Good Life Project - Turning Down Tinnitus
Episode Date: December 18, 2025How I made peace with the sound in my head, turned my inner tormentor into one of my greatest teachers, learned to live with uncertainty, and tamed relentless anxiety.Through his story, Jonathan revea...ls how an unexpected approach became not just his salvation but a powerful tool for living well amid uncertainty, offering listeners both inspiration and practical guidance—including a special guided meditation practice to bring peace and open your heart.Episode TranscriptCheck out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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So what if you had the ability to feel peaceful at ease, grounded, focused, and calm
no matter what was happening around you, no matter how calamitous or virtuous, loud, or quiet
things were? And what if that power also came with the ability to notice when your mind
had dropped into a spin cycle of self-destructive overthinking, chatter, doom-looping, fear,
and overwhelm, and then literally just let it all go. Even if the circumstances,
were still there, it would give you this proverbial off switch and guide you back to peace
and ease. Today, I want to share a deeply personal journey with you, one that in a sense
probably explains to you my longstanding fascination with and commitment to meditation and why
I believe it is the single most powerful and accessible meta skill in your quest to live a good
life, no matter what comes your way. Because it gives you agency over your attention.
And as you will hear me share even more than circumstance, where your attention goes, so goes your life.
And why you might want to explore saying yes to starting your own practice today.
And I'll wrap with a very special kind of guided practice that's designed to both bring you back to a grounded place and also open your heart just a bit.
So excited to share this best of conversation with you.
I'm Jonathan Fields and this is Good Life Project.
So 12 years ago, my world more or less fell apart, and only three people knew.
It was March of 2010.
Stepping off a flight in Austin, Texas, something goes a bit haywire in my brain.
I noticed an odd fluttering sensation in my left ear, not so unusual after flying.
But by evening, when I lay my head on the pillow, this clicking or seeping sound, a bit like
Geiger counter starts tapping away. And over the next four days, the noise persists, making it near
impossible to sleep. I'm getting exhausted, sensitized to sound, and a bit freaked out. So I start
popping pills in a desperate attempt to get some shut-eye. And I made it through that window and
then returning to New York, I call my doctor, try some nose spray, he says, in two weeks pass.
Still no change. At this point, I start battling severe
headaches from the fatigue. And I start taking other pills for that. And the timing, by the way,
is pretty terrible. I have just signed a book deal with my dream publisher and I'm under
deadline. But in my altered state, I can barely scratch out a sentence. I end up on a flight to
Pittsburgh and Chicago to speak. The noise in my head follows everywhere I go. Back home, I try
everything. I try acupuncture, chiropractic, massage.
Every modality you can think about, still the Geiger counter clicks on.
And it's now joined by this kind of pulsing and wishing sounds in my quote, good ear.
And I can't focus for more than short windows.
Nightfall becomes my enemy as the din of the city where I was then living in New York City
fades, leaving me to battle the sound in darkness.
And things are about to get worse.
About a month and a half in, one evening at about two in the morning.
I wait to this high-pitched electronic sound screaming through my head.
I fumble through the darkness for an off switch.
I must have left something on.
Everything that can be off is off.
And I realize this sound too, it's coming from inside my head.
And with my wife and then young daughter sleeping feet away, I collapse onto the couch and just
begin to weep. And over the next few days, I find myself in a soundproof booth,
poked and prodded and cocooned in a brain skin, looking to rule out all the big, scary things.
The good news, it's not a brain tumor or an aneurism or cancer. And yet the sound remains.
I can't sleep. I can barely work.
and I'm doing everything I can to keep it all secret from the world.
I don't tell my friends, my editor, or my agent,
because once I do, it becomes real.
I have to own it.
And it becomes a conversation.
One I can't bear the thought of having.
So I bury my pain and hang on to the hope that it still may just go away.
Every time I hear an ambient hum or a high-pitched noise,
I wonder, is that real or is it in my head?
And I want to ask, can you hear that?
But then everyone would know.
And soon after a diagnosis finally comes,
tinnitus or tinnitus,
which I learn as a catch-all phrase for,
oh, your brain is making you hear stuff
and nobody else hears,
but we've got no clue why.
It's so poorly understood.
Doctors can't even really agree
how to pronounce the word.
Tinnitus, tinnitus, tinnitus, tinnitus.
I hear both.
Have you been exposed to loud noises I'm asked?
No.
What about medication?
Well, I've been popping sleep in headache meds for weeks, and I checked the side effects
for both meds online, and there it is, buried in the fine, fine, and even finer print,
potentially, tinnitus or tinnitus.
So now maybe I have a possible cause, but even then who knows, really, they certainly
don't.
My only question, how do I make this go away?
The answer, when I asked the doctors, you don't.
For some reason, for some people, it goes away over time.
But the longer it stays, the more likely you'll have it forever.
So back online, I start to read stories of people whose tenetist leads to crushing anxiety, depression, estrangement, lost jobs, and destroyed lives, sometimes even ends of lives.
This can't be happening to me.
My entire life depends upon my ability to create things.
I am a maker.
I'm screaming towards a book deadline, but the words aren't coming.
To create, I need peace.
But I can't hide from the noise that constantly barrages my brain every second of every day.
And I wonder if the love of my life, my wife will get tired of my struggle.
Will it push me from my daughter, my source of breath and inspiration?
will I be able to earn a living
doing what I'm here to do
and put food on my family's table
and a few days pass
I waken to find the Geiger counter
in my left ear gone
my God there's hope
I'm thinking to myself
some small window of peace returns
until three days later
the Geiger counter returns
and a fluttering and pulsing
sensation in my right ear
it evolves into extreme sensitivity to certain frequencies, to certain sounds.
My wife stands at my side as I'm cupping my ear trying to block out sound.
Are you okay?
And I shake my head near tears.
What's going on?
Certain sounds, I tell her, they seem to kind of make my brain scramble.
And the sound of your voice is one of them.
and I try to laugh it off.
That is not something that you want to say.
And she tells me it's really upsetting, of course.
Why don't you take something to help you sleep and get rid of your headache, she asks.
I'm barely hanging on.
I say, God forbid, drugs were in some way a part of the cause of this,
and we have no idea what it really was.
And I take something that makes it worse.
I think I'd want to end things.
I can't believe.
what I've just said.
This cannot go on.
And for the first time,
I begin to ask a different question.
If the smartest doctors in the world
can't make the sound go away,
if this is me for life,
what do I do with that?
Is there some way to turn my tormentor
into my teacher?
And the Buddhist slogan,
abandoned hope,
finds its way into my mind.
first time, I actually get it. I had railed against this, really not understanding what
is about for years in studies of Eastern philosophy. And they start to realize it's not about
giving up, but rather shifting your energy from trying to change an unchangeable circumstance
to changing the way you experience it. And I begin to wonder why I hear sounds around me all day.
I'm in New York City. Literally, I'm being barraged.
with noise, with sounds all day, all night, every day.
But only the sound coming from my brain brings me to my knees.
Is there some way to train the part of my brain that spirals into anxiety to be okay
with the other part of my brain that creates the sound that haunts it?
Can I find peace with the possibility that this may never go away?
And in fact, at any given moment, it may get worse.
I scour the web for ideas, tools, resources, strategies.
There's an odd irony here.
The book that I'm writing at the time, we're trying to write, in random fits and starts,
it begins as an exploration of peak performance, but along the way, refocuses on uncertainty
as a key to peak performance.
And this shift becomes my salvation.
I find myself in needy deep in research about mindfulness.
meditation. The practice trains you to dissociate circumstance from a story, to give you this
space to create a different frame, to tell a different story, to hold on to what you want to
and let go of what you don't. And this fuels a certain freedom and possibility instead of pain
and paralysis. And then I begin to connect the dots. It's not the sound that's causing me so much
pain, but rather my brain's inability to hear it as anything but pain, to just fold it into
the background the way to do with all the other sounds in the city. And I wonder if mindfulness
might be able to help me live with more ease for as long as the sound in my head sticks around.
But I have no idea if it'll work. So I start looking for someone, anyone with an answer,
and I'm close to giving up when out of the ether, also known as the internet,
My spirit guide emerges in the form of a tenetist suffering, former rock drummer, turned
mindfulness-based cognitive therapist named Bruce.
And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
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And I make an appointment and I go in, he happens to be two blocks from where I live.
I ask him, if mindfulness works for tinnitus, yes.
At least he says, it might.
Ten years into his tinnitus, the sound in his head mysteriously got louder and shriller.
And he didn't know what to do.
So he turned to mindfulness-based therapy and it helped him.
So I scheduled the appointment.
He explains what I've got to do.
But when he gives me the instructions, I'm a little bit devastated.
I know them well.
I have practiced and even taught meditation on and off for years, mostly off, by the way.
Focus on your breath.
And if you get distracted by the same thing over and over, focus on what distracts you.
For now, he shares, you won't be able to focus on anything but the sound, so you must make that your focus.
So that night, I go home.
I sit on the floor next to an old radiator.
I don't want to do it the way my drummer therapist tells me.
I try to focus on my breath, but he's right.
All I hear is the sound.
Close my eyes.
I turn toward.
The sound screams at me.
It tears through me.
I begin to shake with anxiety.
It's just too much.
So I deep breathe until I'm calm again.
And I start to use breathing exercises that I had studied and taught as a yoga teacher for many years before
that and I try again and again and again and again over and over day after shaking anxious day
until it starts to get just a little bit easier and then one day I notice something as I sit
consumed by sound my mind drifts away from it and returns to my breath
The cycle begins to break itself.
The sound is still there, or at least the stimulus for the sound, but I begin to let it go.
To rediscover ease, to see just the smallest glimmer of peace, I have the capacity I realize
to live with this, but not make it my life.
Over the last dozen years, I have kept.
to this daily practice, explored a variety of ways to kind of better tune it to my needs as I
move through different seasons of life now and support me in different ways. I begin every morning
with a blend of breathing exercises that still anchor back to that moment with an emphasis on
extended exhales and open-throated pauses that bring my breathing rate now after practicing
this for years down to probably somewhere in the order of two to three breaths and
minute, which is down from the normal of about 16 breaths for a minute. It's taken years, but
slowly by slowly, my body has learned to downregulate very quickly through the mechanism of
breath, and it's designed to rapidly bring me into a deeply grounded state. And I then
transition into a basic mindfulness practice that blends both focusing on my breath
and then opening my attention to all sensations around me.
And these two approaches help me both notice where my attention is and keep cultivating the skill of holding it where I want it to be
and letting go of the places and the thoughts and the emotions and the feelings and the stimuli that I don't want it to be attending to.
And also expanding my attention to allow all sensations to come into my experience, to let it all in,
and then like a breeze against a screen summer porch on a hot day,
just let it blow through without holding onto it or grasping for it.
And I also mix in what we call a loving kindness meditation,
which I'll share more about in just a few moments.
And then after the break, I'll actually guide you through
if you're inclined to give it a try.
So as I share all of this with you today,
the sound remains, but maybe not really.
And I'm okay.
And I guess maybe I'm okay because maybe it's not really there.
What I've learned is that any sensory experience is one part stimulus
and one part what the brain does with that stimulus or input.
Now, in this case, my brain is both the source of the sound, the stimulus,
and the receiver or translator of it,
the thing that says there is a sound here
and also tells me whether it's okay or not.
But there's something else, a massive realization.
My perceiving brain only experiences the sound
or the experience the sensation of sound
when my attention is focused on it.
Sure, the stimulus is always there.
At this point, I assume it will be for life.
Part of my brain is generating something that says there's a sound to be perceived,
but I've trained my brain to stop maniacally locking its attention onto it.
And in fact, I now have to actively direct my attention to it if I even want to be aware of the sound.
And now when I hear it, because I know it no longer consumes or defines me, I can just let it go.
redirect my attention
to the thousand other things
that captivate and interest me
and it's not even that my practice
has trained my brain to ignore the sound anymore
because my attention
more than my circumstance
or external or internal stimulus
in effect
determines my reality
for all intents and purposes
when I don't look for it
it doesn't exist
and this capacity has
now over a period of deepening practice for over a dozen years, it has changed my life in
ways that extend far beyond its initial purpose. Joseph Campbell said, it's by going down into
the abyss that we recover the treasures of our life. Where you stumble, there lies your
treasure. Sometimes we go into the abyss willfully. Other times, most times, the universe
delivers us kicking and screaming. My abyss, it was the sound in my head. It brought me to my knees,
but it also brought me to my treasure, to my practice, to who and what mattered. Once I opened to the
possibility that within this struggle lay the potential for growth. So I still have days when I'm
overtired and stressed where my attention sneaks back to the sound, but they're extremely rare now.
it happens, I also, I understand what's really happening and know how to proactively let it go.
I've been able to return to writing and speaking, loving, and being present in the people's lives
who mean the world to me to creating and to living. And my practice, the thing I came to as a
last resort therapy to take me from minus 100 back to zero has now taken me from zero to plus
100. It's become a place to touch stone, a source of extraordinary creativity, clarity,
and power, fuel for ease, one that reaches so much farther into the fabric of my life
than I ever intended or expected. And here's the thing. Every one of us has our own, quote,
sound in our heads. Our own source of fear, our own place of deep uncertainty, distraction,
pain, paralysis, or suffering, our own abyss, waiting to deliver us into our treasure.
So I guess my question for you is this.
What if you said yes to taking the first step into a daily practice that held the power to slowly over time
give you the agency over not just your attention, but the way you experience nearly every moment of your life?
Whether it's mindfulness, mantra-based, TM chanting prayer, or the many other approaches,
any practice that gives you the capacity to notice where your attention is and is not.
And then direct it away from negative or destructive thoughts or emotions or experiences
and toward positive grounding, wellness-supporting experiences,
that is a practice that truly can become the foundation
of your ability to live the life you want to live no matter what the world puts in your path.
And that's why I want to share my personal meditation journey with you today.
We spend some time on the podcast with Tara Brock and others, who's a wonderful teacher of
Insight Meditation.
Every week on her podcast, actually, she offers a guided meditation, which is a wonderful
way to start if you're looking for a place to drive.
into this practice.
And there are now also so many fantastic apps just loaded with literally thousands of teachers
and voices and approaches that you can try on, experiment with so you can find what resonates
most for you.
The invitation is really to try, to just explore.
Now we're going to head into a quick break, but when I come back, I'm going to share with
you a guided meditation that's called a loving kindness or meta-meditation.
And I regularly mix this into my own practice because it grounds me both in noticing and in
compassion. And there's actually research that shows this kind of meditation over time
cultivates very real, positive change in the way that you feel. So I'll see you back here shortly
for a guided meta-meditation. And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
So find a nice comfortable seat.
It can be on a couch, it can be a cushion, a bolster, or whatever, allows you to kind of
settle in in a nice upright but not overly erect position.
So you want to be, feel like you're active, but not straining.
So you're comfortable, you can sit for a little bit of time here.
So just wiggle around a little bit, you know, settle in so that you feel good with whatever
you're doing.
just close your eyes for a moment and just notice your body do a quick scan from the top of your head
and let your attention just slowly pour down through your body just noticing how everything feels
and kind of move your shoulders around a little bit squeeze them for a second and as you exhale
just kind of drop them and let them hang loosely and bring your awareness down around your hips
and your legs and just notice a sensation as they settle into the cushion or
whatever it is that you're sitting on, feeling the sit bones in contact and the legs in
contact with the floor or wherever they may be touching.
Take a nice inhale with your eyes closed, full body inhale through your nose and through your
mouth.
Just let it all out.
And again, through your nose, inhale.
and through your mouth
once more
and through your mouth
just feel your body settled
just really comfortably
with the eyes still closed again
just scanned from the top of the head slowly
it's almost as if your attention were drifting down through you.
Like an ephemeral line of awareness,
it just slowly lowers from the tippy top of your head down through your body,
and as it goes, just noticing that everything seems to release so comfortably,
so gently, without intention, without having to force anything.
Just noticing your breath, noticing your body,
finding a nice comfortable place, and as you do,
very slowly very deliberately ease your left hand up and place your left palm right against your heart
so you feel the warmth of your hand slowly penetrating in and you feel the soft energy of your heart
slowly pouring out into your palm just notice that sensation for a moment
and then equally slowly, really gently.
Just slowly ease your right hand up
so that your palm is sitting gently against the stomach.
Again, noticing the warmth pouring in from the palm
and similarly the softest energy, barely perceptible,
just pouring back out into the palm.
You may notice that your shoulders may have raised or tightened a bit as you did that.
So keeping your hands where they are, relaxing your palms, but keeping where they are, just slowly let your shoulders relax down, soften them a little bit again.
With your eyes still closed, with the next inhale, breathe slowly into the top palm and let your inhale pour down into the bottom as it pushes gently out.
and then slowly exhale allow in the bottom hand to recede in and the top hand to settle back into the chest
and again breathing in through the top palm and then pouring it down into the bottom
and then exhaling from the bottom slowly rising up and out letting everything settle
just one more time into the top through the bottom
And then exhale, letting the hand slowly slide back into the center of the body,
keeping that stillness, that energetic circuit between the heart and the center.
With your eyes closed, just slowly release your palms gently back down into your lap
or wherever feels comfortable to you, returning to the sensation of your breath.
And then bring a visual representation in your mind's eye.
Picture yourself, just sitting here with a sense of ease, a sense of comfort, a sense of acceptance.
Just create that picture of yourself.
and they begin to offer yourself certain wishes.
So with that vision sitting in front of you,
as you breathe just very slowly and quietly,
recite with your mind the following phrases,
may you be free,
may you be happy,
may you be healthy
may you be loved
may you live with ease
sending it out to you to yourself
and you can even change it to I
so let's try that
may I be free
may I be happy
may I be healthy
may I be loved
may I live
with ease. May I be free? May I be happy? May I be healthy? May I be loved? May I live with ease? May I be free? Be happy. Be healthy. Be loved.
with ease, repeating the phrase while you hold that image of yourself, wishing these things to
yourself, and opening, surrendering to those wishes, allowing them to land. May I be free,
be happy, be healthy, be loved, live with ease.
Take a nice big inhale and then exhale and just let go of that image of yourself.
And now take a moment and just bring into your mind's eye the image of somebody who you love unconditionally.
Somebody who's so dear to you and they may be with us today or they may be somebody who's past.
It's okay, either one.
Bring that vision and make it make it as clear.
clear as you can, what do they look like, what are they wearing, where they feel like,
create that visual in your mind's eye. And then we offer that same set of blessings or wishes
to them. May you be free. May you be happy. May you be healthy. May you be loved.
May you live with ease.
May you be free?
May you be happy.
May you be healthy.
May you be loved.
May you live with ease.
May you be free.
Be happy.
Be healthy.
Be healthy.
loved, live with ease.
Continuing to repeat those, what you hold that image of this person who you care so deeply
about in your mind's eye, may you be free, be happy, be healthy, be loved, live with
ease and just continue slowly with that very slowly and then as you're ready take a deep inhale
and then slowly just exhale and let it all out and then let go of the image of that person
just let it sort of float off into the ether
and then very gently
bring your mind's eye
to the image of somebody who
maybe appears in your daily life
but you really have no feelings for
no specific connection to you somebody
maybe you see in passing
maybe it's somebody who's at the deli
who makes your coffee or a barista
or maybe it's just somebody
who you know in passing but really don't have any connection
no strong feeling for about
or against just bring a picture of that into your mind's eye see them in your mind's eye and then we share
that same series of wishes to them holding that in your eye may be free maybe happy
may you be healthy
may you be loved
may you live with ease
may you be free
may be happy
may you be healthy
may you be loved
may you live with ease
may you be free
Be happy, be healthy, be loved, live with ease.
May you be free, be happy, be healthy, be loved, live with ease.
Take a nice inhale.
And as you exhale, just let that person go into the ether,
vanishing away.
And then bring your mind's eye very gently, very gently,
to the image of somebody with whom you feel a sense of unease or sense of struggle.
It may be somebody you feel has done you wrong.
It may just be somebody who you're not comfortable with.
and this can sometimes be challenging and if doing so starts to bring up so much discomfort or unease or suffering within you then
just allow that person to drift off and replace them with yourself because you're the one in need of wishes of love
so hold that person in your mind's eye and create that same image and to them we offer the same
May you be free, may you be happy, may you be healthy, may you be loved, may you live with ease, may you be free, may you be happy, may you be healthy, may you be loved, may you live with ease, may you be free, may you live with ease,
May you be free, be happy, be healthy, be loved, live with ease.
May you be free, be happy, be healthy, live with ease.
Taking a very gentle breath.
And as you exhale, just let that person evaporate out into the ether,
just letting your mind go still, nice and quiet.
Yeah.
And then finally and very gently,
bringing into your mind's eye the experience of all those people
and all those beyond,
a sense of oneness,
as if no matter who it is that we perceive to exist outside of this solitary boundary we call
our body, we're all just a part of one shared existence, one shared energy, one shared experience
of love, surrender, and generosity.
Feeling that connectedness and bringing into your mind's eyes, a sense of oneness, a community,
a vision however you choose to manifest it in your mind's eye of those beings all around you,
everyone with whom we've just talked
and the greater community around us.
And we offer those same blessings to us all.
May we be free.
May we be happy.
May we be healthy.
May we be loved.
May we live with ease.
May we be free, may we be happy, may we be healthy, may we be loved, may we live with ease.
May we be free, be happy, be healthy, be loved, live with ease.
May we be free, be happy, be healthy, be loved, live with ease.
Taking a deep breath in, feel all the room, all those inner mind's eye.
And as you exhale, just let them all evaporate into the ether.
with the eyes still closed again very gently return a soft left palm to your heart
and a soft right palm to your stomach just breathe into your hands feeling the
connection letting the shoulders relax
And with this final exhale, allowing your palms to just gently return to your lap, surrendering open, shoulders relaxed.
And as you're ready, very slowly, letting your eyes lift open, looking gently around and bringing the same energy to the rest of the
of your day.
This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers
Lindsay Fox and me, Jonathan Fields.
Editing help by Alejandro Ramirez and Troy Young.
Christopher Carter crafted our theme music.
And of course, if you haven't already done so,
please go ahead and follow Good Life Project in your favorite listening app
or on YouTube too.
If you found this conversation interesting or valuable and inspiring,
Chances are you did because you're still listening here.
Do me personal favor.
Steffin's second favor.
Share it with just one person.
I mean, if you want to share it with more, that's awesome too.
But just one person even.
Then invite them to talk with you about what you've both discovered,
to reconnect and explore ideas that really matter.
Because that's how we all come alive together.
Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project.
You know what I'm going to be.
