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The Tinnitus Relief Roadmap

A free 8-page expert guide with science-based tips to help you reduce panic, avoid common mistakes, and know what to do next.

8 pages on a table with images and text showing a tinnitus roadmap from Still Tinnitus by Roel van Gorkum

1.  Essential checks to rule out medical red flags

What to do first, today, tonight, this week, and longer term.

First: check for medical red flags. Visit Doctor or ENT urgently when any of these apply:

☐ Sudden hearing loss (within hours to 3 days).
☐ New neurological symptoms: facial numbness, speech/vision changes, severe imbalance.
☐ Severe vertigo with hearing change (room spinning, tilting, vomiting).
☐ Suicidal thoughts, inability to function/sleep due to distress.
☐ I understand this guide is not a medical diagnosis.

All other cases:

☐ Visit your primary care doctor for a check-up (including blood pressure).
☐ Have your hearing tested at an audiologist (obtain audiogram).
☐ Visit an ENT if you experience dizziness, vertigo, imbalance, or neurological symptoms. If you have asymmetric hearing loss, an MRI may be considered when there is more than a 15 dB difference between ears at any 2 adjacent frequencies. Pulsatile tinnitus (tinnitus pulsating with heartbeat) is also an indication for ENT visit.

Today: stop feeding the panic loop

☐ I will stop checking whether the sound is still there.
☐ I will not test tinnitus in silence today.
☐ I will not panic-Google or read horror stories today.
☐ I will use gentle background sound if silence makes tinnitus feel worse. 
☐ I will do one normal activity while tinnitus is present.

Tonight: protect sleep

☐ I will use soft neutral sound if needed.
☐ I will not research tinnitus in bed.
☐ I will not measure the sound while trying to sleep.
☐ My goal tonight is rest, not solving tinnitus.

This week: reduce tinnitus control over your life

☐ I will restart one normal activity I have been avoiding (only if your energy is sufficient, do not force anything).
☐ I will stop comparing today’s tinnitus to yesterday’s.
☐ I will focus on reducing the impact of tinnitus instead of trying to force silence.
☐ I will choose structured education over random cure-hunting.

Longer term: follow a structured path

☐ If tinnitus affects my sleep, mood, work, focus, or daily life, I will consider structured help.
☐ I understand that even though no cures exist, it is possible to retrain my brain to stop focusing on my tinnitus.
☐ This process is called habituation: your brain gradually stops treating tinnitus as a threat so it can fade into the background.

I’ll only send you the roadmap and helpful tips.


2.  Common tinnitus mistakes to avoid

DO’s for tinnitus

☐ Stay physically active even if tinnitus fluctuates temporarily. 

☐ Improve sleep quality with low-stimulation evenings and consistent routines.

☐ Use hearing protection selectively in genuinely loud environments. 

☐ Use neutral background sounds rather than stimulating podcasts or music. 

☐ Practice meditation or relaxation regularly to reduce stress.

☐ Eat reasonably healthy and reduce excessive alcohol intake.

☐ Reduce tinnitus monitoring/checking behaviors. 

☐ Get your official Tinnitus Functional Index Test score here.

☐ Trust habituation, and get help if you want a structured plan.

☐ Use scientifically grounded tinnitus information and qualified experts.

DONT’s for tinnitus

☐ Don’t panic or assume tinnitus means your life is over.

☐ Don’t endlessly read negative tinnitus forums and doom stories. 

☐ Don’t constantly check, compare, or analyze the sound. 

☐ Don’t overprotect your ears in normal sound environments. 

☐ Don’t wear earplugs all night unless medically necessary. 

☐ Don’t sleep with stimulating podcasts/music running continuously. 

☐ Don’t doomscroll or use your phone in bed. 

☐ Don’t rely on miracle cures, supplements, or influencer claims.

☐ Don’t stop exercising purely because tinnitus spikes temporarily. 

☐ Don’t assume every spike means permanent damage or worsening. 

When first aid is not enough

I’ll only send you the roadmap and helpful tips.


3. How to manage a tinnitus spike 

What to do when tinnitus suddenly feels louder, scarier, or impossible to ignore.

Step 1: Name the spike

Literally say this: “This is a tinnitus spike. My job is to calm the reaction, not solve everything right now.” Naming the spike creates distance. Your future isn’t ruined.

☐ I named this as a spike, not a catastrophe.

Step 2: Stop measuring the sound

Say this: “Measuring keeps tinnitus important. I am not measuring it right now.”

☐ I don’t check whether it is getting louder and I don’t compare this spike to yesterday.
☐ I don’t sit in silence, cover one ear, or go to a quiet room to double-check it.

Step 3: Reduce contrast

If silence makes tinnitus stand out, add gentle background sound. You can download my free app with masking sounds here (Apple / Android). You can also open a window or a fan, or listen to your favorite music. Keep it gentle. The goal is not to overpower tinnitus. 

☐ I added calm background sound if silence was making it worse.

Step 4: Block panic-searching

Do not search tinnitus forums, cure claims, horror stories, or symptom explanations while anxious. If you have a medical concern, write it down and contact a qualified professional.

☐ I did not panic-Google or read worst-case stories.

Step 5: Do one normal activity for 10 minutes

Choose one small activity and do it while tinnitus is present. Do a meditation, make tea, take a shower, take a walk, prepare food, read one page, tidy one small area, watch something calm, do something fun, or message someone about something unrelated to tinnitus.

☐ I did one normal activity while tinnitus was present and didn’t wait until the spike was gone.

Step 6: Use the spike script

Read this slowly: “This spike feels uncomfortable, but I do not need to solve my whole tinnitus problem right now. Checking, searching, and fighting will only keep my brain focused on it. My job is to respond calmly and teach my brain that this sound is not an emergency.”

☐ I used the spike script instead of arguing with the sound.

Step 7: Getting help is not failing

I’ll only send you the roadmap and helpful tips.


Bonus: Free app with masking sounds

A smartphone displaying the Still Tinnitus app with sound options (rain, campfire, crickets, etc.), placed on a notebook with a pen beside it.

One of the fastest ways to reduce the impact of tinnitus is to add a soft background sound. But not every sound works equally well. I created a free app with specialized masking sounds based on the sounds that helped me the most.

Checklist for masking sounds

☐ Download my free app leaving your email address below.
☐ Use your phone on speaker instead of headphones.
☐ Choose a sound you like.
☐ Set the volume as low as possible at first.
☐ If you do not get enough relief, increase the volume step by step.
☐ Louder is not necessarily better. The goal is to create a softer listening environment so your tinnitus is less noticeable.
☐ If you still do not get enough relief, try the cricket sound. It is more intense, but it can temporarily “quiet” tinnitus for some people, especially those with high-pitched tinnitus.

Next step: try a meditation

☐ Meditation can help calm your nervous system and reduce the attention you give to the tinnitus.
☐ Start by playing a masking sound you like. It continues during the meditation for added support.
☐ Sit comfortably in a chair or on a couch. You do not need to sit cross-legged.
☐ Start a meditation, follow the instructions, and focus on your breathing.
☐ With both hands, gently touch your index finger to your thumb.
☐ If this works well, you can also try meditating without a masking sound.

I’ll only send you the roadmap and helpful tips.


Bonus: Jaw and neck exercises

For many people, tinnitus changes when they clench their jaw, move their neck, press around the jaw, or hold tension in their shoulders. This is often described as somatic tinnitus, meaning body tension or movement may influence the sound.

These exercises are meant to reduce tension. They should feel gentle. Do not force any movement, and stop if you feel pain, dizziness, pressure, or discomfort.

Exercise 1: Massage your jaw

☐ Place three fingers on each side of your face, starting at your temples.
☐ Press down firmly and slowly make circular movements.
☐ Circle 10 times, then move downward. As you move down from your temples, you may feel a bone ridge. Just below that ridge, press down again and open your jaw a few times to feel the muscles. Circle 10 times again.
☐ Move down about half an inch, or 2 cm, and continue circling as you move downward.
☐ Try to feel where your jaw muscles are tense and focus on those areas.

Exercise 2: Jaw protrude

☐ Move your lower jaw as far forward as feels comfortable. Hold it there for 5 seconds, then release.
☐ Repeat the movement slowly. Many people with high-pitched tinnitus notice their tinnitus gets louder while moving the jaw forward. That is okay.
☐ When the jaw returns to its normal position, the tinnitus may feel quieter, although this effect is often temporary.

Exercise 3: push the jaw

☐ Open your mouth as far as feels comfortable, without overstretching.
☐ Take your stronger hand, usually your right hand, and spread your thumb and index finger. Place them on the front of your jaw.
☐ Press the jaw backward toward your neck. The movement should be mostly horizontal, not downward.
☐ Increase the pressure gently, but do not force anything, especially if you have existing TMJ issues.
☐ Hold for 30 seconds. Repeat 3 times.
☐ It may help to open your jaw to about 80% of your maximum range instead of opening it fully.

Exercise 4: Neck stretch

☐ Sit up straight in a chair and look forward.
☐ Carefully turn your neck to the left as far as feels comfortable and hold for 5 seconds.
☐ Do the same to the right side.
☐ Then look up for 5 seconds.
☐ Finally, look down for 10 seconds.
☐ Repeat 3 times.

Exercise 5: Back stretch

☐ Stand up and hold your hands behind your back. Look up and slightly backward while pulling your arms away from your body. Hold for 10 seconds.
☐ Release your hands, keep your legs straight, and fold forward. Try to bring your fingers as close to the floor as comfortably possible.
☐ Hold for 10 seconds and repeat 3 times.

Exercise 6: Shoulders tuck

☐ Sit in a chair with a straight back.
☐ Push both shoulders upward toward your ears as far as feels comfortable.
☐ Press firmly and hold for 10 seconds.
☐ Release and repeat 3 times.

I’ll only send you the roadmap and helpful tips.


Bonus: Redirecting your attention

Tinnitus often becomes more noticeable when your surroundings are quiet and your attention locks onto the sound. One practical way to get quick relief is to change the input your brain is receiving: movement, fresh air, conversation, a task, or a different environment.

This is not “ignoring” tinnitus through willpower. It is giving your nervous system something else to process.

Option 1: Go outside for 5 minutes

☐ Step outside.
☐ Walk slowly.
☐ Listen for three external sounds: traffic, wind, birds, footsteps, voices, leaves, or distant movement.
☐ Name what you hear without judging it.
☐ Keep walking for a few minutes.

Outdoor sound naturally creates a richer sound environment, which can make tinnitus feel less dominant.

Option 2: The 5-4-3-2-1 reset

☐ Look for 5 things you can see.
☐ Notice 4 things you can feel.
☐ Listen for 3 sounds around you.
☐ Notice 2 things you can smell.
☐ Take 1 slow breath.

This works because it moves attention away from internal monitoring and back toward the outside world.

Option 3: Do a simple task

Choose something physical and low-pressure:

☐ Make tea
☐ Fold laundry
☐ Water plants
☐ Take out the trash
☐ Tidy one surface
☐ Stretch for two minutes
☐ Walk around the block
☐ Text a friend about something else than tinnitus
☐ Prepare a snack
☐ Do a short breathing exercise

The task should be easy enough that it does not create stress, but active enough to interrupt the tinnitus focus loop.

I’ll only send you the roadmap and helpful tips.


From Hellish Noise to Silence

This is my story.

Hi, I’m Roel, biomedical engineer and tinnitus expert. I got tinnitus in my left ear during a stressful period and went through the most frustrating time of my life fighting the ringing in my ear.

I’m a biomedical engineer and father of two. Here you see me with my son in winter!

My primary care doctor told me, “There’s no cure, you’ll just have to learn to live with it.” I panicked and started trying everything I read about on tinnitus forums. I took ginkgo biloba supplements and used white noise to mask the ringing. I was constantly focused on my tinnitus, but nothing helped, and I grew more and more desperate.

Afraid of making things worse, I began overprotecting my ears. That backfired. I developed hyperacusis: an extreme sensitivity to sound. Everyday noises became painful. The combination of stress, anxiety, and lack of sleep eventually pushed me to a breaking point.

I decided to stop fighting and started learning. I studied the work of the world’s leading tinnitus experts, determined to understand what was happening in my brain and how to calm the ringing. I tested multiple science-based treatments on myself and combined them into a new method.

My method worked! Within weeks, I was sleeping better and feeling less tense. The months that followed had their ups and downs: two steps forward, one step back. But over time, moments of real silence began to return.

I hope this Tinnitus Relief Roadmap was helpful.

Just know that I’m here to help if you need it.

Take care!

Roel

Transparent rating score graphic showing a 4.8 out of 5 score on Google Maps indicating positive experiences of the Still Tinnitus course.

I’ll only send you the roadmap and helpful tips.

This guide is educational and is not a medical diagnosis. Contact a qualified medical professional, ENT, audiologist, or emergency service if tinnitus is sudden, one-sided, linked to sudden hearing loss, dizziness, injury, neurological symptoms, severe distress, or other concerning symptoms.