My tinnitus started around 15 years ago. I don't remember exactly how it began. I was in the Air Force and was exposed to loud jet engine noise almost every day for two years, about 35 years ago. I'm also a devoted audiophile and have listened to hi-fi music daily for more than 30 years.
My tinnitus became severe about three to five years ago. Some nights, during music listening sessions, it felt like massive 30-foot gears were turning right in front of me, like something out of a science fiction movie. Many nights I woke up to what felt like a huge hammer hitting concrete inside my ears. Those were really bad times. Maybe that's why I haven't slept more than four hours at a time for the past 20 years, always needing to take a nap during the day.
I haven't suffered from tinnitus for the past two years. I still hear a light "shhh" sound, but it doesn't bother me. I only notice it when it's quiet and I focus on it. I once asked my daughter, who doesn't have tinnitus, if she could hear any sound when it's silent, and she said no. I guess once someone notices the tinnitus sound, it tends to stay even if it improves or seems cured. Either way, I consider myself 95 to 100 percent recovered. My tinnitus doesn't bother me at all now. I sleep four to six hours at a time these days, and I can fall back asleep again if I want to.
My job is making high-end audio speakers. Ever since I created a "natural sound" speaker two years ago, my tinnitus has disappeared. I believe my tinnitus was caused or at least worsened by listening to harsh-sounding audio. I've realized that most speakers in the world sound unnatural and rough, and maybe hi-fi audio itself is a big part of the problem.
I'm not a doctor or an expert in human hearing, but I can say that most people, including audiophiles, don't realize how harsh and distorted the sounds and music from speakers truly are. We're surrounded by them every day: at school, in parks, on car radios, phones, and earphones, yet we don't notice how damaging they can be.
In the video below, the sound from the left speaker might seem fine at first, but it's actually a harsh, ear-straining sound. Our ears trick us, and we don't realize it. Every speaker in the world, even those costing millions, sounds and behaves like the left one. My tinnitus disappeared after I started listening to the natural sound, like that produced by the right speaker.