Trauma – PTSD » PTSD Treatment » noise anxiety?

noise anxiety?

Question:

She is also a licensed nurse

Prove it. I think you are a liar Margrove. In fact I would bet on it.

Response:

: :Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can :anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, :but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a :treatment or palliation? Has she ever mentioned this to her doctor? Jackie, shouldn’t you be telling Ted that you are a JANITOR and all your opinions should be taken with a BIG grain of salt?

Thanks, everyone, for the advice. Now I’ll give you some advice: Stop nipping at ech other. Ted Shoemaker

Response:

Jackie is also a person who has been a very good friend to me. Despite the geographical distance between us, she has provided and does provide me with an enormous amount of support. I will never forget my surprise at receiving a phone call from Jackie when I was hospitalised. It came at a point when I was feeling very low. That call made a very big difference to the way I felt. Thank you Jackie, and also Catherine for letting Jackie know had had happened to me. love Meryl

– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – and they should take her advice with a grain what advise? That they should not seek a doctors opinion? Her opinions are sound. Is she a Janitor? No. She is a women who does and is lots of things-one of those things is  cleaning facilities for cash. She is also a licensed nurse, a mother, a card carrying voter. Your point is???? You really are grasping here to discredit someone at the expense of someone who is asking for help-perhaps if someone responded to your cries when you did have enough heart to cry, you wouldn’t be -well-you LM

Response:

Jackie is also a person who has been a very good friend to me. Despite the geographical distance between us, she has provided and does provide me with an enormous amount of support. I will never forget my surprise at receiving a phone call from Jackie when I was hospitalised. It came at a point when I was feeling very low. That call made a very big difference to the way I felt. Thank you Jackie, and also Catherine for letting Jackie know what had happened to me. love Meryl

I hate typos, LOL – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – and they should take her advice with a grain what advise? That they should not seek a doctors opinion? Her opinions are sound. Is she a Janitor? No. She is a women who does and is lots of things-one of those things is  cleaning facilities for cash. She is also a licensed nurse, a mother, a card carrying voter. Your point is???? You really are grasping here to discredit someone at the expense of someone who is asking for help-perhaps if someone responded to your cries when you did have enough heart to cry, you wouldn’t be -well-you LM

Response:

and they should take her advice with a grain what advise? That they should not seek a doctors opinion? Her opinions are sound. Is she a Janitor? No. She is a women who does and is lots of things-one of those things is  cleaning facilities for cash. She is also a licensed nurse, a mother, a card carrying voter. Your point is???? You really are grasping here to discredit someone at the expense of someone who is asking for help-perhaps if someone responded to your cries when you did have enough heart to cry, you wouldn’t be -well-you LM

And she is my friend ! No matter the distance. She is one of the persons who took the time to educate me about my disorder. Who was allways here for me and many many others. She also works cleaning facilities for cash and I find this highly couraegous for a woman who was housebound. Anna

Response:

Jackie is

NOT a nurse. All claims to the contrary are lies.

Response:

And she is

A janitor. And ALL newbies have a RIGHT to know this so they can take her advice for what it is worth.

Response:

– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – : :Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can :anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, :but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a :treatment or palliation? Has she ever mentioned this to her doctor? Jackie, shouldn’t you be telling Ted that you are a JANITOR and all your opinions should be taken with a BIG grain of salt? Thanks, everyone, for the advice. Now I’ll give you some advice: Stop nipping at ech other. Ted Shoemaker

Dear Ted, I hope you found some useful advice in this thread. I am truly sorry that it did not stay your topic. love Meryl

Response:

And she is A janitor. And ALL newbies have a RIGHT to know this so they can take her advice for what it is worth.

ROFLOL,and you are getting more idiotic by the hour hehe. I am sorry I have to go to bed,you are great amusement gnnnnnnn A.

Response:

Jackie is also a person who has been a very good friend to me. Despite the geographical distance between us, she has provided and does provide me with an enormous amount of support. I will never forget my surprise at receiving a phone call from Jackie when I was hospitalised. It came at a point when I was feeling very low. That call made a very big difference to the way I felt. Thank you Jackie, and also Catherine for letting Jackie know had had happened to me. love Meryl

Many of us can tell similar stories, Jackie is a *rare gem*, online *and* in RL. She has been the true *heart* of ASAP for many years now and if I never saw her again I would *never* forget her, she is one of those rare people who have the capability and willingness to really touch other people’s lives and make a true difference. I am very proud and happy to call her a friend, one of the best I ever had. Philip – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – and they should take her advice with a grain what advise? That they should not seek a doctors opinion? Her opinions are sound. Is she a Janitor? No. She is a women who does and is lots of things-one of those things is  cleaning facilities for cash. She is also a licensed nurse, a mother, a card carrying voter. Your point is???? You really are grasping here to discredit someone at the expense of someone who is asking for help-perhaps if someone responded to your cries when you did have enough heart to cry, you wouldn’t be -well-you LM

Response:

Jackie was also the first person to respond to me here and helped me to overcome a few shared anxiety conditions through posting and email. At the time i was virtually housebound, that was less than three years ago, now I’m on the other side of the planet. My recovery is directly linked to the help that Jackie and all the other good people here gave me, whether it was serious stuff or off topic joking and banter. During my time here I’ve seen that she’s always the first, or one of the first to offer help, advice and support to any newbies here as well as dealing with her own anxiety and aggoraphobia, looking after her family and getting herself back out to work . I’m proud to count this particular janitor as my friend. Thanks Jackie :-) )) Kenny.

– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Jackie is also a person who has been a very good friend to me. Despite the geographical distance between us, she has provided and does provide me with an enormous amount of support. I will never forget my surprise at receiving a phone call from Jackie when I was hospitalised. It came at a point when I was feeling very low. That call made a very big difference to the way I felt. Thank you Jackie, and also Catherine for letting Jackie know had had happened to me. love Meryl and they should take her advice with a grain what advise? That they should not seek a doctors opinion? Her opinions are sound. Is she a Janitor? No. She is a women who does and is lots of things-one of those things is  cleaning facilities for cash. She is also a licensed nurse, a mother, a card carrying voter. Your point is???? You really are grasping here to discredit someone at the expense of someone who is asking for help-perhaps if someone responded to your cries when you did have enough heart to cry, you wouldn’t be -well-you LM

Response:

Jackie was also the first person to respond to me here

Makes you wonder about how neglected her family really is doesn’t it Kenny? Not that you would give a rats ass about that. You are here for YOU. Right? ;-)

Response:

Jackie just told this person to check with doctors, and YOU tell the poster that she’s a janitor? so should take her advice with a grain of salt?

Did I lie? She is a janitor, and they should take her advice with a grain of salt. Where is your problem?

Response:

It’s just about everyone’s problem,

Is or is not Jackie a JANITOR? Answer the question dumbass.;-)

Response:

- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Hello, I am writing on behalf of a relative.  For all her life, she has found certain kinds of sounds to cause her anxiety.  These sounds are fairly innocuous to the rest of us — things like someone wheezing quietly, for example.  It isn’t the volume that bothers her; it’s the type of sound.  She often has a noisy fan or TV on, in order to mask those sounds which disturb her. In case her personal history would help: She says she was physically and emotionally abused in childhood, and her mother took a medicine (sorry, I don’t have the name of it at hand) during her pregnancy (1939) which likely affected the baby’s (my relative’s) emotional well-being. Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a treatment or palliation? Thank you very much. Ted Shoemaker

hello Ted, I have allways been high-sensitive for noises. And like your friend it has nothing to do with volume. With me it was and is a symtom of my Panic disorder. If your friend only has anxiety for cetain sounds it is best to get a check up by a doctor. The best to your friend :-) Take care Anna

Response:

- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Answer the question dumbass.;-) LOL  Is that your newest and most favorite word?  I know that YOU think with your ass, and you are pretty dumb, especially when logic enters into the picture. I guess that since you hear that name day in and day out, that you want to share it?  Putz!  ;) Back to basics now… Sorry Skippy.. it’s the topic. You change it and I’ll bring you right back to it, unless you prefer to go back into your hypocricy with guns and shooting and bang bang stuff ;) Where is your problem? It’s just about everyone’s problem, and ESPECIALLY the new person who came here for advice. As follows, which IS how this/these threads began, in case anyone following has lost track, because of your bobbing and weaving the issue of your interference to a poster ’seeking’ opinions from those who have have lived these disorders. Where is the problem?  Read on… it’s far too obvious. Title: Re: noise anxiety? :Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can :anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, :but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a :treatment or palliation? Dear Ted, Has she ever mentioned this to her doctor? if she hasn`t she really should and it wouldn`t hurt if she was checked out by a ear, nose, throat doctor. There is a condition called CAPD (Central Auditory Processing Disorder). One of the symptoms of this disorder is sensitivity to certain noises, but there are other symptoms as well. Take care :) Jackie, shouldn’t you be telling Ted that you are a JANITOR and all your opinions should be taken with a BIG grain of salt? THAT is the problem, meaning YOU are the problem. Of course, you know that and I know that. Too bad that Ted (the initial poster) didn’t know that. — EJK

Dear mr. Elliot, You are not implying that mr. boob is a problem are you ? He is just saving this group from "The Terrible Clique With Their Terrible Doings" ! Kiss on ya nose from Miss Anna

Response:

He is just saving this group from "The Terrible Clique With Their Terrible Doings" !

Exactly! Kiss on ya nose from Miss Anna

I’ve heard it called many things, but never a nose.;-)

Response:

Does she have PTSD because in my case I sometimes can still hear the violent sounds of my childhood, (yelling, hitting sounds) as if they were happening now. Good luck, I hope your relative gets the help she needs. JD – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Hello, I am writing on behalf of a relative.  For all her life, she has found certain kinds of sounds to cause her anxiety.  These sounds are fairly innocuous to the rest of us — things like someone wheezing quietly, for example.  It isn’t the volume that bothers her; it’s the type of sound.  She often has a noisy fan or TV on, in order to mask those sounds which disturb her. In case her personal history would help: She says she was physically and emotionally abused in childhood, and her mother took a medicine (sorry, I don’t have the name of it at hand) during her pregnancy (1939) which likely affected the baby’s (my relative’s) emotional well-being. Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a treatment or palliation? Thank you very much. Ted Shoemaker

Response:

and they should take her advice with a grain

what advise? That they should not seek a doctors opinion? Her opinions are sound. Is she a Janitor? No. She is a women who does and is lots of things-one of those things is  cleaning facilities for cash. She is also a licensed nurse, a mother, a card carrying voter. Your point is???? You really are grasping here to discredit someone at the expense of someone who is asking for help-perhaps if someone responded to your cries when you did have enough heart to cry, you wouldn’t be -well-you LM

Response:

– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – :Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can :anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, :but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a :treatment or palliation? Dear Ted, Has she ever mentioned this to her doctor? if she hasn`t she really should and it wouldn`t hurt if she was checked out by a ear, nose, throat doctor. There is a condition called CAPD (Central Auditory Processing Disorder). One of the symptoms of this disorder is sensitivity to certain noises, but there are other symptoms as well. Take care :) Jackie, shouldn’t you be telling Ted that you are a JANITOR and all your opinions should be taken with a BIG grain of salt? See? Here’s a newbie with a QUESTION and what happens?  

ROTFLMAO!!! This is almost identical to the post you made to Jackie that brought you the threat from Dan Rhodes you dumbass. Would you like me to repost it along with all your whining posts that followed? OK I will.;-) Bear with me though I have work to do first.

Response:

– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – :Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can :anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, :but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a :treatment or palliation? Dear Ted, Has she ever mentioned this to her doctor? if she hasn`t she really should and it wouldn`t hurt if she was checked out by a ear, nose, throat doctor. There is a condition called CAPD (Central Auditory Processing Disorder). One of the symptoms of this disorder is sensitivity to certain noises, but there are other symptoms as well. Take care :) Jackie ~*~There are as many nights as days, and the one is just as long as the other in the year’s course. Even a happy life cannot be without a measure of darkness, and the word ‘happy’ would lose its meaning if it were not balanced by

sadness~*~ Hi Jackie, I have a problem with auditory figure ground. I can see some parallels here, although mine is not a disorder, AFAIK. It is more that I find it difficult to screen out extraneous noises. Great when I have a son like Chris with his band  :) Here we would recommend testing by an audiologist, but I guess an ENT doctor would suggest that if necessary. love Meryl

Response:

- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – :Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can :anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, :but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a :treatment or palliation? Dear Ted, Has she ever mentioned this to her doctor? if she hasn`t she really should and it wouldn`t hurt if she was checked out by a ear, nose, throat doctor. There is a condition called CAPD (Central Auditory Processing Disorder). One of the symptoms of this disorder is sensitivity to certain noises, but there are other symptoms as well. Take care :)

Jackie, shouldn’t you be telling Ted that you are a JANITOR and all your opinions should be taken with a BIG grain of salt?

Response:

Hi Ted…I don’t think I have the same thing as your relative, but I am very sensitive to noises in that I get very irritable when noise bothers me. I know there is a condition that isn’t just a "psychological condition" that makes people sensitive to certain kinds of noise.  It wouldn’t hurt to mention this to her dr if she hasn’t already.   There may be some way to get some relief.  I hope she will check out all her options. – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Hello, I am writing on behalf of a relative.  For all her life, she has found certain kinds of sounds to cause her anxiety.  These sounds are fairly innocuous to the rest of us — things like someone wheezing quietly, for example.  It isn’t the volume that bothers her; it’s the type of sound.  She often has a noisy fan or TV on, in order to mask those sounds which disturb her. In case her personal history would help: She says she was physically and emotionally abused in childhood, and her mother took a medicine (sorry, I don’t have the name of it at hand) during her pregnancy (1939) which likely affected the baby’s (my relative’s) emotional well-being. Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a treatment or palliation? Thank you very much. Ted Shoemaker

Jeannie I want to live before I die.

Response:

:Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can :anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, :but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a :treatment or palliation? Dear Ted, Has she ever mentioned this to her doctor? if she hasn`t she really should and it wouldn`t hurt if she was checked out by a ear, nose, throat doctor. There is a condition called CAPD (Central Auditory Processing Disorder). One of the symptoms of this disorder is sensitivity to certain noises, but there are other symptoms as well. Take care :) Jackie ~*~There are as many nights as days, and the one is just as long as the other in the year’s course. Even a happy life cannot be without a measure of darkness, and the word ‘happy’ would lose its meaning if it were not balanced by sadness~*~

Response:

Hello, I am writing on behalf of a relative.  For all her life, she has found certain kinds of sounds to cause her anxiety.  These sounds are fairly innocuous to the rest of us — things like someone wheezing quietly, for example.  It isn’t the volume that bothers her; it’s the type of sound.  She often has a noisy fan or TV on, in order to mask those sounds which disturb her. In case her personal history would help: She says she was physically and emotionally abused in childhood, and her mother took a medicine (sorry, I don’t have the name of it at hand) during her pregnancy (1939) which likely affected the baby’s (my relative’s) emotional well-being. Of course, no one can diagnose this without seeing her.  But can anyone give me the name of this complaint?  (It seems close to, but not the same as, hyperacousis.)  Can someone recommend a treatment or palliation? Thank you very much. Ted Shoemaker

Response:

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