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I have found the only thing that cures my tenitis is nonstop masturbation for like 2 hours followed by chicken wings and playing lots of online Madden. Hope it works for you too!
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I wouldn't look at them as withdrawals, but an endocannabinoid deficiency. Using the Cannabis was regulating those issues you faced when quitting Cannabis. Research the Endocannabinoid System it will clear up why it might not be withdrawals, but rather symptoms you didn't know Cannabis was treating.
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Been smoking for decades and I truly believe there is a connection.I can do morse code with my jaw as I talk and hear it during my conversations.My ears get worse when I smoke and now even feel like theres water in there. I know pot is the problem and I need to quit because pot is not naturally grown anymore and is causing other problem...
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I have had tinnitus for 8 years now and its constant. louder some days. I also have smoked weed for 20 years and I think for me weed was a cause for the tinnitus maybe not the only cause but a part for sure. weed wont cure or relieve your Tinnitus. Nothing Will you just have to find your way of dealing with it. if you smoke cigarettes it will make it worse also high caffeine and sodium use will make it worse. good luck to all of you who suffer with Tinnitus
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Withdraw from weed is real. Constant headaches , sweating etc. maybe not as intense as other drugs but it happens
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What they probably experienced was an episode of depersonalization/derealization, which can be caused by smoking weed. That happened to me about three years ago and lasted for 6 days. I felt "high," and really thought I was until I read more about the phenomenon. So yeah, they weren't high, but they felt high?
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Try smoking a gram of crystal meth to the face and get back to me in 4 days
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I am a 52 year old male and have smoked bud since I was 13 or 14 years old. I smoked it regularly until I was about 25 when I began growing it from seeds purchased in Holland (hey, good genetics were hard to come by back then). For the next ten years I smoked it heavily. Real heavily. At 35 I had a daughter and cut it out over the course of a few years until I only smoked a hit or two now and then; perhaps a couple times a week. On camping trips and day long kayaking adventures (25-30 miles) I smoked quite a bit but this was only a few times a year.

About 5 years ago I woke up in the morning and asked my wife what the hell was outside of our house. It sounded kind of like a diesel truck idling just outside our bedroom window. She swore that it was as quiet as ever and there was nothing to be heard except for the birds chirping. I went outside to figure out what the hell it was and I think both of us thought the other was crazy. Outside I couldn't pinpoint the source, it seemed to come from everywhere.

This went on for about a week. Over time I noticed I would hear the [non-existent] noise a day or two following a hit or two. It would last for 5 or so days and then go away. It was loud in the morning and diminished as the day wore on but still present by night only to be full bore on the next morning. As I put two and two together I began to keep track. Today, some 5 or so years later, I can say without a shadow of doubt that a couple small hits of really good bud is enough to cause serious noise / ringing in my ears for about 5 days straight. I've looked it up on line and have found others reporting the same phenomena; some even reporting it becoming permanent. For me, it was a minor inconvenience and I rolled with it (pun intended).

So this brings me to today. As I type this I fear I may loose all or part of my hearing in my right ear. I had a little bud on Saturday, just a couple hits as I've become a lightweight in my older age and that's enough to get me as high as I enjoy... I do get really high quality buds. On Tuesday morning I woke up with the expected noise in my left ear but the noise in my right ear was terribly loud and I had lost almost all of my hearing in that ear. Being a life long allergy sufferer I blew it off as plugged up sinuses. By the end of the day however, it was no better. I looked it up on line and decided to see a doctor the next day. She, a general practitioner, said that my ear was free of any foreign object, free of any wax, fluid, or infection; and that the Tympanic Membrane looked normal and healthy. She told me I needed to see a specialist immediately because the condition could become permanent within 72 hours of onset. So the next morning I went to an ENT specialist. My herring was tested and I was examined. I was diagnosed with sudden neurological hearing loss due to vasculitis. Basically my white blood cells are attacking the artery and blood vessels supplying my inner ear. The specialist told my that within about 72 hours the damage becomes too sever for the body to heal and the condition becomes permanent. He added it was a good thing I acted so quickly and that I have a 50-60 percent chance of recovering my hearing. I was prescribed a massive regiment of steroids over the next 14 days.

That was yesterday. Today most of the noise in that ear has subsided and I have recovered some of my hearing though it has a long way to go. I pray my hearing fully recovers. So did smoking that bud last Saturday cause this condition? I do not know and can not answer that question with any certainty. I can however say with full and utmost confidence that the noise I experienced in both ears that I spoke about at the beginning of this dialog was absolutely caused by smoking a little pot. I spent most of 5 years experimenting and the results were 100% consistent. So it is a fact that smoking bud caused a problem with my hearing that would last 5 or so days and it is a possibility that my current condition was caused by it. Suffering with this condition right now, I can tell you that I will not experiment to find out. The previous problem was always temporary, and severe only in the morning for a couple of hours during the 5 or so days it persisted. What I experienced on Tuesday left me unable to listen to music as it sounded squawky, hollow, echoey, distorted, and unpleasant almost to the point of pain - at any volume. Things like telephones were painful and I had trouble understanding speech even though I could hear it. I am a musician and love music. I value my hearing now more than ever. Trying a hit or two just to find out if that was the trigger is out of the question. It is simply not worth my hearing to find out or to get high; and I really enjoyed getting high occasionally. It saddens me and makes me a little angry but I will never smoke buds again. My hearing is too precious. Well, unless I get to live long enough to go completely deaf. Then what the hell right?

I hope this helps answer someones questions who may be experiencing what I initially experienced, and perhaps saves them from going through what I am currently going through. I am not saying my current condition was caused by smoking a little pot but I am saying there is enough evidence to say it is a possibility. Perhaps even a good possibility. If I had known all that I have written before my current condition, I think I would have given it up a few years ago. If you are experience noise or ringing in your ears a day or two after smoking a little bud that lingers for several days you might want to give these words some thought.
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I have an issue due to smoking. A few months ago weed caused an ear infection. Its been 4 months that i didnt smoke and i started again. Now my ears ring and i think i have an ear infection again. Antibiotics helped last time. I have smoked since 5th grade. And now im 28. Its been 4 days and my ears are ringing since i started smoking after 4 months. Think its been causing an ear infection for sure.
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I have an issue due to smoking. A few months ago weed caused an ear infection. Its been 4 months that i didnt smoke and i started again. Now my ears ring and i think i have an ear infection again. Antibiotics helped last time. I have smoked since 5th grade. And now im 28. Its been 4 days and my ears are ringing since i started smoking after 4 months. Think its been causing an ear infection for sure.
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Hi Patty, could you tell me more about the treatment, is it Chinese medicine? I'm a musician/sound engineer and have just recently noticed some hearing loss and tinnitus. But as you can imagine for me that's like the end of the world... I also have some sort of fluid blockage in my Eustachian tubes. So I'm looking for anything that can restore some of the hearing loss. I'm taking magnesium, zinc and vitamin B and C which apparently are great at preventing hearing loss. I can only hope that clearing the fluid will restore some hearing, but it was there already when my hearing was fine. Any help or advice would be much appreciated, Mike
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Listen. I'm 24, been smoking almost daily for three years, and three weeks ago I woke up with blaring tinnitus in my left ear which eventually spread to both ears. I also have Meniere's disease, which exacerbates this whole thing. Long story short, I had something very akin to what you experienced, and noticed that as I would slowly get better, every time I would smoke - I vaporize - it would shoot it through the roof and not go down for a few days. What you describe is uncannily similar to what I have experienced: It is always worse in the very morning, diminishes through the day, and hits with a vengeance the next morning after being horizontal for so long. I have been to my ENT 4 times now, once just today, and he is confident I'm getting better (which is true, over time I have been getting better since I first had this horrible incident start three Sundays ago). He sees no issue, just that I have Meniere's disease which is likely being screwed by my marijuana use. This sucks, because I love Marijuana, and it helped me through crippling depression. If you're still there, friend, please contact me. Though I fear you're a guest... just like me, and won't be reading this again. Message me in a quick reply, as I'd like to get in contact with you.
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A reply to myself: it's the tinnitus and pain which seems to occur after every smoke. Yet tinnitus has persisted for a while now, and I've had no neurological hearing tests.
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That is not true. You can smoke hash for example and be high for a number of days.
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I am currently researching the effects of smoking weed on your hearing whilst mixing audio, as part of a wider subject about our brain's reaction to different levels of music. I've been told that smoking weed creates standing waves along the cochlea. I'm currently looking for confirmation on this.

Initially I thought that standing waves on the cochlea could account for why the average person listening to a song, whilst high, may enjoy music more than someone who isn't. For the former, additional harmonic content is being converted into neurotransmitters for the brain to perceive as sound, despite the eardrum never actually receiving this data.

Discussing it with another mastering engineer gave me a new line of enquiry. Stating that standing waves on the cochlea could easily induce tinnitus if then exposed to loud noises / music.

I don't know the implications of that rn but I'll carry on looking into it. If anyone knows any more along these lines...?
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