Hello TinnitusTalk World,
I feel like I know many of you, but you don't know me. I think, this evening, I feel strong enough to introduce myself.
I developed t from a loud concert in April of this year, it's bee about six months. I was a disaster when it started. Like so many, I was inconsolable, depressed, plagued by panic attacks and anxiety, insomnia and disturbingly serious thoughts of suicide.
In my endless query of the internet for all information available relating to my problem, I found TinnitusTalk and have been one of the thousands of silent readers out there benefiting from your research and conversation. I actually found Sarah's Garden (a non profit HBOT center in Ohio) though one of your threads and while it didn't stop the ringing, it was a healing place to be and I am so enormously grateful for that.
I'm always working on living with tinnitus, as all of you know, that's a daily task. However, I'm trying to incorporate more gratitude into my life, and while I am not quite enlightened enough to say I'm grateful for my tinnitus, I am grateful for the opportunity it has given me to search for a deeper inner peace (of which I occasionally catch blessed glimpses), and to show gratitude for all the good things in my life.
So I wanted to make a profile and say thank you to all of you. I have amassed a heaping helping of tinnitus knowledge in the last six months, from here, from experience and from everyone I've met and all I've read. I would say I am a little less a sufferer of tinnitus now and more a person who is living with it. The key word here being living, not just surviving. It's not that way every day, but it happens and that is a great gift. I hope I can give back those who are suffering here, and those who are just giving back to our little community with what I'm learning and experiencing.
In pursuit of my own healing, and in an effort to make something good out of my tinnitus, I started a blog that more or less chronicles my experiences. It may be of no use to anyone but me, but if you're looking for books that this tinnitus person has found inspiring, my experiences with about a million different therapies (HBOT, steroids, anti-anxiety, anti-depression, herbs, acupuncture etc.) it's all there. I'm going to keep adding to it, so it will grow. If it gives even one person a little hope, then it would make me feel good. That said, I'm not selling or endorsing anything and I have no medical authority of any kind, just sharing my own journey in what is hopefully a hopeful, but honest way. I know I was desperate when I first came down with tinnitus, and I feel like every little shred of information helped, so hopefully, this will be a way for me to give back and sort through my own feelings. I hope this is okay to share here: www.hopeblog.org
Here's to all of you. Thank you and may you all find the kind of healing you are searching for.
I feel like I know many of you, but you don't know me. I think, this evening, I feel strong enough to introduce myself.
I developed t from a loud concert in April of this year, it's bee about six months. I was a disaster when it started. Like so many, I was inconsolable, depressed, plagued by panic attacks and anxiety, insomnia and disturbingly serious thoughts of suicide.
In my endless query of the internet for all information available relating to my problem, I found TinnitusTalk and have been one of the thousands of silent readers out there benefiting from your research and conversation. I actually found Sarah's Garden (a non profit HBOT center in Ohio) though one of your threads and while it didn't stop the ringing, it was a healing place to be and I am so enormously grateful for that.
I'm always working on living with tinnitus, as all of you know, that's a daily task. However, I'm trying to incorporate more gratitude into my life, and while I am not quite enlightened enough to say I'm grateful for my tinnitus, I am grateful for the opportunity it has given me to search for a deeper inner peace (of which I occasionally catch blessed glimpses), and to show gratitude for all the good things in my life.
So I wanted to make a profile and say thank you to all of you. I have amassed a heaping helping of tinnitus knowledge in the last six months, from here, from experience and from everyone I've met and all I've read. I would say I am a little less a sufferer of tinnitus now and more a person who is living with it. The key word here being living, not just surviving. It's not that way every day, but it happens and that is a great gift. I hope I can give back those who are suffering here, and those who are just giving back to our little community with what I'm learning and experiencing.
In pursuit of my own healing, and in an effort to make something good out of my tinnitus, I started a blog that more or less chronicles my experiences. It may be of no use to anyone but me, but if you're looking for books that this tinnitus person has found inspiring, my experiences with about a million different therapies (HBOT, steroids, anti-anxiety, anti-depression, herbs, acupuncture etc.) it's all there. I'm going to keep adding to it, so it will grow. If it gives even one person a little hope, then it would make me feel good. That said, I'm not selling or endorsing anything and I have no medical authority of any kind, just sharing my own journey in what is hopefully a hopeful, but honest way. I know I was desperate when I first came down with tinnitus, and I feel like every little shred of information helped, so hopefully, this will be a way for me to give back and sort through my own feelings. I hope this is okay to share here: www.hopeblog.org
Here's to all of you. Thank you and may you all find the kind of healing you are searching for.