By Lynne Malcolm and Tegan Osborne.
Melissa was in her early teens when she first began to sense something wasn’t quite right with her hearing.
When her father was eating, the munching sound of his mouth made her feel anxious and upset — to the point where she would need to escape the room.
This and other sounds, like chip packets crumpling, or chair legs screeching on the ground, made her body tense and tighten, and her breathing quicken.
And they still do today, years later. If anything, the problem has gotten worse.
Melissa has a condition called misophonia — which put simply, is a severe hatred of certain sounds. It’s a condition only described by scientists and psychologists in the recent past, that doctors still understand very little about.
“I feel a fight or flight response kick … a lot of adrenaline. I can feel angry at the person making the noise, even though it’s just a normal thing for them – obviously, they’re trying to eat or sneeze. I usually need to get away from the situation because I can’t handle it,” she said.
“I was fairly young … when I [started] noticing it and there was no literature about it then. I’d never heard of anyone else having something like that, so you do think it’s all in your mind.”
Misophonia discovery ‘a relief’
Years after her symptoms began, Melissa noticed a small article in a magazine about misophonia, which described exactly how she was feeling.
It was a discovery that brought with it a mix of emotions.
“A mix of joy and sadness I guess … it tells me that it is real and it’s probably not going to go away. It’s a thing. But definitely relief that I wasn’t just going crazy and there were other people like me.”
In a recent ABC article about groundbreaking research on misophonia, we posted some examples of sounds that can be annoying, and asked people to vote on how they felt about them.