A space for real stories, honest reflections, and small victories from life with tinnitus and hearing loss.
Here you’ll find comfort, perspective, and maybe even a laugh or two as we learn to live a little more peacefully with that damn noise.
Who Else Keeps Their Hearing Aids Turned Off?
By Marie

Let’s get this out of the way early. Yes, I have hearing aids. Yes, they were expensive. Yes, they are currently… turned off. And no, I’m not broken, ungrateful, or in denial. I’m just a bit tired.
Hearing aids don’t just add sound. They add everything.
Cutlery clattering like a construction site. Plastic bags announcing themselves from three rooms away. Someone breathing with a level of confidence I didn’t ask for. Think loud eaters galore!
Suddenly, the world becomes a noisy soup, and my brain is expected to politely sort it all out.
Brain: nah!
That sorting takes effort. Mental effort. The kind no one sees, but you feel it behind your eyes by mid-afternoon.

When I wear my hearing aids, I’m not just listening.
I’m:
It’s like running background apps all day. Eventually, something overheats. You know when you look at your mum’s phone and there are loads of apps all running in the background? Yeah, like that.
And when that happens, turning my hearing aids off isn’t giving up. It’s damage control.
Here’s the funny bit.
I put my hearing aids on to feel more connected. But sometimes, all that extra noise makes me feel more overwhelmed… and oddly more alone.
When everything is loud, nothing feels clear. Including conversations.

When I turn my hearing aids off, the world eases away from chaos mode and slips into comfortable mode. It’s not silent, tinnitus sees to that, but it’s familiar. Predictable. Contained.
There’s is comfort in that. No surprises. No sudden sonic jump scares. Just my own small, manageable soundscape.
It’s not that I'm being antisocial. It’s not avoidance. It’s rest. And that's what I'll continue to tell myself!
Over time, I’ve noticed patterns. These are the moments when my hearing aids are most likely to get a little break:

Oh, and music. If I really want to enjoy music, my hearing aids are coming out. With them in, everything can sound a bit… thin. Tinny. Like my favourite song is being played through a nervous robot wrapped in tin foil.
Without them, the sound is warmer. Richer. More emotional.
I feel the music instead of sounds just clonking around together. And to be honest, if I’m choosing between technically hearing more and actually enjoying the song, enjoyment wins. I hear less without my aids, but what I do hear is far more pleasing.
Let me be clear. Hearing aids help me. They really do.
I use them when:
But I also turn them off when:
Both choices are valid.
If you ever feel guilty for switching yours off, you’re not alone.
You’re not being difficult. You’re listening to your body.
And that might be the smartest thing you do all day. Well, that and reading The Buzz (this blog).
If you’re reading this with your hearing aids turned off, welcome. You’re in good company.
Take care,
Marie

Comment: Be the first to comment - use the form below.
Reply:
(It’s a friendly buzz, promise.)
Join my newsletter for stories and reflections on life with tinnitus and hearing loss.
Unsubscribe at any time
I do not offer medical advice. I am not a doctor or a medical professional.
TinNOtus is designed with YOU in mind. I'm here for emotional support and personal reflection.
Contact Me on marie.tinnotus@gmail.com
TinNOtus © 2026