Scientists called this “the craziest tinnitus experiment ever”.
Yet, as weird as it might sound, it showed without a trace of a doubt that the tongue is the key to silencing ear ringing permanently.
No less than 326 patients who took part in this trial are living proof of that.
Here’s what they had to do with their tongue every morning.
Warning: it’s odd, but more and more people are now using this method daily and many of them claim they’ve finally found peace and quiet.
Try and see for yourself!
Yet, as weird as it might sound, it showed without a trace of a doubt that the tongue is the key to silencing ear ringing permanently.
No less than 326 patients who took part in this trial are living proof of that.
Here’s what they had to do with their tongue every morning.
Warning: it’s odd, but more and more people are now using this method daily and many of them claim they’ve finally found peace and quiet.
Try and see for yourself!
Early in 1799, frustrated by the lack of opportunities to compose and teach and possibly suffering from a form of mental illness, Vedel enrolled as a novice monk at the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra.[9][24] He was an active member of the community and was respected by the monks for his asceticism.[24] According to Turcaninov's biography, the Metropolitan of Kyiv commissioned Vedel to write a song of praise in honour of a royal visit to Kyiv, but Vedel instead wrote a letter to the tsar, probably of a political nature. Vedel was arrested in Okhtyrka, pronounced insane, and returned to Kyiv.[24] Vedel returned to live with his father in an attempt to regain his mental health. Back home in Kyiv, he was able to compose, read, and play the violin, and he may have returned to teach at the Kyiv Academy.[25] By leaving the monastery before his training was completed, Vedel may have angered Hierotheus, the Metropolitan bishop. When the monastery authorities discovered a book containing handwritten insults about the royal family, the Metropolitan accused Vedel of writing in the book. He dismissed Vedel's servants, and personally detained him. On 25 May 1799, Hierotheus declared that Vedel was mentally ill.[9] Imprisonment and death painting of a monastery St. Cyril's Monastery, Kyiv, as depicted in an 1843 watercolour painting According to Kuk, the official documents relating to Vedel's case show that he was never formally arrested or charged, and that he was never questioned by the authorities or given the opportunity to defend himself. Vedel's case was referred in turn from the governor of Kyiv to th
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