Mick... I had wanted to add a little footnote to your prior post that I had responded to and I will do it now (just back online here), as the theme is similar.
You said at the end of the previous discussion: "To hell with tinnitus, iI have to let tinnitus do it's thing while I do mine." Afterwards, when I read that it worried me. I wanted to get back to you and indeed, as you are posting here above, Tinnitus is not that easy to be "un-worried" about... AND YOU SHOULD BE!!!
Mick, it is kinda heavy to say that, but I mean it in all good intention and with as much empathy as I can have you believe. I totally agree with you that we must try and live our lives as richly and fully as possible, without tinnitus (and/or hyperacusis) ruling over us like some tin-pot dictator having us cower in fear. Absolutely! BUT...Please, take my word for it. Once you get trauma/sound induced tinnitus, I think it needs to be something that you be aware of for a long time ahead, if not your whole life. Just like looking both ways when you cross a street becomes much more real after you get rammed by a bicycle unexpectedly. One pays closer attention! That is what learning is all about. It's not necessarily a "heavy" thing, but sort of just a fact like thing.
To me and my long experience with tinnitus, it's a 'real injury' despite being so darn goofy, and hidden, and invisible, and mysterious, and inexplicable, and not so easily treatable...yet. Yes, we can habituate to it and mostly do. And yes, with some lucky few it can miraculously disappear. That may happen to you. I sure hope so....But, I was worried when you almost sounded to me like you would challenge the tinnitus by living your life and doing what you wanted irrespective...to hell with it! Etc.
Yes, DO THAT, but also be careful. Be aware that you are on of us that seem to get zapped by a loud sound and pay for it, where others are not and just say: "Wow, that was loud!" No damage. No tinnitus. No suffering.
Unless you are very lucky (we are all different physiologically), I would continue to be cognizant of potential damaging levels of sound, and protect...in those instances! Not elsewhere. Don't let it rule you everywhere for sure...But also don't underestimate the biological'structural makeup of our hearing/brains that seem to do this wacky thing to us irrespective of what we think about it. And here I mean the actual "damage" part, not our attitude or thoughts about it, or how it should be or could be.
You are 26. That is a real big plus, as we heal faster when younger and are by nature more adaptable. You will get over this.....but don't tempt fate and push it too far too fast with the exposure. As many have said here: TIME is the big thing. It really is true. Take your time...And yes, I know how hard that is to do.
Take gentle care. Zimichael