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		An 87-year-old British pensioner has developed an oddly patriotic 
		condition in which he hears an auditory hallucination of England’s 
		national anthem playing in his head on a loop.
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		Ron Goldspink of Bilton hopes to meet Queen Elizabeth when she visits 
		his town next month to tell her that he has heard the anthem even more 
		frequently than she has. He suffers from a rare condition called Musical 
		Ear Syndrome (MES) and mainly, which affects those suffering from 
		hearing loss, causing them to develop non-psychiatric auditory 
		hallucinations. The cause and mechanism of MES are currently unknown, 
		but researchers believe it occurs when there is a lack of auditory 
		stimulation. Sensory deprivation causes the brain to begin manufacturing 
		sound, hence why it is common among people suffering hearing loss. 
		Although it is still underreported, MES is believed to affect 
		approximately one in 10,000 people aged over 65 in the UK.
 Mr. Goldspink says he developed the condition spontaneously three or 
		four months ago, adding that the version of ‘God Save the Queen’ he 
		constantly hears in his head is sung by an all-male choir.
 
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		“I complained about my next door neighbor who I thought was playing 
		music and keeping me awake at night,” Mr. Goldspink told the Hull Daily 
		Mail. “My son complained to the council, and when they came down I told 
		them I could hear this music coming from through the wall every night. 
		They went next door and my neighbor said they were not playing anything, 
		and I realized it was just me that could hear it.”
 
 He experiences the hallucination 1700 times every week, and although he 
		says that the version he hears is sung very well, it can be “deafening” 
		at times and feels it is driving him mad.
 
 “My doctor could not understand it, and had never heard of it before,” 
		Goldspink said . “There is nothing you can do about it – the only 
		possible way I can get a rest from it is if I put a hearing aid in one 
		ear and have the TV on in the background. That helps me with it, 
		otherwise, it deafens me.”
 
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		| Mr. Goldspink is hoping to meet the Queen when she visits Hull on 
		November 16 to tell her about his condition.
 
 “I want other people to know what I am living with, and to know about 
		the condition,” he said. “I have no idea what caused it, I just know it 
		is a group of men singing and they sing it very well. I just want people 
		to know that I am not mad, and don’t just have something wrong with my 
		head. I am telling the truth, and I hear the national anthem 
		continuously.”
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