6 Months In and Struggling with Depression/Anxiety

carolinet617

Member
Author
Jul 8, 2019
74
37
Apex, NC, USA
Tinnitus Since
01/2019
Cause of Tinnitus
Bupropion (Wellbutrin), TMJ, possible ETD
Hi there! Just wanted to introduce myself as I've been browsing around the forum for a few months but stupidly kept thinking I had "beaten" my tinnitus and everything was fine now. I'm trying very hard to accept that I'm probably in this for the long haul. I guess I qualify as a newbie and it's daunting thinking about potentially having this the rest of my life.

I'm Caroline, 32 years old and live in NC, and I developed tinnitus and ear pain/pressure in January after a week of being on generic Wellbutrin (bupropion). I stayed on it for a month before tapering off. I was scared of permanent damage so I went to see an ENT who told me there was a 99% chance it would disappear once the Wellbutrin was out of my system and that my hearing is normal. At first, it seemed like he was right. For a couple of weeks, it lessened to the point where I could barely hear it and it was no longer distressing. And then it came back with a vengeance for a few weeks. And then went away for a few weeks. And on and on until now, 6ish months later. I tend to feel the pain/pressure for a day or so before the sound actually starts. This past weekend it spiked so badly that I began having suicidal ideation (more on that later). I still cannot find any correlation between what is causing the cycle of spikes and then returning to relative normalcy.

Even though I'm certain the Wellbutrin triggered the onset of my tinnitus, I'm uncertain if it's the only thing involved or if it's kind of a "perfect storm" situation. I had chronic ear infections in childhood and a few in my 20s. I've also had a crackling in my ears that started all of a sudden one day when I was 10, and I hear it every time I swallow (the ENT told me this was normal, but I don't know anyone else with the same thing). I used to go to incredibly loud local concerts and stand right up front near the amp (smart!) I've also been on and off a host of psychiatric and other medications for the past 15 years, some of which I now now are ototoxic. In addition, I have occasional bouts of dizziness/vertigo including one a few years ago so bad that I couldn't turn my head without vomiting for 3 days (I am currently waiting to undergo testing for Meniere's which I can't do right now because of some of the medications I'm on). So while Wellbutrin was certainly the trigger, I'm not sure I can say it's the only thing. My plan is to safely go off as many medications as possible so I can establish some sort of baseline--I know for a fact I'm overmedicated regardless of the tinnitus.

I know people with tinnitus often develop depression/anxiety due to the condition (totally understandable) but I have struggled with severe anxiety, depression and a host of other mental issues my whole life. I am currently unemployed because of social anxiety and agoraphobia. Developing tinnitus has made all of those things 100x worse. I've read that reducing stress and anxiety, not focusing on the noise so it starts to fade into the background etc. tend to help, but it's very hard when I already have a panic disorder and OCD which makes me hyper-focused on the sound when it gets loud. I've always had bad insomnia so when the tinnitus is spiking and I sleep even less, my anxiety ramps up and makes everything so much worse. I'm trying not to be too defeatist and I hope I don't sound too "poor me," but I have a history of suicidal ideation so it terrifies me that tinnitus may push me over the edge. When you already feel like your life is meaningless and are having trouble finding hope for the future, the fact that the future may always include tinnitus is incredibly daunting. I'm well aware that I have a lot of privilege and life could certainly be worse, but it seems like just when I feel like I'm at rock bottom, something else happens. It's comforting to read your stories of similar struggles although of course I wish none of us had to endure this. I'd be very grateful for coping tips from anyone with long-term mental illness.

So anyway, that was a lot more than I planned on writing but I just wanted to say hello and thank you all for all the great information I've gathered so far on the forum. It's a lot to take in, especially the scientific stuff which is not my forte, but it's nice to know that I'm not alone and that hopefully one day there may be something close to a cure.

Caroline
 
@carolinet617, maybe check with Dr. Shulman. He specialized in tinnitus. I might call him myself. I think he is semi-retired. My psychiatrist said I could call him. He is in his 80's I believe.

Yeah, tinnitus is tough especially if you have had pre-existing anxiety, depression, panic attacks, etc.

https://www.upbrooklynent.com/abraham-shulman.html
 
Caroline, I'm 33 and in NC too. I am nearing 6 weeks with noise induced tinnitus. It has been nothing short of life changing and horrible.

This morning after sobbing like a child on my wife's shoulder, I decided it was time to get help with sleep and depression.

I got a script for trazadone which is supposed to help with both. I'll let you know how it goes.

PM me if you like. Hang in there. I would have so much more faith in the likely hood of healing if I had your track record and causation. I have mild hearing loss due to hammering one day (and many days of loud tools and music over the years).

Healing does happen and I'm hanging on to that possibility by a string.
 
Caroline, I'm 33 and in NC too. I am nearing 6 weeks with noise induced tinnitus. It has been nothing short of life changing and horrible.

This morning after sobbing like a child on my wife's shoulder, I decided it was time to get help with sleep and depression.

I got a script for trazadone which is supposed to help with both. I'll let you know how it goes.

PM me if you like. Hang in there. I would have so much more faith in the likely hood of healing if I had your track record and causation. I have mild hearing loss due to hammering one day (and many days of loud tools and music over the years).

Healing does happen and I'm hanging on to that possibility by a string.

So sorry to hear you're struggling. That's great though, I hope it helps! I was able to get a followup appointment with the ENT I saw before in 3 weeks so hopefully we can discuss some options.

You're welcome to PM me anytime too, this stuff is definitely easier to deal with knowing there are others out there to relate!
 
@carolinet617 I'm sorry to hear about your Wellbutrin induced tinnitus. Wellbutrin also caused the onset of my tinnitus. My best advice is to hang in there, get good sleep, make positive lifestyle changes to your diet and exercise schedule (if necessary). These are all things that (I believe) have helped me. My tinnitus started getting noticeably better after a year or so. I'd say at 6 months, you're still in the early phase... and there's still a good possibility that your tinnitus will continue to decrease over the next 18 months. Mine hasn't gone away, and at this point, I don't expect it to, but it's at a point where I can live with it.

I've documented my journey with Wellbutrin induced tinnitus over the past 18 months here:

https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/tinnitus-from-wellbutrin.25849/
 
@carolinet617 I'm sorry to hear about your Wellbutrin induced tinnitus. Wellbutrin also caused the onset of my tinnitus. My best advice is to hang in there, get good sleep, make positive lifestyle changes to your diet and exercise schedule (if necessary). These are all things that (I believe) have helped me. My tinnitus started getting noticeably better after a year or so. I'd say at 6 months, you're still in the early phase... and there's still a good possibility that your tinnitus will continue to decrease over the next 18 months. Mine hasn't gone away, and at this point, I don't expect it to, but it's at a point where I can live with it.

I've documented my journey with Wellbutrin induced tinnitus over the past 18 months here:

https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/tinnitus-from-wellbutrin.25849/

Thanks for the support! I'm sorry it's been so rough for you, how frustrating to take a medication to try and improve yourself and have it give you another nightmare symptom! Sleeping is absolutely my biggest issue. Even before my tinnitus, on the days where my insomnia was bad, my anxiety and depression would skyrocket. Of course there's the paradox of the tinnitus making it even harder to sleep, then not sleeping makes the tinnitus worse, and on and on in a big cycle. Sound masking at night absolutely helps me though, so it's starting to be a bit more routine. I definitely need to improve my lifestyle regardless of if it goes away or not, I've become very sedentary while not working. I'm glad you're improving and that's very encouraging to think that even if it's there, I'll learn to live regardless. I'll be sure to follow along with your journey!
 
I know people with tinnitus often develop depression/anxiety due to the condition (totally understandable) but I have struggled with severe anxiety, depression and a host of other mental issues my whole life. I am currently unemployed because of social anxiety and agoraphobia. Developing tinnitus has made all of those things 100x worse. I've read that reducing stress and anxiety, not focusing on the noise so it starts to fade into the background etc. tend to help, but it's very hard when I already have a panic disorder and OCD which makes me hyper-focused on the sound when it gets loud.

Warm welcome to the forum Caroline. Sorry to hear your struggle with tinnitus and your background of having suffered anxiety, depression and other mental issues before T. I have similar experiences, having suffered decades of anxiety and panic disorder, and also PTSD after witnessing the tragic accidental death of my young son when he was 5. I have had phobia and panic attacks so bad that I was home bound for a while, not able to work. So I can share your mighty struggle when T arrived. Same here, and I had both ultra high pitched tinnitus and severe hyperacusis to deal with with a much weakened nerves from my past experiences. Yea, it was tough. It fact it was such a nightmare I was in a mess physically and mentally initially, with relentless anxiety and panic attacks daily from the moment I woke up. Oh yea, those suicide ideations surrounded me and my tired and stressed out mind as it saw no way out of the dark tunnel, only to be consumed daily by extreme sufferings both body and mind. How could one live with such unlivable condition?

But that was then. Today I live a normal, productive, happy and absolutely enjoyable life. I also learned techniques in CBT to help me battle those old demons of chronic anxiety and panic attack as well as depression. Life is good now and I will be on a 18 days cruise from Hawaii to Tahiti, New Zealand ans Sydney in 2 months with 2 more cruises planned next year. I kick tinnitus' butt even though it is still ringing like before. I never though I could stare down T and still function but I can now. In my darkest time, I never thought I could have this kind of good life again. But I am. So never say never. Good life can be back. Don't despair. If my success story can help you, check it out for more detail of my journey with both T & H (and some descriptions of living with mental attacks) where I share some helpful strategies in more details. Take good care. God bless.

https://www.tinnitustalk.com/thread...w-i-recovered-from-tinnitus-hyperacusis.3148/
 
Warm welcome to the forum Caroline. Sorry to hear your struggle with tinnitus and your background of having suffered anxiety, depression and other mental issues before T. I have similar experiences, having suffered decades of anxiety and panic disorder, and also PTSD after witnessing the tragic accidental death of my young son when he was 5. I have had phobia and panic attacks so bad that I was home bound for a while, not able to work. So I can share your mighty struggle when T arrived. Same here, and I had both ultra high pitched tinnitus and severe hyperacusis to deal with with a much weakened nerves from my past experiences. Yea, it was tough. It fact it was such a nightmare I was in a mess physically and mentally initially, with relentless anxiety and panic attacks daily from the moment I woke up. Oh yea, those suicide ideations surrounded me and my tired and stressed out mind as it saw no way out of the dark tunnel, only to be consumed daily by extreme sufferings both body and mind. How could one live with such unlivable condition?

But that was then. Today I live a normal, productive, happy and absolutely enjoyable life. I also learned techniques in CBT to help me battle those old demons of chronic anxiety and panic attack as well as depression. Life is good now and I will be on a 18 days cruise from Hawaii to Tahiti, New Zealand ans Sydney in 2 months with 2 more cruises planned next year. I kick tinnitus' butt even though it is still ringing like before. I never though I could stare down T and still function but I can now. In my darkest time, I never thought I could have this kind of good life again. But I am. So never say never. Good life can be back. Don't despair. If my success story can help you, check it out for more detail of my journey with both T & H (and some descriptions of living with mental attacks) where I share some helpful strategies in more details. Take good care. God bless.

https://www.tinnitustalk.com/thread...w-i-recovered-from-tinnitus-hyperacusis.3148/

I'm so touched by your response, thank you! I'm so sorry for everything you went through. I try to stay positive but the depression I've had for 20 years pre-tinnitus is still raging along, and I'm scared to try any more psychiatric medications as Wellbutrin is what caused my tinnitus. The hardest part right now is sleep, I'm currently getting maybe 4 hours a night before I'm wide awake and then feel horrible the rest of the day because my anxiety and tinnitus spike when I don't sleep. Masking helps at night, but I already had insomnia before this started. I have been homebound for about 2 years due to agoraphobia after losing my job, and have been denied disability so I'm barely scraping by. I also don't have support from family and don't have very many friends so this forum has been a nice way just to have some human contact. I know things could be worse and lots of people are suffering in the world, I just wish one thing would go right in my life to give me hope for the future.

I read through your whole post and your story is so inspiring, thank you. I'm so happy to hear how well you're doing and that gives me hope that maybe someday I can learn to live with this.
 
Caroline, I'm 33 and in NC too. I am nearing 6 weeks with noise induced tinnitus. It has been nothing short of life changing and horrible.

This morning after sobbing like a child on my wife's shoulder, I decided it was time to get help with sleep and depression.

I got a script for trazadone which is supposed to help with both. I'll let you know how it goes.

PM me if you like. Hang in there. I would have so much more faith in the likely hood of healing if I had your track record and causation. I have mild hearing loss due to hammering one day (and many days of loud tools and music over the years).

Healing does happen and I'm hanging on to that possibility by a string.

Hello,

You did well going to get some treatment for the sleep and depression... Me too I was too depressed to do anything, but the worst is the anxiety...

How do you feel nowadays ? I hope much better ! :)
 
Wow you have a lot to deal with. I'm typing on my phone, so I won't go into to much detail. But although you wouldn't think so if you met me, I have generalized anxiety, OCD, hypochondria (only recently started admitting that one) and super loud tinnitus. So I share a few things in common with you.

It sounds so cliche but time will be your best friend when dealing with your tinnitus. I'm almost 2 weeks into a spike. Hopefully a temporary one. But even though it's screaming right now, I feel better than I did when it started.

Hopefully yours isn't permanent. But if it is you will get used to it. It may annoy you at times. But with a positive attitude you will be ok with it.

As for your other problems, have you asked for help from charities and your doctor?

And have you tried meditation? I'm pretty new to it myself. It hasn't been the answer to all my problems. But it's probably helped me by 15%!!!!! So that's not bad for 10 minutes a day!

Message me if you want to talk about OCD. It can be a bit embarrassing trying to explain it to somebody that doesn't have it!
 
I try to stay positive but the depression I've had for 20 years pre-tinnitus is still raging along, and I'm scared to try any more psychiatric medications as Wellbutrin is what caused my tinnitus. The hardest part right now is sleep, I'm currently getting maybe 4 hours a night before I'm wide awake and then feel horrible the rest of the day because my anxiety and tinnitus spike when I don't sleep.

Caroline, you have tried natural supplements for calming nerves and helping sleep? The ones commonly recommended are natural substances like Melatonin, kava, passion flower etc. The following website talks about the natural alternatives for treating insomnia:
http://www.christopherhobbs.com/lib...ealth/herbs-and-natural-remedies-for-insomnia /

As for helping with depression, CBT and understanding cognitive distortions and how they wreck our mental health will help a lot. We need to sort out the depressive thought patterns and try to understand them methodically. CBT encourages us to write down our biggest fears, worries, or depressive thoughts, and try to counter them with more positive or realistic thoughts. I used to have many WORD documents where I wrote down all the challenges and worries, fears, phobias etc., and also wrote down the rebuttal to each of them. This is self-help CBT, very useful and it is a good alternative to full blown CBT involving licensed therapists whose services may be not affordable to some people. So try to research on Cognitive Distortions and CBT, plus even mindfulness meditation (youtube has many tutorial videos), as these don't cost money and you can take your time to practice them.

Besides reading up to arm our brain with knowledge about how to deal with anxiety and depression, it is advisable to get active physically to combat these demons. Try do something outdoor, even just having daily short walks, hikings, camping or try pick up some new hobbies, such as bird photography (as you walk in outdoors). The trick is to get physically tired and have the brain distracted from the anxiety and stress. We need to give the anxious, stressed and depressed mind the mental breaks it needs to recuperate and to find new energy (or what I call life force) to break away from the old mode of functioning. In the process, physical activities can tire the body so sleeping will be easier. Then adding the natural alternatives (Melatonin, Chamomile tea etc) will make it easier to sleep and sleep longer, one day at a time, one step at a time.

Try also to read or watch jokes and laughters or comedians daily from sites dedicated for this purpose:
http://www.laughfactory.com/jokes/clean-jokes (or other jokes of your choice)
http://www.laughfactory.com/DaveChappelle (or other comedians you like)

Or train your brain with more positive thinking with sites like:
https://positivewordsresearch.com/top-50-positive-websites-to-benefit-your-well-being/

I know it can be a process to change how we think. But once we make the baby steps, the brain will slowly respond and change to catch up with our will to be a happy person. I once watched a documentary on PBS about one of the longest living Japanese lady who was the lone survivor of her entire family during the atomic blast in World War II. In fact as a young child then, she was badly burnt over her body having to face life on her own with so little left to life to cheer about. But yet she somehow overcame her challenges and she was known to be a cheerful old lady with a good sense of humor. When asked her secret of longevity and happiness despite her sufferings, she said and I paraphrase, "I just focus on the simple pleasures of daily living and don't think ahead too much". So her secret is about focusing on living the NOW, the moment which she has some control and live it as happy and pleasurable as she can. When one can do that, these little moments of NOW spent in positivity will add up and slowly retrain and reprogram our mind towards more positive outlooks of life. That is what we need to do one day at a time, one step at a time, and one NOW moment at a time.

Wishing you well, Caroline. God bless.
 
Hello,

You did well going to get some treatment for the sleep and depression... Me too I was too depressed to do anything, but the worst is the anxiety...

How do you feel nowadays ? I hope much better ! :)
@Christophe_85 thank you. Still a rollercoaster. I've had laughter and plenty of heavy crying, but, I've begun to get a little bit more sleep, and that in itself is very helpful. One day at a time. Thank you for asking and I hope better days are ahead for you.
 
Hi Caroline,

Welcome to the forum! Thank you for taking the time to share your story with us. I believe collectively we are all stronger if we can come to this forum and share our stories and show support to each other.

I can't imagine what you are going through when you already are in depression before you got Tinnitus. I don't think I got it as bad as you but I too contemplated suicide when I first got my tinnitus. Eventually, thinking about my wife pulled me away from it and then after a while, I realized that tinnitus may have changed my life forever but it is still better than not having a life to live. So here I am, decided to stay with it and hang on till now.

Today after a year and nine months, I would say I am in a much better place. Emotionally it does still affect me when it hits hard but I learn to tell myself that it will get better the next day or two. I now get good days after a few bad ones so I try to enjoy the good days as much as I can. I notice that my tinnitus is eventually getting quieter although it is very very slow and sometimes the volume goes back to full volume for a bit but not for too long.

I believe one day I will get my life back and be normal again.

Winston
 
It took you longer to get anxiety, depression of suicidal thoughts that in my case. I am with T for about a week and it gives me crazy time and I also have those weird thoughts... It is because I have another yet serious sickness and correlated met T it just feels too much to bear for a common guy.
I wonder if there is any solution if you are not rich though :) How can you live being sick, especially for such thing as T, while being depressed, having no goal in the life anymore, thus often not working in the result? You've gotta to pay bills, eat something ect. Nobody gives a shit about your condition. No pay = kick out, no paid bills, loans....
 
Caroline, you have tried natural supplements for calming nerves and helping sleep? The ones commonly recommended are natural substances like Melatonin, kava, passion flower etc. The following website talks about the natural alternatives for treating insomnia:
http://www.christopherhobbs.com/lib...ealth/herbs-and-natural-remedies-for-insomnia /

As for helping with depression, CBT and understanding cognitive distortions and how they wreck our mental health will help a lot. We need to sort out the depressive thought patterns and try to understand them methodically. CBT encourages us to write down our biggest fears, worries, or depressive thoughts, and try to counter them with more positive or realistic thoughts. I used to have many WORD documents where I wrote down all the challenges and worries, fears, phobias etc., and also wrote down the rebuttal to each of them. This is self-help CBT, very useful and it is a good alternative to full blown CBT involving licensed therapists whose services may be not affordable to some people. So try to research on Cognitive Distortions and CBT, plus even mindfulness meditation (youtube has many tutorial videos), as these don't cost money and you can take your time to practice them.

Besides reading up to arm our brain with knowledge about how to deal with anxiety and depression, it is advisable to get active physically to combat these demons. Try do something outdoor, even just having daily short walks, hikings, camping or try pick up some new hobbies, such as bird photography (as you walk in outdoors). The trick is to get physically tired and have the brain distracted from the anxiety and stress. We need to give the anxious, stressed and depressed mind the mental breaks it needs to recuperate and to find new energy (or what I call life force) to break away from the old mode of functioning. In the process, physical activities can tire the body so sleeping will be easier. Then adding the natural alternatives (Melatonin, Chamomile tea etc) will make it easier to sleep and sleep longer, one day at a time, one step at a time.

Try also to read or watch jokes and laughters or comedians daily from sites dedicated for this purpose:
http://www.laughfactory.com/jokes/clean-jokes (or other jokes of your choice)
http://www.laughfactory.com/DaveChappelle (or other comedians you like)

Or train your brain with more positive thinking with sites like:
https://positivewordsresearch.com/top-50-positive-websites-to-benefit-your-well-being/

I know it can be a process to change how we think. But once we make the baby steps, the brain will slowly respond and change to catch up with our will to be a happy person. I once watched a documentary on PBS about one of the longest living Japanese lady who was the lone survivor of her entire family during the atomic blast in World War II. In fact as a young child then, she was badly burnt over her body having to face life on her own with so little left to life to cheer about. But yet she somehow overcame her challenges and she was known to be a cheerful old lady with a good sense of humor. When asked her secret of longevity and happiness despite her sufferings, she said and I paraphrase, "I just focus on the simple pleasures of daily living and don't think ahead too much". So her secret is about focusing on living the NOW, the moment which she has some control and live it as happy and pleasurable as she can. When one can do that, these little moments of NOW spent in positivity will add up and slowly retrain and reprogram our mind towards more positive outlooks of life. That is what we need to do one day at a time, one step at a time, and one NOW moment at a time.

Wishing you well, Caroline. God bless.

Thanks for your reply! I haven't tried supplements yet but it's something I definitely want to experiment with. I am lucky to have a good therapist who while I don't think specifically does CBT, definitely has experience with some of its methods. Regardless, he'll be helping me through a lot of the struggles that come with the T.

Physical activity is something I really struggle with but I know you're right, I need to just do it. I wish I could afford a treadmill because it's hard to leave my house with agoraphobia, even just to walk around my neighborhood makes me incredibly anxious. I'm going to try my best to start doing so though, I know I need to force myself out of my comfort zone.

Out of desperation last night I took medication for sleep and finally got a good night's rest. I don't want to rely on medication longterm but it felt like an emergency situation and I'm glad I did. When I don't sleep for a few days on end it makes my mental health tremendously worse and the last thing I need is to end up in a psych ward (something I've been close to a few times). So hopefully I've kind of "reset" my brain and can have a good natural sleep tonight.

Thanks for all the tips!
 
@carolinet617, do you have any TMJ problems like clicking or crunchiness? Sometimes that can cause tinnitus. I'm looking into a different TMJ specialist for a second opinion.
 
Wow you have a lot to deal with. I'm typing on my phone, so I won't go into to much detail. But although you wouldn't think so if you met me, I have generalized anxiety, OCD, hypochondria (only recently started admitting that one) and super loud tinnitus. So I share a few things in common with you.

It sounds so cliche but time will be your best friend when dealing with your tinnitus. I'm almost 2 weeks into a spike. Hopefully a temporary one. But even though it's screaming right now, I feel better than I did when it started.

Hopefully yours isn't permanent. But if it is you will get used to it. It may annoy you at times. But with a positive attitude you will be ok with it.

As for your other problems, have you asked for help from charities and your doctor?

And have you tried meditation? I'm pretty new to it myself. It hasn't been the answer to all my problems. But it's probably helped me by 15%!!!!! So that's not bad for 10 minutes a day!

Message me if you want to talk about OCD. It can be a bit embarrassing trying to explain it to somebody that doesn't have it!

Thanks for replying! It's good to know I'm not alone with the mental health aspect. My spike seems to be fading a little bit, although it may be just that I am starting to panic about it a little bit less now. The irony that panicking makes it worse and then the worse it gets, the more you panic! I've slept a bit more now which helps tremendously for both the anxiety and tinnitus, so that's good. I'm glad you're finding it easier to deal! It's always good to hear stories of people who survive despite it, even if it doesn't go away.

I've tried meditation in the past but I've been bad about keeping up with it. I want to try again though, I know there are some free phone apps I can try. As far as doctors, I do have an ENT I'm seeing soon to get tested for Meniere's to at least rule that out, and I have a good therapist who's helping me with the rest. I'm in the US and the healthcare/mental health system here is abysmal, it's very easy to go bankrupt with medical bills unfortunately. I've been too ill to work and was rejected for disability and without the help of my parents I'd essentially be homeless, it's a tough thing to be sick here. I do whatever my insurance lets me, though! That's why I'm so grateful for places like this where we can help each other! You're welcome to message me anytime as well!
 
Hi Caroline,

Welcome to the forum! Thank you for taking the time to share your story with us. I believe collectively we are all stronger if we can come to this forum and share our stories and show support to each other.

I can't imagine what you are going through when you already are in depression before you got Tinnitus. I don't think I got it as bad as you but I too contemplated suicide when I first got my tinnitus. Eventually, thinking about my wife pulled me away from it and then after a while, I realized that tinnitus may have changed my life forever but it is still better than not having a life to live. So here I am, decided to stay with it and hang on till now.

Today after a year and nine months, I would say I am in a much better place. Emotionally it does still affect me when it hits hard but I learn to tell myself that it will get better the next day or two. I now get good days after a few bad ones so I try to enjoy the good days as much as I can. I notice that my tinnitus is eventually getting quieter although it is very very slow and sometimes the volume goes back to full volume for a bit but not for too long.

I believe one day I will get my life back and be normal again.

Winston

Thank you! Yes, this place has been a godsend really. No one in my life has any idea what it's like, so it's good to have people facing the same things to talk to.

I'm so glad you're doing better! Yes, the more I read through here, the more I realize how sadly common these feelings can be. And I think it's important we validate that, it makes sense to want to escape from something that so drastically affects your life negatively. I guess the key is finding those things/people that make it worth it to keep going. I'm still trying to find those things, but I'm not giving up. :)
 
It took you longer to get anxiety, depression of suicidal thoughts that in my case. I am with T for about a week and it gives me crazy time and I also have those weird thoughts... It is because I have another yet serious sickness and correlated met T it just feels too much to bear for a common guy.
I wonder if there is any solution if you are not rich though :) How can you live being sick, especially for such thing as T, while being depressed, having no goal in the life anymore, thus often not working in the result? You've gotta to pay bills, eat something ect. Nobody gives a shit about your condition. No pay = kick out, no paid bills, loans....

I'm so sorry you're struggling. It makes sense though, it's a terrible thing to suddenly face especially if you're dealing with another illness.

Unfortunately I've struggled with depression, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts since I was 12 years old because of childhood trauma, so the tinnitus just intensified all of the mental issues I've had for 20 years already. I've been in therapy for 15 years, tried over a dozen medications, and nothing seems to help. But I'm still here! And you're right, I wouldn't have even been able to even try those things if I wasn't lucky enough to have the money at the time. I definitely struggle with having hope for the future as I haven't been able to work for so long and now am struggling greatly financially.

I agree, it does feel like no one gives a shit. I don't know where you are, but here in the US you can easily go bankrupt with medical bills and it's hard to get disability. The only thing saving me is that I'm tremendously lucky to have parents who are able to help me financially as I've gone through most of my savings. Without them, I'd likely be homeless and much worse off than I am now. It's so sad how we treat sick people, I hope that changes soon.

I know it's tough, and I know it's hard to carry on when so many things seem to be piling up, but I try to take comfort in the thought that people do come through this. Reading success stories on this forum has helped a lot. If you read through other replies to this post, people have given me some good ideas which I'm going to try. I hope you start feeling better soon!
 
I'm so sorry you're struggling. It makes sense though, it's a terrible thing to suddenly face especially if you're dealing with another illness.
It was suddenly yes. I deal with heavy back hernia and its symptoms and jaw but that is under treatment right now.

Unfortunately I've struggled with depression, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts since I was 12 years old because of childhood trauma, so the tinnitus just intensified all of the mental issues I've had for 20 years already. I've been in therapy for 15 years, tried over a dozen medications, and nothing seems to help. But I'm still here! And you're right, I wouldn't have even been able to even try those things if I wasn't lucky enough to have the money at the time. I definitely struggle with having hope for the future as I haven't been able to work for so long and now am struggling greatly financially.
I do same, more less from 15 years old. I was quite in shape till I reached 29, I had accident so got back problems. Then knee, then jaw. And now tinnitus. I feel now that it is too much. For the first time in my life I literally cried. Quite weird look for a big, fit man but yes.

I agree, it does feel like no one gives a shit. I don't know where you are, but here in the US you can easily go bankrupt with medical bills and it's hard to get disability. The only thing saving me is that I'm tremendously lucky to have parents who are able to help me financially as I've gone through most of my savings. Without them, I'd likely be homeless and much worse off than I am now. It's so sad how we treat sick people, I hope that changes soon.
I live in the Europe, currently in the Netherlands. Here is better I think than in US, I mean the treatment\medicine costs. However I am really scared because I am alone and it is quite not life, always depressed and now with high pitch tone in your head. How long can one last with it...

I know it's tough, and I know it's hard to carry on when so many things seem to be piling up, but I try to take comfort in the thought that people do come through this. Reading success stories on this forum has helped a lot. If you read through other replies to this post, people have given me some good ideas which I'm going to try. I hope you start feeling better soon!
It is hard, I am also sad that there is literally no cure for tinnitus. All what you can do is try this, try that with hope that it will make sickness less. The more you try and it fails, the worse your condition becomes. Just hopeless.
Maybe I exaggerate, probably yes in the eyes of the others, but if I knew that I would have such life, I would choose not to be born.
 
Physical activity is something I really struggle with but I know you're right, I need to just do it. I wish I could afford a treadmill because it's hard to leave my house with agoraphobia, even just to walk around my neighborhood makes me incredibly anxious. I'm going to try my best to start doing so though, I know I need to force myself out of my comfort zone.

Perhaps try some home workout programs? I personally tried programs like Insanity and Insanity MAX 30. you don't need a gym membership, no treadmill, no need to go out and jog. Just use your own body and a yoga mat...it's as simple as that!
 
If you are suffering from panic attacks then read what I just wrote in another post below. Hope it helps.

You don't need medication... dealing with panic attacks is simple. The method is very simple and counterintuitive and yet people seem to suffer from this from years sometimes, it's amazing to me and just goes to show the utter uselessness of doctors.

I have written about this before, I guess you could search for it, essentially you just embrace it, wait and hope for another attack, decide to explore it, by now you should know it will not hurt you.

In fact, why don't you go into your bedroom or somewhere private and do your best to get an attack? What have you got to lose?

Thing is, and you might know this, the expectation of getting an attack can cause an attack, so... break that cycle, get one willingly, or try, it's practically impossible.

After failing to do that, decide to wait for the next one with the plan of "enjoying", "exploring" it... then you will break the cycle and never have another attack.

Please try this, you are suffering for no reason and this works, absolutely guaranteed!
It's barely a month since a friend of mine took this advice and it stopped his attacks in its tracks. He also did not believe me at first.

You might ask how would you muster the courage to "enjoy/explore" something so horrible ? Simple, you should look forward to never having a panic attack again ;)
 
The only true thing that has worked for me is a drink and a joint. You may do this which is your choice - this is how I deal with it - drown it out with a drink and some Mary Jane - it just works for me. I have tried all kinds of other methods and none has worked - so as Johnny and Mary says let's go, I am on board.
 
The only true thing that has worked for me is a drink and a joint. You may do this which is your choice - this is how I deal with it - drown it out with a drink and some Mary Jane - it just works for me. I have tried all kinds of other methods and none has worked - so as Johnny and Mary says let's go, I am on board.

I'm all for whatever works! I can't drink because I have gastrointestinal issues so I end up feeling worse, but I do enjoy a few bowls from time to time if I'm able. I've found it occasionally (only temporarily) makes my T louder, but I just don't give a shit anymore because I'm finally relaxed. :) Works better for me than any anxiety or sleep med I've tried, and I've tried a lot.
 
@Christophe_85 thank you. Still a rollercoaster. I've had laughter and plenty of heavy crying, but, I've begun to get a little bit more sleep, and that in itself is very helpful. One day at a time. Thank you for asking and I hope better days are ahead for you.

Hello,

Yes this is good for you if you can get better sleep... This is very important...

As you say, one day at a time...

What kind of work do you do ?
 

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