seems to have increased in decibels 10 fold to what they used to be. I usually wear my Loop Earplugs when I am outside the house - especially when I am walking to and from my car at work as it's on a busy retail site near a dual carriageway - taking them off when I get inside the car and then cranking up my music loud enough to dull out the other engines, but still able to listen to my own car.

    Fireworks and gunfire - fireworks especially as I feel like the sound is going right through my body and I either completely freeze up or I completely panic to the point of being sick. Once when some really loud fireworks went off from a neighbour's house - I actually tried to run to my safe space (my bedroom), but ended up knocking myself out on the living room door (but could still hear the fireworks going off - strangely) and giving myself mild concussion in the process. If I hear gunfire on the TV - I usually just mute it (if I know when to) or just freeze in my chair until I feel more comfortable - or wear my Loops again if I have them nearby (which I normally just keep a set on the arm of the chair so I can just pop them in when needbe.

    But I also can really hear things like clocks ticking, pencils being used on paper etc. and other 'quiet' things that most NT's can't hear.

    My favourite sounds though are music, birds singing, hearing my cat purring from the other end of the room, or even in a different room lol (and close up too) and gentle noises like water from a river/stream/sea etc. 

    I haven't officially been diagnosed as autistic yet - but everything I've ever questioned about myself fits, so waiting for my first appointment now I've done the AQ10 and AQ50 test - hopefully next year.

    Hope that helps.

    Mweekie xx

Children
  • I think mine's worse too as I've got older, or maybe it's because I'm not masking so much in everyday life anymore that I notice it more.

    I'd love to live somewhere remote again, where the sounds are mostly natural ones, like birdsong and sheep.

    I had my hearing tested when I was in my 20's and I scored almost off the chart, the audiologist said he'd love to have tested me under clinical conditions rather than in the back room of the local opticians. I wonder if very good hearing is an autistic thing? Maybe it's not us being picky, that we can hear a lamp buzzing, but a very real biological thing. The second time I had my hearing tested was when I was in my 30's and thought I had a problem as my hearing was far less accute than it had been, and then the audiologist said that I had very good hearing and that if I'd noticed a loss, then it must have previously been exceptional, now I just have normal age related hearing loss, although I don't need hearing aids or anything.

    I wonder if it's worth autists especially younger ones having hearing tests to see if they too have exceptionally good hearing? It might lead to a study and more recognition of our needs?