At the risk of sounding woo-woo, I met a psychic years ago with an incredible ability to predict things. Because of where I was emotionally at that stage of my life, 27 years old in fact, and barely recovering from a series of devastating personal traumas, he and I discussed suicide.
What he told me is that when you commit suicide, you come back right where you left off because you haven't resolved the issue. Most Christians don't believe in reincarnation, they believe if you commit suicide it's likely you'll go to hell.
The way I see it, you have 4 possible outcomes:
1. You die and nothing happens afterwards. You and your soul are extinguished forever, with no legacy;
2. You die and go to hell forever as punishment for taking your life. I imagine there's tortuous pain in hell;
3. You die, you reincarnate, and you have physical issues that are as bad, or worse, than what you're dealing with now;
4. You die, you reincarnate, and whatever kind of life you have will have nothing to do with this life.
I am no stranger to the issue of suicide. A very nice woman I know recently committed suicide at the end of a long battle with extremely painful ovarian cancer. For a 27-year-old, though, it's a bad choice, especially with all the research going on now to help veterans coming back from war with hearing loss and tinnitus.
I'm interested in knowing all the things you have done to help yourself get through this. Other than am-101, which you somehow managed to sabotage by not going, what else have you done? Balance exercises? Audio notch therapy? Supplements for calming the CNS? Counseling? TRT? CBT? Brain games to stimulate your prefrontal cortex to redirect your reaction away from the limbic system? Meditation?
It's hard work to adjust to physical impairments of any kind. No one can do this for you. What effort have you actually expended to help yourself?