
Watched after work — first night in months I didn’t fixate on the buzzing. Fell asleep faster.
If you’ve tried apps, ear drops, white noise, or “ignore it and hope it fades,” you already know: masking the sound isn’t the same as addressing the trigger. Researchers point to a stress–auditory loop, where hypervigilant brain centers keep amplifying harmless signals until they feel unbearable — especially in quiet rooms. That’s why nights feel louder.
The video below breaks this down in plain English and shows a simple nightly step many viewers say helps calm the system so your ears and brain finally “de-escalate.” No strict routines. No drastic lifestyle changes.
Watched after work — first night in months I didn’t fixate on the buzzing. Fell asleep faster.
Didn’t expect much… but the way they explain the “loop” finally clicked. Starting tonight.
Same here — the step is simple. Took me 2–3 nights to feel a difference at bedtime.
My ringing spiked at night. This was the first thing that didn’t feel like a gimmick.
I used to dread quiet rooms. Two weeks in, bedtime is calmer and mornings aren’t so foggy.
Sent this to my dad (68). He said the routine is easy and he’s less on edge at night.
The “why it gets louder at night” part explained so much. Worth the watch.
For me it was the stress piece. Once I understood that loop, the step made sense.
3 nights in and the edge is off. Not silent, but not dominating my brain anymore.