You are definitely right.
But I concede the psychological problems accompanying this can be real. They are in my case and are severe. My disdain towards world, people and things around me is extreme, including myself. Maybe tinnitus/hyperacusis just uncovered/amplified it. Another more grounded person with the same level of tinnitus/hyperacusis would behave differently. Things that brought me joy in the past, put me off now. Things that I simply disliked, I hate now. Things that I hated/feared, I loathe and hate with hellish passion now. It is insanity, no two ways around it.
On a related note,
@Jason C's my favorite story - though it took 2 years, his tinnitus completely resolved. I find it interesting and very relatable to read about his anger issues during the ordeal:
Dealing with Self-Hate
He persevered and succeeded, but in the end because his tinnitus went away?
It feels to me I need to somehow survive for a while without causing much more damage around me. If I heal in meantime, then maybe things will be ok, at least for a while.
I have read many of your posts. You sound a lot like me on the onset of this. I guess I can relate.
The trouble is we can't just go get on with our lives. Life itself doesn't allow for that. Not in the way others tell us to and expect us to. It feels like an opposing magnet, the more they push you towards normality, the harder it is to conform to it.
On the onset of this I really thought tinnitus and hyperacusis were the ultimate in undiagnosed, misunderstood conditions. I was wrong. I am suffering other misunderstood, misdiagnosed conditions worse than my severe tinnitus and hyperacusis - and in fact I get more sympathy from the medical world on tinnitus and hyperacusis than I do my current symptoms.
My mindset shifted. From being all consumed by tinnitus and hyperacusis, to being all consumed by my new ailments - because they are worse.
It made me realise the mind CAN shift focus. No one else shifted it for me, it came from me.
Engrossing the mind on a problem is a powerful thing. It doesn't always matter what the problem is but it must have meaning to you.
Wishing tinnitus to go away is futile and mentally damaging, accepting it is too stomach wrenching to contemplate - so now, I do neither.
I absorb myself in to whatever I can, and can still enjoy. Literally absorb.
Whilst you are where you are now, balance is the very first step, not normality.
I was given a good piece of advice which is do what you (used to) enjoy, even if at the start you hate doing it, and hate yourself for attempting it - but still do it. Keep doing it. It won't take long before glimmers of light and satisfaction do hit. Even in small doses at first but it can set off a chain reaction.
I never believed it at the start but the mind can adapt. It's not about accepting but adapting, and it takes time.
I was worried about something you said. You said if it suddenly disappeared you would still struggle with what it left behind...
...I'm a guy, not much in to talking therapy and personally see it as horse shit if I'm honest (for me personally, not for others) - but I tried it. It can help. Doesn't fix it, but can help.
I don't like giving up. I will keep fighting, researching, learning and discovering whilst I'm still able (and believe me it's damn tough at times).
You have had some really encouraging signs that in all honesty I am jealous of. I'd love to hear that in 6 to 12 months time you are having continuous improvements. Don't give up on getting there.
Vent your frustrations on here. It's what Tinnitus Talk is here for. Nothing weak in that. Keep doing it if you need to.
Engross and adapt. Change will happen, it's how the mind works.
Time is unconquerable, but it can heal.