P
Parson
Guest
people were always shocked they were deaf
good timing, good rhythm, and overall very talented dancers as a matter of fact
good timing, good rhythm, and overall very talented dancers as a matter of fact
Count me in.
Anything else I can do? And has anyone else suffered for a long period and then gotten better? I knew a studio engineer whose left ear was totally screwed after years of abuse and he claimed you couldn't get better, but from what I can google it seems sometimes it goes away.
- getting some ER-20 plugs for gigs
- cutting down on the caffeine and choc (health benefits anyway)
- stopping using the in-ear phones, went to town to look at noise-reducing cans today and thinking of getting a pair of Sennheiser PCX-350s (Bose I don't like (pose?), and the SonyMDR NC60 look to small since I am wearing glasses)
- getting some ER-20 plugs for gigs
Not too concerned over how it will look, my hearing is more important than worrying
if I look like "grandad in the house"
You don't think that might be something else? Maybe you have a foreign body occluding your canal.Anyone else get this rumbling, rather than whining/humming?
You don't think that might be something else? Maybe you have a foreign body occluding your canal.
What's the latest on possible therapeutic treatments?
There was some talk about regenerating the hair follicles.
Also something about some kind of cognitive feedback thing to retrain the brain.