communicating with voluntary tinnitus

trevorjohnson83

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Nov 24, 2015
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I observed that an animal such as a cat sitting very still will move it’s head right after making a voluntary short tone of tinnitus in your own ear. Manipulating the whistling in the ears into short tones is a practice. It's similar to fleeting tinnitus. I think it's simple enough anyone can do it. I have also noticed whistling communication in ordinary people at work and at the store, like a flustered cashier. I did experiments where my participant listened for the whistling in the silence and I attempted it. Watching a timer, we were able to match up when the other person attempted it 9 times out of 10!


I successfully recorded voluntary short tones of whistling in the ears using an earpiece headphone as a microphone, a small digital recorder, and recording program Audacity. I am able to manipulate the whistling sound in my ears into short tones and a faint sound of the whistling is heard at the moment that I attempted it. I also recorded three and a half hours of activity in the inner ear while I slept. I've been looking for a similar sound to what I recorded voluntarily. There are so many unexplained noises and voices that its hard to say anything for sure. Better equipment then what I have at my house would probably help as well as voice recognition type software.


The curious question is if recording the inner ear, as close to the whistling cochlea as can get, only produces a very faint noise on the recording, how does the whistling travel up to thirty feet and possibly further between people and animals?


I believe that the vestibular, the gravity sensory input, located adjacent to the cochlea in the bony labryinth is responsible for this communication. It senses inaudible changes in the atmosphere and a stress travels down in to the cochlea causing a whistling as faint as its source.


My theory on the voices schizoids hear is that its not a disease, but an illness in the vestibular. The vestibular then vibrates involuntarily to create the voices and the words they say and incoming sound vibrations from the room or outside or wherever, become shaped by the vibrations in or around the vestibular. This would explain why def people can still hear voices, because it occurs in the vestibular not the cochlea.


The balance system seems to be connected to sleeping and the subconcious which can be observed just before falling asleep. An involuntary vestibular language may be discernible while a person sleeps,recorded in the inner ear, and converted into visual broadcast by a computer program.


A person’s honest response to interrogation may be recorded by recording dreams and subconscious responses. Subconscious damage that is proven to be un-necessary or greedy and otherwise victimizing may be recorded right after it happens and reported.


There is also a therapeutic effect to ear whistling where voluntarily calling on one's own vestibular a involuntary response may be observed.
 
I observed that an animal such as a cat sitting very still will move it’s head right after making a voluntary short tone of tinnitus in your own ear.

Are you talking about projecting the sound of tinnitus outwardly --- toward, in this case, the cat?

This would involve presumably encroaching closely on the cat, ear-first?


Manipulating the whistling in the ears into short tones is a practice. It's similar to fleeting tinnitus. I think it's simple enough anyone can do it.

If you're manipulating your own tinnitus into tones, then are you able to turn it on and off, at least temporarily?
 
well voluntary tinnitus and involuntarily tinnitus heard from others occurs at the same frequency range as tinnitus caused by damage nerves, however thats unwielding.
 
There are many situations in public that cause fleeting tinnitus that one can experiment with emulating voluntary fleeting tinnitus, example holding the door for someone, or walking in close range. Voluntary fleeting tinnitus seems to add a sort of anxiety to what your saying if you do it carelessly but can look pretty clever if you plan it right.
 

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