Episode 134 - You’re Not Alone With Tinnitus — Your Brain Just Thinks You Are
Update: 2025-11-07
Description
Hey Tinnitus Friends and Family,
Tinnitus can make you feel completely isolated — like no one else could ever understand what you’re going through.
But the truth is: that feeling of isolation isn’t real. It’s perceived.
When your brain believes you’re on your own with something scary, your nervous system goes into survival mode — releasing stress hormones, heightening your alertness, and making the tinnitus feel louder and more intrusive.
In today’s video, I’ll explain:
💡 Why tinnitus can make you feel so lonely (and why that’s normal)
💡 How this perceived isolation keeps your brain stuck in the tinnitus loop
💡 What happens when your brain finally feels safe again
💡 Why connection, not silence, is the real foundation of relief
💡 And how joining a supportive community can help your brain calm down and habituate
You’re not alone — not even close.
There are thousands of us walking this same path. And when you start to feel connected again, your brain can finally begin to relax, and your tinnitus starts to fade into the background. 🌱
🧠 Start your journey today:
🎧 Free 4-Day Habituation Course → www.habituate.online
🌍 Join our global 12-Week Community Program → www.mytinnitus.club
👂 About Me
I’m Frieder — Tinnitus Coach, Founder of MyTinnitus.Club, and someone who’s lived with severe tinnitus for 16 years.
Born deaf in my left ear, I’ve learned firsthand that peace and relief don’t come from silence — they come from understanding, connection, and retraining the brain to see tinnitus as safe.
If this video helps you feel a little less alone, let me know in the comments 💛
We’re in this together.
hear you in the next one!
Frieder
#TinnitusRelief #TinnitusLoneliness #TinnitusHabituation #TinnitusCommunity #TinnitusSupport #AcceptanceAndCommitmentTherapy #Neuroplasticity #TinnitusCoachFrieder
Tinnitus can make you feel completely isolated — like no one else could ever understand what you’re going through.
But the truth is: that feeling of isolation isn’t real. It’s perceived.
When your brain believes you’re on your own with something scary, your nervous system goes into survival mode — releasing stress hormones, heightening your alertness, and making the tinnitus feel louder and more intrusive.
In today’s video, I’ll explain:
💡 Why tinnitus can make you feel so lonely (and why that’s normal)
💡 How this perceived isolation keeps your brain stuck in the tinnitus loop
💡 What happens when your brain finally feels safe again
💡 Why connection, not silence, is the real foundation of relief
💡 And how joining a supportive community can help your brain calm down and habituate
You’re not alone — not even close.
There are thousands of us walking this same path. And when you start to feel connected again, your brain can finally begin to relax, and your tinnitus starts to fade into the background. 🌱
🧠 Start your journey today:
🎧 Free 4-Day Habituation Course → www.habituate.online
🌍 Join our global 12-Week Community Program → www.mytinnitus.club
👂 About Me
I’m Frieder — Tinnitus Coach, Founder of MyTinnitus.Club, and someone who’s lived with severe tinnitus for 16 years.
Born deaf in my left ear, I’ve learned firsthand that peace and relief don’t come from silence — they come from understanding, connection, and retraining the brain to see tinnitus as safe.
If this video helps you feel a little less alone, let me know in the comments 💛
We’re in this together.
hear you in the next one!
Frieder
#TinnitusRelief #TinnitusLoneliness #TinnitusHabituation #TinnitusCommunity #TinnitusSupport #AcceptanceAndCommitmentTherapy #Neuroplasticity #TinnitusCoachFrieder
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