Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ear plugs are your friend. Take extra long showers. Spend time outdoors. Meditate.
What earplugs do you recommend? I don’t want to block out all sound, just tone it down and take the edge off.
Anonymous wrote:Ear plugs are your friend. Take extra long showers. Spend time outdoors. Meditate.
Anonymous wrote:My entire life I’ve tended to get overstimulated easily. I could never do concerts (or even music at home), clubs, large groups, etc.
I have 2 young kids and an H, and most days I feel like breaking down. The toddler screams all the time, the 8 yo complains, H is super loud. It feels like I’m being bombarded from every angle. Plus throw in a dog, the phone going off, the never ending to-do list, and most days I feel like I can barely function.
Tonight at dinner everyone was just being so LOUD I had to get up and leave. I got in the shower to calm down. Most of the time when someone tries to talk to me, I can’t even process what they’re saying because I’m hearing 2-3 other people talking and my anxiety from it all is through the roof. A few nights ago H took the kids out for the evening and I forgot how nice it is to just do the dishes in silence so I can relax and actually hear myself think for once.
I don’t want to be one of those moms who screams at everyone to be quiet, and I do believe kids have the right to be loud. I just can’t take when everyone is making noise all at once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you wear discreet ear plugs that will help dampen (but not mute) the sound?
DP. I get overstimulated by sound, and where discreet noise-canceling headphones do dampen sound, but DH gets annoyed and has zero empathy, and my kids think I'm weird, so more often than not, I'm tortured. It's the worst on car trips when we're all trapped together, and there is fighting, phone/iPad noise, and radio noise, and in those cases, I wear my noise-canceling headphones without apology. Work is a retreat because it's mostly quiet, and no one cares that I wear headphones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. I had a hairdresser who wore earplugs. She could hear me, but they helped her with the noise of all the hairdryers and music and people yelling to be heard over them. Can you wear earplugs?
2. Train your kids. Sure sometimes toddlers will be loud but really work on yours learning to not interrupt, no whining, only being loud when on the playground or in an emergency. Teach the older one they can only complain about something ONCE. They state their complaint, you acknowledge hearing them, and that's it. Or let them have a Complaint Log, where they write out their complaints to you and you write back each night.
3. Turn your ringer off or super low.
4. Train your dog to not bark.
I hear you on this - I had to go to a dinner at Benihana and found it VERY overwhelming and by the time we were walking out I'd shut down quite a bit. It was too loud to make conversation, my nerves were frayed from all the slamming of spatulas on the grill and lights flashing and people yelling, etc. I truly couldn't go to another event three nights later - just couldn't make myself show up.
I agree with teaching your kids. This is the biggest thing. At the table, teach your older child not to interrupt. Teach the toddler not to scream.
I get overwhelmed easily and my husband is a terrible interrupter. I try very hard to nicely say "hold on Bill. Ok as I was saying...." I interject when he interrupts our 12 year old too. It works sometimes. It was much easier to teach my child how to not interrupt.
My husband is not sympathetic - he doesn't understand why being interrupted is hard for me or why I can't hear the movie over him inexplicably taking a full minute to roll the top of the chip bag over to close it up.
But you can work on your kids op.
I disagree. You can’t be constantly screaming at your kids to be quiet. There’s lots of studies that loud kids are the healthiest because they feel the most comfortable to be them.
I wear ear plugs. I also have area rugs everywhere to help absorb noise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. I had a hairdresser who wore earplugs. She could hear me, but they helped her with the noise of all the hairdryers and music and people yelling to be heard over them. Can you wear earplugs?
2. Train your kids. Sure sometimes toddlers will be loud but really work on yours learning to not interrupt, no whining, only being loud when on the playground or in an emergency. Teach the older one they can only complain about something ONCE. They state their complaint, you acknowledge hearing them, and that's it. Or let them have a Complaint Log, where they write out their complaints to you and you write back each night.
3. Turn your ringer off or super low.
4. Train your dog to not bark.
I hear you on this - I had to go to a dinner at Benihana and found it VERY overwhelming and by the time we were walking out I'd shut down quite a bit. It was too loud to make conversation, my nerves were frayed from all the slamming of spatulas on the grill and lights flashing and people yelling, etc. I truly couldn't go to another event three nights later - just couldn't make myself show up.
I agree with teaching your kids. This is the biggest thing. At the table, teach your older child not to interrupt. Teach the toddler not to scream.
I get overwhelmed easily and my husband is a terrible interrupter. I try very hard to nicely say "hold on Bill. Ok as I was saying...." I interject when he interrupts our 12 year old too. It works sometimes. It was much easier to teach my child how to not interrupt.
My husband is not sympathetic - he doesn't understand why being interrupted is hard for me or why I can't hear the movie over him inexplicably taking a full minute to roll the top of the chip bag over to close it up.
But you can work on your kids op.