Re: Computer reacting with something else?/now : how tinnitus happens

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Re: Computer reacting with something else?/now : how tinnitus happens

sandimaurer

> It kills me that half or more of all Americans suffer from tinnitus,
> yet they don't know the cause is EMF from their TVs, computers,
> and cell phones... lunacy rules.


I was 25, living in a rural house with no electricity for 6 months,
gardening outside listening to a radio and wham my ears started ringing
and they still ring 22 years later. The radio was maybe 4 feet away. Any
thoughts about that?

I lived in a room in a house two years prior (for two months) in which
I believe had very high electric fields, perhaps magnetic. I was
seriously having a hard time going to sleep there and was so panicky and
one time heard a loud roar like a plane engine while trying to go to
sleep. I wonder if that time created the latter tinnitus although two
years later?

Sandi

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Re: Computer reacting with something else?/now : how tinnitus happens

jaime_schunkewitz
That jet engine roar is familiar. It's a vicious episode of tinnutus
which invariably occurs while sleeping. I refer to the experience as
a seizure. It occurs after/while being exposed to EMF. For instance,
I had these episodes nearly every evening when I was a software
engineer. Now it happens if someone turns on the ceiling fan (which
is over 30 ft away) full speed overnight.

Calcium supplements seem to have reduced the severity of such seizures.

Supposedly tinnitus can seem worse when living in a quiet
environment. Our ears need some exposure to noise.
Perhaps that move from the electrified house to the
bucolic setting made you more aware of the tinnitus.
There's no telling for sure.

Eli

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Re: Computer reacting with something else?/now : how tinnitus happens

jaime_schunkewitz
In reply to this post by sandimaurer
Use of earphones may reduce risk of hearing loss: Study
Express News Service

Chandigarh, August 9: A preliminary study conducted by the ENT
department at the PGI has shown that long-term mobile phone users are
at a higher risk of developing hearing loss, particularly at higher
speech frequencies.

http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=250259 

...
This is the first report I came across about hearing
loss caused by EMF, even though I've known about it
first hand for years.
Eli