Sorry you have to go through the torture of tinnitus. When I was tortured for 3 years I begged God for help, that's when I invented Tinnitus Mix. Tinnitus Mix works on about 50% of those that follow instructions. You must be in the other 50% that it does not help.
Don't give up, there is something out there that will help you. It's just finding it. I wish you good luck in your journey.
David, this is not an assault on you or your product but I think the question is simply "why haven't we seen more success stories here?" You claim it helps 50% of people that use it. There are 25k+ members here on the forums (I believe). If even 1/100 try it, that would mean 125 people would have positive results. Why are they not posting here?
You claim your Tinnitus Mix has already cured 100s or 1000s but you have continued to post the same 10 reviews or letters over and over. Where are the others in this? I can tell you if your Tinnitus Mix cured me, not only would I be on here singing your praises, I would probably wire you a nice sum of money and get a tattoo of your name across my chest. I trust
@Renfrey has been having some success but I don't know how much is because of natural healing especially due to his lifestyle and commitment to getting better. His is probably the only review I give any benefit of doubt to.
I haven't really seen any of the prominent members posting any success with your method. Don't get me wrong, I hope to God it works and I myself have invested into the headphones and a cheap WAV player, but I just don't have a huge level of confidence because all the success stories seem to come from you and not other members of this forum.
Also, just want to point out that if in fact this university research project is authentic, the writers have made some pretty intense claims:
"The ultrasound frequencies, as obtained in this research, can reverse the process of creating tinnitus and therefore it heals the human beings suffering from it. Based on the different interviews and feedbacks, it is clear that the sound wav and the headphone can be treated as a medical sound treatment or medical ultrasound treatment."
This is just one of a few claims in the document. I think it's very irresponsible for educated, bonafide researchers to make these kind of claims given such a small sample size and without understanding the underlying mechanics of why it's supposedly happening. I have my reservations about the authenticity of this paper or the credentials of the people who wrote it. Was this an undergrad project for a science course? I'm not being facetious, I truly am trying to understand the craziness that is R. David Case's Tinnitus Mix.