@shelbynn,
Fellow social worker here. Although I haven't been in practice in over 20+ years. Switched careers quite a while ago.
I hope you're doing OK. I feel for your struggle and I was there in 2015. I got bilateral tinnitus after attending an AC/DC concert. Similar to your friend, mine went away after about two years. My process was the same as hers. I was using sound machines, medication to sleep etc. I used to carry a sound machine around with me in the office when I had to go to meetings. My hearing at the time was perfectly normal. I eventually learned to deal with it and cope and then I stopped using sound machines, stopped using my sound pillow and noticed it was gone.
I'm back on this site because I had some hearing loss in my left ear last May and my tinnitus came back in that ear. Ugh! Of course, I went through it all over again as if I had never had it in the first place. It was just like 2015 again. And I just sobbed and sobbed to my ENT because I did everything right. After I first got tinnitus, I got custom-made earplugs, I protected my ears, I did everything right. I did everything I was supposed to do. But I habituated to it pretty quickly. Until two weeks ago when it got worse, changed tone, pitch etc. and is soooooo much more annoying, and I learned I have more hearing loss in that ear. Now I'm headed for the million dollar work up to make sure the etiology is not the dreaded acoustic neuroma or something else. Best case scenario, it's cumulative damage of years of going to concerts and not realizing I needed to protect my ears. Oh and I think there are at least three occurrences when the burglar alarm went off in my office in my early 20s.
So it is a process, but my point is that I am confident that you are going to get better. And it may in fact go away.
I'm assuming you have no measurable hearing loss? The key is to take it one day at a time. Just like you are doing.
Going through this a third time for myself, the best I can do is one day at a time.
And for the record, I cannot believe that doctor told you tinnitus isn't a problem. How fortunate is he that he clearly doesn't suffer from it. I too cried to my ENT and asked why there's no treatment or cure for tinnitus. His response was that because it doesn't technically kill you, there is not a lot of research dollars being funneled into it. He was very kind about it and he was very understanding. He also went on to say that since the problem is really primarily neurological and multifactorial, targeting treatments has been a massive challenge. Well I certainly understood the complexity of the issue from a neurological perspective, it didn't make me feel any better.
Hang in there. One day at a time. This past week I had two massive spikes in the middle of the night so I know what you're talking about. Sent me into a tailspin like you wouldn't believe. Both times I seemed to be better by the morning.
Best,
Danielle