Some of you fockers are depressing. It's just a focking noise and it can't hurt you. Stop focusing on it and get back to enjoying life regardless of it. Stay busy, don't talk about it, have conversations, take up hobbies and get out of your own way.
First I thought you were joking, because there are even some so-called professionals whose thoughts align with the above, and so I hoped you were being sarcastic.
I have to say, if you were sincere, then your earlier post in another thread summarizes it well:
In my opinion most people won't feel too deeply about others' issues because they're so focused on their own. Honestly, myself included. We can give to charity and feel briefly for others, but if it's not any issue affecting our children, spouse or immediate family then we don't generally put a lot of effort in to understand and console.
Tinnitus is not the same for everyone. The scale literally goes from it being something you can only hear when you plug your ears to being tortured with highly reactive, multi-tone tinnitus that you can't mask anywhere, which pierces through your brain and incapacitates you to a level you couldn't imagine.
It's basically the difference of some music playing a mile away that you can barely hear to being blasted with large studio speakers in a confined, small room.
Please try to have some respect and empathy for those who are on the worse end of the spectrum. We have lost genuinely wonderful, caring, loving people to the consequences of severe tinnitus - those people are no longer with us to defend themselves and the actions they took, but let it be absolutely clear; they were not weak, it was not just a focking noise, and there was no option of just staying busy and taking up some new hobbies; their tinnitus was soul-crushing, life-altering, utterly debilitating. And please make no mistake; this it can be, for any of us. I'm 100% convinced that there is a level of tinnitus that nobody, not even the strongest of minds can survive.
All this said, I actually agree staying busy, avoiding making it the center of your thoughts as much as possible, were it through hobbies or so, can be very helpful for the garden variety of tinnitus. And some people definitely benefit not constantly reading about tinnitus.
But your comment, applying it across the board, is what too many in the general population without tinnitus (or with mild tinnitus) think. That thinking needs to be fought back at all costs.