Just a curious question. Is there in 2017 actually someone who completely recovered after having a tinnitus like a high pitch noise for many years (5+) that was caused by too loud noises?
Yes I know two people (one passed away last year) which had their pretty severe tinnitus completely disappear. One after five years (70 years old) and one after three (14 years old)
So the body just healed itself? I have it for hmm 23 years now, learned very early that suffering is a choice and if you don't do it, you do not suffer at all, still hoping one day someone finds a real cure. Even most research I have seen even it sounds sophisticated is 99.9% nonsense.
I have a friend have had T about 10 years. He was suicidal first 2 years. Still now he have T but don't bother him anymore and he is living a very happy and healthy life.
That is relatively easy @Bidyut saha , the question is not about dealing with it, but about physical and neurological healing, wherever I am not sure it is a neurological error .. I am still believe it is a physical error somewhere, at least that explains that biting your teeth makes the sound go up.
@maltese I mean completely healed, I know many who live a really normal life, but they
still have the ringing.
Two people in this forum posted during the last week that they had acquired t again after 2 and in one case 5 years' break. Now both cases, if my memory serves me well, were rumbling t. It may have a different ethnology, which brings me to the point that thus info would be beneficial to researchers...does anyone think they know have this type of info? @Wojtek Kalka is yours loud and you have a happy life?
@Candy yes mine is loud and I have a very happy life... as written suffering is a choice, but that is another topic, I have a friend who is in a wheelchair and he still wakeboards like a pro, but he still would prefer to walk, but it will never happen...
Yes I know two people (one passed away last year) which had their pretty severe tinnitus completely disappear. One after five years (70 years old) and one after three (14 years old)