A lot of very salient points in this thread. I'd like to thank Dr Ancill for bringing it up.
I remember when I went and saw an audiologist after my tinnitus went through the roof, I was sitting on a chair in her office as she was talking about hearing aids, and I simply burst into tears and started bawling my eyes out.
The really weird thing was, even though I was sobbing uncontrollably, I couldn't stop thinking about how attractive the audiologist was. Like, I was sitting there thinking, "I'm a grown man crying in a startled lady's office, she's talking to me about hearing aids and I'm only 33... and she's pretty much one of the most attractive women I've ever seen".
To me, that's a sense of perspective. I still have intrusive tinnitus. I still need hearing aids. But hey... I got to interact with someone I would otherwise never have met.
Tinnitus sucks, and it's definitely the worst thing I've ever had to deal with (and I've dealt with a lot). But if I let it consume my life, then I'm not really living. That's the way I feel about it anyway.
I remember when I went and saw an audiologist after my tinnitus went through the roof, I was sitting on a chair in her office as she was talking about hearing aids, and I simply burst into tears and started bawling my eyes out.
The really weird thing was, even though I was sobbing uncontrollably, I couldn't stop thinking about how attractive the audiologist was. Like, I was sitting there thinking, "I'm a grown man crying in a startled lady's office, she's talking to me about hearing aids and I'm only 33... and she's pretty much one of the most attractive women I've ever seen".
To me, that's a sense of perspective. I still have intrusive tinnitus. I still need hearing aids. But hey... I got to interact with someone I would otherwise never have met.
Tinnitus sucks, and it's definitely the worst thing I've ever had to deal with (and I've dealt with a lot). But if I let it consume my life, then I'm not really living. That's the way I feel about it anyway.