Hi Karen, nice to meet you. I know how you feel, everyone here does, I think. All I can offer at the minute is this:
- you can be better; everything will be alright; you are going to be OK
- you've already learned how to cope with T, since 1987.
I think you're more anxious now because of the changes in your other ear, and this is causing you to focus on the T, increasing the anxiety and so on.
What happened to bring on the hearing loss in both cases?
I drew a lot of strength from reading recovery stories on forums like this one, and from convincing myself that it was worse *because* of the anxiety. I still have the noise, and I hear it mostly when on this forum (ironic and unfortunate!), but it doesn't stop me sleeping. I have used antidepressants (long term) to get stable (sounds drastic, but I'm depressive/anxious naturally), and amitryptiline (10mg) to help sleep in the first few weeks.
Getting back to work, back to my hobbies, and exercise were key to getting better; it's almost impossible to get started on these things when you're so anxious and want to hide in a corner all curled up, but baby steps, one day at a time. It's all about distraction; it feels forced at first, and you're constantly checking on how distracted you've been, but eventually you start to unwind.
I hope some of this is helpful, or reassuring, or both.
DD