Tinnitus

TABS: A New Tinnitus Coping and Habituation Technique


Today, I am excited to finally share a powerful new tinnitus coping and habituation technique that I have been developing for the last 4 months.

I call it the TABS technique, which is short for Tinnitus Awareness Body Scan.

It’s a coping exercise that combines a breathing technique with brief moments of focused tinnitus awareness, a progressive muscle relaxation routine, and an awareness switching exercise.

At minimum, the TABS technique is a powerful new tinnitus coping and relaxation technique.

But I also believe that it just might be a viable alternative to my tinnitus-focused meditations for facilitating habituation.

For years, I’ve been trying to create new strategies that do not require a person to meditate but could achieve the same underlying results as my tinnitus-focused meditation techniques.

With tinnitus-focused meditation, the concept is fairly simple:

When you practice meditation often and become good at it, you start to experience states of calm and relaxation when you meditate. Traditionally people are instructed to focus on their breath, or a mantra, or part of the body when they meditate, though there is ultimately nothing special about the breath or a mantra.

By choosing to focus on the sound of your tinnitus during meditation instead of the breath or a mantra, but still achieving the meditative state of relaxation as a result of doing so, your brain and nervous system will start to associate the resulting state of relaxation with the sound of your tinnitus.

And this new positive association slowly starts to overpower the vicious cycle of fight or flight that prevents habituation from occurring naturally.

The TABS technique was created achieve a similar result. It enables you to experience a deep state of relaxation while incorporating moments of tinnitus focus and awareness as part of the process, but without requiring you meditate at all!

Results so far:

I’ve been teaching the TABS technique to my 1-on-1 tinnitus coaching clients for the last several months now and the feedback has been incredible. So much so, that I finally feel ready to share it with the rest of the Rewiring Tinnitus community!

If you are already having success with my tinnitus-focused meditation techniques, this new technique is nice addition to the program and can help you to make additional progress.

Portrait of a pretty young girl listening music.

But if you have been scared to try my tinnitus-focused meditation techniques, or have been unsuccessful with them in the past, this is an entirely new technique that you can practice daily instead.

I am going to start by teaching you the basic technique, and then at the end, I will teach you a variety of ways that you can modify the technique to better suit your specific needs.

How to practice the Tinnitus Awareness Body Scan technique:

You can do this with or without background noise or the brainwave entrainment tracks on the Rewiring Tinnitus Relief Project Album, though I highly recommend using some kind of background noise.

(For the best results, I recommend using the relaxation inducing brainwave entrainment tracks found on the Tinnitus Relier Project album – any of the deep or light meditation tracks, or the deep or light relaxation tracks will work best. You can practice with a sample brainwave entrainment track at the bottom of this page.)

First, lay down and get completely comfortable. I recommend laying down in bed, on a comfy recliner, or on the couch. The more comfortable you are, the better.

Next, you’re going to slow your breathing down to 4 seconds in, 8 seconds out, in through your nose, out through your mouth.

For the first couple of breaths, I just want you to count the seconds in your head. This is simply to get a rhythm going so you don’t have to keep counting, but you will continue breathing at this speed for the remainder of the exercise.

After counting for 3-4 breaths, you are ready to begin the technique.

First, as you inhale for 4-seconds, I want you calmly focus on the sound your tinnitus, just like you would during meditation. A helpful visualization here is to imagine that you are breathing in the sound of your tinnitus as you inhale.

Then with each 8-second exhale, you are going to hard shift your focus on to a specific part of your body starting with your feet.

For the entirety of the 8-second exhale, focus all your concentration on relaxing the muscles in your feet as completely and deeply as you can. If you find it difficult to focus on your feet, start by gently tensing the muscles in your feet briefly before releasing the tension.

As you inhale for 4-seconds, focus again on the sound of your tinnitus.

Then as you exhale, shift your focus back into your body, now focusing on your lower legs (ankles to knees), relaxing your lower leg muscles as much as you possibly can.

You will repeat this pattern until you have worked your way through your entire body following this sequence of body parts:

Breath 1: Feet

Breath 2: Lower legs (ankles to knees)

Breath 3: Upper Legs (knees to glutes)

Breath 4: Stomach/Lower back (Core muscles)

Breath 5: Chest/Upper back

Breath 6: Shoulders/Arms/Hands

Breath 7: Neck/Throat

Breath 8: Head/Face/Jaw

One you finish going through the body, go back to the feet and begin again.

If you get distracted at any point, you can repeat the most recent body part or simply start over again at your feet and take another lap

You can practice this for as long or as short you’d like, though I highly recommend practicing for longer sessions, ideally 5-20 minutes at a time. The longer you go, the more relaxed you will become.

For tinnitus habituation purposes, I recommend practicing for 15 minutes twice per day.

Important Notes and optional modifications: 

  • When you first try this technique, it will require a lot of concentration, but that’s a good thing. The harder you have to concentrate, the less chance of experiencing anxiety thoughts. After practicing a few times, it requires less concentration and becomes much easier to flow with the breath as you practice.
  • You can choose to move through the body in larger or smaller increments. To speed it up, you can focus on larger segments of your body each time you exhale. To slow it down, you can focus on smaller body segments with each breath (i.e. starting with one foot, then one part of one leg at a time), breaking the body up into as many breaths as you’d like.
  • You can choose to breathe in and out of your nose, rather than in through the nose and out through the mouth.
  • If you struggle with 4-8 breathing, you might find it easier to do 5-5 breathing instead. Other breathing patterns you find helpful can be substituted as well:
  • You can also try 4-7-8 breathing in the following way: breath focus on the 4-second inhale, tinnitus focus on the 7-second breath hold, body focus on the 8-second exhale
  • If you prefer to start with your head and work your way down your body rather than up from your feet, that works too! In fact, I recommend experimenting to see which is more relaxing for you.

Practice the Technique:

To make it as easy as possible for you to practice this new technique, I have included several free resources below:

Relaxation Inducing Audio (Sample Tracks from the Rewiring Tinnitus Relief Project Album): Click play on one of the two sample tracks below experience the incredible anxiety relieving power of Brainwave Entrainment. Listen with headphones or a decent set of speakers and with your eyes closed. As you listen take slow, deep, steady breaths and watch how quickly the Isochronic tones are able to relax you. But make sure to read the disclaimer before you listen as this sample is extremely sedating.

(Click here for a full explanation of the Tinnitus Relief Project.)

(Click here to learn more about the science of Brainwave entrainment.)

Nature Sound Masking Tracks: Click play on one of the nature soundscape tracks below if you would like to practice the TABS technique with background noise for masking. All of these nature soundscape tracks were created by me and are featured on the Tinnitus Relief Project Album.

(These tracks are sound masking tracks do not feature brainwave entrainment.)

Guided Breath Pacing Bubble: One of the most effective ways to practice breathing techniques is to use a visual breath pacer. The breathing bubble below is set by default to breathing pace of 4 seconds in and 6 seconds out, but can be changed to any pacing you like! Simply click menu button in the top right of the breathing bubble below (it looks like three stacked small horizontal lines), and change the “Breathe Out” interval to 8 seconds if you want to do the basic technique, or any other interval you’d like to try!)





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