Musical Ear Syndrome: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Auditory Hallucinations Many Hard of Hearing People Secretly Experience
When hard of hearing people begin hearing phantom voices or music, they immediately worry they are going crazy. After all, only people with schizophrenia and other mental illnesses hear such sounds, right?
Wrong!
The truth is, thousands of sane hard of hearing people experience the spooky phantom voices, music and other sounds associated with Musical Ear syndrome.
Learn what these sounds are, what causes them, what you can do to alleviate or eliminate them and how you can regain your peace of mind.
Printed softcover book, 2nd edition, 178 pages ($22.49)
Downloadable eBook in pdf format, 2nd edition, 179 pages ($16.99)
Before: When you hear phantom sounds no one else hears, you immediately think the worst—like these three people did.
- “I was afraid I was going nuts!”
- “All my family believe I am nuts!”
- “Even my doctor thinks I am crazy!”
After: After learning about Musical Ear syndrome, notice the difference!
- “Knowing it is not a sign of mental illness is such a relief”
- “I am enormously relieved. Now that I am not worried about going crazy, it does not bother me any more.”
—Former Musical Ear syndrome sufferers
Now you, too, can learn the secrets of Musical Ear syndrome and how to alleviate it!
- Sane or psychotic… learn how to distinguish between auditory hallucinations that are signs of mental illness (page 18) and the non-psychiatric auditory hallucinations that many hard of hearing people experience. (page 21)
- 5 symptoms of Musical Ear syndrome … Do you fit this profile? (page 51)
- Hearing phantom sounds?…You are not alone. (page 45)
- Tinnitus or auditory hallucinations?… Here’s how to tell the difference. (page 25)
- Exactly what are hallucinations. (page 17)
- 9 common causes of auditory hallucinations… Knowing the cause is half the battle. (page 65)
- If I have normal hearing and hear auditory hallucinations, am I crazy? (page 52)
- 8 things you can do to alleviate or eliminate your auditory hallucinations. (page 111)
- Turn your auditory hallucinations into pseudo-auditory hallucinations and gain peace of mind… because you now know the difference. (page 30)
- 368 drugs, herbs and chemicals that can cause you to hear auditory hallucinations. Eliminating these may eliminate your auditory hallucinations. (page 135)
- Techniques for overcoming sensory deprivation… Keep your auditory hallucinations at bay. (page 122)
- Dental fillings and radio broadcasts… Learn the truth about people who claim to hear radio broadcasts through their dental fillings. (page 87)
- Songs, songs and more songs… This is what you may be hearing. (page 58)
- 22 uncanny parallels between visual hallucinations (Charles Bonnet syndrome) and auditory hallucinations (Musical Ear syndrome). (page 127)
Don’t suffer in silence! Take control of your phantom sounds and gain peace of mind.
Reviews:
“My grandmother is 88 and is perfectly sane. The problem is that she has been hearing music for a few months. She was so aggravated at her neighbors in her senior living complex that she would complain to her apartment manager about the “constant music” they were playing! She was even more aggravated that they would play Silent Night four months before Christmas! Who does that?When we learned that nobody else could hear it, we were concerned that she may have had stroke or TIA but her workup was clear. It was then that we turned to the internet and found your book. I sent her your book and she is so very happy with it! She now understands what is going on, and can even joke about it, whereas just a few weeks ago she could only obsess about the constant music.She took it along to her doctor’s appointment with her, and he was very intrigued with your book also! Thanks again for everything!”—J.S.
Printed softcover book, 2nd edition, 178 pages ($22.49)
Downloadable eBook in pdf format, 2nd edition, 179 pages ($16.99)