- Nov 25, 2016
- 5
- Tinnitus Since
- 02/2016
- Cause of Tinnitus
- construction, clubbing, loud rock concert, stress
Hey @Jazzer
Thanks for your message. Yes I've watched similar video clips on YouTube etc.
Personally I'm a great believer in shock tactics to get people thinking, it works for me. I go back to my original message when I mentioned a film called 'It's All Gone Pete Tong' that film scared me silly and i was adamant that i was gonna stop clubbing which I did for a very long time until complacency set in. In hindsight I wish I'd watched that film every month to cement the scary possibility of tinnitus and losing my hearing.
I just want the public to know that there is a different side to tinnitus. It's not all barely there, only audible in a quiet room. We've all met those friends or family who get tinnitus sometimes and they don't understand why it's such a big deal, just ignore it and don't obsess about it etc etc. One of the most cutting comments was from my own mother at the beginning of my tinnitus journey when I was trying to explain to her I was struggling. I was trying to get her to read a book on tinnitus to better explain what I was going through. Her response was I know what tinnitus is, lots of people have tinnitus, I don't need to read about it, stop obsessing about it.
I agree on what @Starthrower mentioned above in that the Tinnitus Organisations probably wouldn't be happy for morbid stories out there. But I really believe if the public knew the truth that they would be asking questions and demanding funding and more research be done. Every single one of them or their family is just one too loud noise exposure - one too stressful event - one too many ototoxic medications etc etc away from possibly joining this tinnitus club.
My goal is for the public to start asking questions. for eg: Why do we not know that taking my kid to an IMAX cinema is damaging my child's hearing. Why do we not know there are over 200 medications that could give me or my family tinnitus etc etc.
You mention "Actual distress is perhaps too nasty to sell to a largely disinterested audience" but that is covered daily in soap operas all over our TV screens with stories of drinking and drugs etc etc, so I don't see the public not wanting to watch.
As everyone says it's just so hard to convey the constant torture to friends and family. But I really think following a character's journey on a soap opera etc over many weeks / months dealing with tinnitus would get the public thinking and asking questions. We can then let the properly informed public do our work for us in raising funds for research.
I'm serious about sending a basic script out to producers, script writers, TV studio heads etc etc even if I have to do it myself. It's not as if I'm writing lies or fiction, it's the truth and it could just be my own story.
It might not be scripted well, but at least I know I gave it a shot.
You miss 100% of the shots you don't take.
Thanks again Dave!!!!
Man Hugs
Stuart x
Thanks for your message. Yes I've watched similar video clips on YouTube etc.
Personally I'm a great believer in shock tactics to get people thinking, it works for me. I go back to my original message when I mentioned a film called 'It's All Gone Pete Tong' that film scared me silly and i was adamant that i was gonna stop clubbing which I did for a very long time until complacency set in. In hindsight I wish I'd watched that film every month to cement the scary possibility of tinnitus and losing my hearing.
I just want the public to know that there is a different side to tinnitus. It's not all barely there, only audible in a quiet room. We've all met those friends or family who get tinnitus sometimes and they don't understand why it's such a big deal, just ignore it and don't obsess about it etc etc. One of the most cutting comments was from my own mother at the beginning of my tinnitus journey when I was trying to explain to her I was struggling. I was trying to get her to read a book on tinnitus to better explain what I was going through. Her response was I know what tinnitus is, lots of people have tinnitus, I don't need to read about it, stop obsessing about it.
I agree on what @Starthrower mentioned above in that the Tinnitus Organisations probably wouldn't be happy for morbid stories out there. But I really believe if the public knew the truth that they would be asking questions and demanding funding and more research be done. Every single one of them or their family is just one too loud noise exposure - one too stressful event - one too many ototoxic medications etc etc away from possibly joining this tinnitus club.
My goal is for the public to start asking questions. for eg: Why do we not know that taking my kid to an IMAX cinema is damaging my child's hearing. Why do we not know there are over 200 medications that could give me or my family tinnitus etc etc.
You mention "Actual distress is perhaps too nasty to sell to a largely disinterested audience" but that is covered daily in soap operas all over our TV screens with stories of drinking and drugs etc etc, so I don't see the public not wanting to watch.
As everyone says it's just so hard to convey the constant torture to friends and family. But I really think following a character's journey on a soap opera etc over many weeks / months dealing with tinnitus would get the public thinking and asking questions. We can then let the properly informed public do our work for us in raising funds for research.
I'm serious about sending a basic script out to producers, script writers, TV studio heads etc etc even if I have to do it myself. It's not as if I'm writing lies or fiction, it's the truth and it could just be my own story.
It might not be scripted well, but at least I know I gave it a shot.
You miss 100% of the shots you don't take.
Thanks again Dave!!!!
Man Hugs
Stuart x