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Only on some rare occasions.
Reader BeeJay DeeJay would like to know if readers can hear a faint "background" ringing or hissing in their ears when it is dead quiet? If so, what is the extent of that hiss or noise, and is it bothersome when listening?
Often I hear what appears to be a constant high-frequency sound that varies in volume. It is most noticed when things are very quiet. The more I talk to people, the more I hear that they have a similar problem. I think it might be caused by CDs. We never had this problem with LPs.
I have a low ringing in my right ear. I've had it for about four years now.I had a test and have a drop off of hearing around 9000Hz. I spoke to my ENT doctor and he said this is becoming very problematic starting around 12 years old and up due to iPod-like devices, I'm 38. I still enjoy my roughly 8000 LPs horns, and tubes on a daily basis.
I've had a ringing in my ears for most of my life thanks to very loud rock music while in college. Until maybe 10 years ago when Time did an article on tinnitus I had to deal with people telling me that it was "all in my head". Yes it was, but not the way they meant. Meditation just isn't the same when you cannot reach complete silence.
It's way up there in pitch, like the steady-state noise of a cathode ray tube, and varies from barely discernible to, rarely, loud enough to obscure small sounds. Classic low-grade tinnitus, I imagine. It gets worse when I'm torqued for whatever reason; drank too much, had a fever or a bad day at work. I don't know, but I'll always suspect that Slade concert 35 years ago, a glorious windward gale of sound.
Sometimes I do hear a ringing but often it's because of a change in blood pressure. Like if I suddenly get up or move from an unusual position like trying to get a cable plugged in/out. I can hear like a 'hiss' when it's quiet. Some stereo equipment makes some 'hiss' but usually it's not audible unless cranked way up.
It's called tinnitus, it's awful. Some physiotherapists have the means and skill to treat it, assuming the patient can co-operate completely, not an easy thing to do. I first heard the ringing one Christmas Eve when listening to Emil Gilels playing his selection of Grieg's Lyric Pieces (DG)—and I could not hear it as previously. Apparently I clench my teeth regularly, something I have had to unlearn. So, at least the otherwise continuing deterioration has ceased. Perhaps one day Gilels will sound freely....
Any "ambient ear noise" as I call it can have a few causes. Some medications can cause a ringing sound, including OTC products. High blood pressure can cause ringing as well. I have had some fairly high ringing in my ears in my life but it never bothered my music listening. If anyone does have noise levels that bother them I say see a doctor or hearing specialist.
When is it ever dead quiet in our mechanized-electronicized world? Even when I'm home on the outskirts of Guilford County, NC, I hear bullfrogs and peepers, birds, crickets, dogs barking, and the rumble of a distant highway. I just went in to a conference room here at work to get away from the constant chatter and nails clicking on keyboards around me, and of course the low hum and whoosh of the AC was present. Nevertheless, I do hear a very slight noise when it's as quiet as it gets, but is that from damage, or just inner ear echoes of the noises I'm already hearing? The noise is similar to the barely audible, very high pitch I used to hear when the TV was on when I was younger. I do notice after a couple of hours of (usually) careful iPodding there is more residual noise in my ears. After blasting the home system, I get the same, or more, of course.