Patients present with a wide range of sensory experiences that feel alarming, intrusive, and difficult to ignore:
These experiences are often treated as separate phenomena. They are not.
They are variations of the same underlying process:
The brain generating or amplifying a real sensory signal and misclassifying it as important or threatening.
This is the foundation of the Gans Model of Sensory Misinterpretation.
All of these experiences share three defining features:
This applies directly to:
These are not fundamentally different problems. They are different expressions of the same brain process.
The brain is not a passive receiver of sensory input. It is an active prediction system.
It constantly:
Most internal signals are filtered out automatically.
When this system shifts—especially under stress or heightened vigilance—the brain:
This is not a malfunction. It is an overprotective system doing its job too aggressively.
The signal itself is not the problem.
Distress emerges through a specific sequence:
1. Detection
A benign internal signal enters awareness.
2. Misinterpretation
The brain asks: “What is this?”
If the answer is uncertain or threatening, the system escalates.
3. Nervous System Activation
The body shifts into a state of alert:
4. Attention Locks In
The signal becomes more noticeable because attention is now anchored to it.
5. Feedback Loop Forms
This loop explains why patients say:
“Why can’t I stop noticing it?”
“Why does it feel worse when I focus on it?”
The system is behaving exactly as designed—just based on a false alarm.
Tinnitus
A real, brain-generated sound without an external source.
Distress is driven by interpretation and heightened nervous system activation.
Charles Bonnet Syndrome
Visual cortex activity generates images in the absence of visual input.
Distress occurs when the images are misinterpreted.
Floaters
Normal vitreous changes become highly visible under attentional amplification.
Phantom Limb Sensation
The brain continues to generate sensory representation of a missing limb.
Across all cases:
The brain is producing or amplifying a signal.
The system becomes stuck when that signal is treated as important or dangerous.
Anxiety is not secondary. It is primary.
Heightened vigilance:
This means:
The nervous system is already primed before the sensory experience becomes bothersome.
The signal then feeds the anxiety, and the anxiety feeds the signal.
This is the loop.
Intervention does not require eliminating the signal.
It requires changing how the brain relates to the signal.
Two mechanisms are central:
1. Accurate Education
This removes the threat interpretation.
2. Nervous System Regulation
As the system settles:
This framework naturally extends into a broader intervention model:
MBSSR applies the same principles across sensory experiences:
Core Components:
Goal:
Not to eliminate sensory signals
But to:
Without a unifying framework:
With this model:
The brain continuously generates and filters sensory information.
Sometimes it brings neutral internal signals into awareness and treats them as important.
This is not damage. It is misinterpretation.
Across tinnitus, visual phenomena, and phantom sensations, the pattern is the same:
A benign signal is detected, misclassified, and amplified through attention and nervous system activation.
When the classification changes, the system changes.
If you recognize this loop in your own experience, the work is not to eliminate the signal—it is to change how your brain relates to it.
The Mindfulness-Based Sensory Stress Reduction (MBSSR) framework builds the exact skills needed to do that.
You can begin learning these skills at
MindfulTinnitusRelief.com