There's honestly no need to thank me, but thankyou anyway
Its not a burden at all to listen to how you are feeling. A lot of us have been there, are still there. We all understand it Frank.We understand how T can make life feel unbearable and ruined. But, your 'good days' are evidence that it wont always be this bad for you. You are doing the right things by being completely proactive and having the fighter attitude.
T took my personality away for months before I got the Pregabalin. It was one of the worst parts of it. I'd always been one to have laughs and deliver good one-liners, humour meant a lot to me, but it went completely. Then I couldnt believe it when I started to have little quips with my fellow man when I was out shopping or something and when I once again could share the laughs I have with my sister. T does get me down still and nowadays I swear at it but I seem to be coping now. One day your personality will shine through again and there wont be as much preoccupation.
About the Pregabalin though, you have to take it continously, its not like Xanax etc in that respect, you cant do it ad-hoc. I thought thats what you might be thinking from what I read in your post.
I understand what you are saying about habituation and when I first got T and started all my research I laughed and sneered at it and binned it completely. I wanted this noise GONE and nothing else but that was going to do. But, after nothing I tried worked and I had my 'crash' I would rip someone's arm off to have Habituation. Not being bothered at all by the noise is good enough for me. People go for hours and days not hearing the T. I emailed the TRT centre to ask about my own noise, as its very irregular sounding, not a constant tone, it moves like a snake or something. Jonathon Hzell himself replied and told me "TRT works on ANY noise, regardless of type or volume". I have to believe that. I've also been told by a very good hearing therapist that "the natural course of tinnitus is one of habituation" that its just natural that in the end we will habituate it. When you are ready this might give comfort.
There was a poster on here called Laperson who wrote a post that gave me heart during the bad time and he explains the suffering very eloquently. I cant find the post on here anymore to just post the link but I copied the text to my desktop to re-read and so will paste it here for you at the end of my post.
Enjoy your walk and ducks & geese, swing your arms and hopefully there'll be some nice wind noise too
Speak soon x
Laperson's post.............
I've had Tinnitus for about 8 years. It is truly the strangest thing I have ever encountered and for some the onset of it will send you threw a life you could never imagine. A lot of people wont understand what you are going threw and the only time they may try to relate is when you talk about it with them. The moment the conversation ends about what you we are going threw is the moment we continue to suffer alone with the ones we love separated by a sound that puts a wedge in our relationships.
Relationships are bound by understanding each other and the affinity of thoughts we share, once the onset of my tinnitus began no one could understand why I was so depressed and miserable. I lost a lot with tinnitus my job, my wife, my friends and my love for certain things in life. Everything that I understood about life and related to in life had to be relearned and newly appreciated with a new constant. A constant high pitched noise
Sound is one of the senses closely related to emotion and when we don't understand where a sound is coming from and why it is happening we fear it. A startling sound we may hear resolves after a moment and once we understand any startling sound we fear it less or understand what to do when it presents it self to us.
I understand what everyone is going threw with tinnitus 100%. I wanted to kill myself and hit one of the deepest depressions a human can endure, living minute by minute hoping it would go away and constantly suffering anxiety contemplating the ability to endure this sound for the rest of my life.
YOU WILL SURVIVE THIS AND YOU WILL BE HAPPY WITH OR WITH OUT IT, I PROMISE.
You must know I'm here with tinnitus and it has become a small stress in my life compared to what I prepared to do years ago to end the noise and many of you know exactly what I am talking about. There are many things that stress us in life and this may very well be one of the hardest things a person can endure besides a constant strong physical pain that only morphine can ease but with the severity of this condition there is truly a way to live life happily with it and find it normal.
Sometimes it will get louder sometimes it will get softer and sometimes it will seem like it's not there. Concentrating on the fix or what we did at the moment it seemed less is just chasing our tails looking for the answer and piles on more stress. I suddenly let go of that and said I don't want it to go away I want to learn to live with it because if I can then I am certainly strong and know that I have overcome something many cannot and if I do then I will surely let others know that it is attainable to feel good even with it right by my side
I will not hate my tinnitus nor will I love it but slowly I have become indifferent to it just like I am indifferent to the t cells that roam within my body. We will not forget it but we can pay it more attention. I use to be afraid to say to someone "you must accept this" knowing I would have to live by my word and do just that, start to accept it as my tinnitus. I will have it now, I will have it a few minutes from now, I will have it an hour from now, I will have it tomorrow, I will have it next week and next year and if I don't well my life as I know it now will not be normal.
I will have it with all of you and that is why I titled this Hello Family
God Bless Us All!
Michael Lapers