Wouldn't you say that without those stories you would be more likely to expose your ears to noise, and as a result you would be more likely to write your own horror story, ending up with a deeper depression for a lot longer?!
I suppose you're right, I'm a very big worrier so I panic about everything
Was it a high pitch tone early on? If so, then it is improving. If not, then it means your ears haven't been hurt as much as ears of some people here. Both a hiss and a static white noise are a lot easier to ignore than a high pitch tone. Mine began as the sound of loud crickets then eventually, as my ears healed, became a hiss. When I put on my Peltor muffs, I can hear a high pitch tone. This seems to prove that when a high pitch tone is quiet enough, we perceive it as a hiss.
It's varying from hiss, to high cricket noise, to hiss to white noise, then for a split second-nothing! Then back again
( it's only been a week and I've only just started properly treating it so do you think that it shall go? I'm petrified, being unwell and had no sleep last night also, so today it sounds a bit like a vacuum cleaner
(
It is true that the younger you are, the more likely it is that your T will fade. It is also true that T tends to fade for most people. This is assuming that you won't do anything to undermine your healing, like exposing yourself to noise.