True happiness comes from within.I honestly wish we would all be cured, so we find true happiness.
stephen nagler
True happiness comes from within.I honestly wish we would all be cured, so we find true happiness.
I have had 2 cups of coffee today and now drinking green tea....yum. Caffeine will not hurt you (moderate doses) and will not make your T worse. In fact, recently shown that caffeine might protect hearing and help T.I'd drink so much caffeine that I'd overdose lol! God how I miss green tea.
I have had 2 cups of coffee today and now drinking green tea....yum. Caffeine will not hurt you (moderate doses) and will not make your T worse. In fact, recently shown that caffeine might protect hearing and help T.
As far as my life changing if my T went away. It wouldn't really. Any life issues I am dealing with now is not because of my tinnitus.
True happiness comes from within.
stephen nagler
Do you have that? Does Trobalt help?
Spend as much time as I could physically bear in an anechoic chamber basking in the silence.
Interesting, I was unaware. In that case I guess just somewhere really quiet would be alright.Well, you'd most likely hear tinnitus, everyone can in one of those.
yeah - you mean the within that is clogged with noise I guess ... sorry but within means that place of stilness where no problems can touch and no mind can go .. tinnitus pretty much fills that spot ... it is harder to enjoy the within with tinnitus.True happiness comes from within.
stephen nagler
I totally understand that. Tinnitus is hard. Very hard. No doubt about it. But that does not change the fact that true happiness can only be found within oneself.... it is harder to enjoy the within with tinnitus.
Ever heard of Maslow's Hierarchy of Basic Needs...?But that does not change the fact that true happiness can only be found within oneself.
Ever heard of Maslow's Hierarchy of Basic Needs...?
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As an analogy, there is no point in talking about "true happiness" unless your body is working as it should (and that would include tinnitus). Only when basic needs are addressed - and fulfilled - can a human being progress further up the pyramid (e.g. "true happiness").
attheedgeofscience
06/APR/2015.
No, of course not: that's why I used the word "analogy"...I don't see anything on that pyramid about tinnitus
Well... if those people are happy, then tinnitus is not a big deal for them for whatever reason (e.g. mildness).What about all the people with T who say they are happy and love their lives, are they lying or just misguided?
Good. Excellent. And so are patients with terminal cancer: they are here; they are thinking; they are breathing. But not much more than that, is my guess. Not exactly a definition of success.I'm here, I'm thinking, I'm breathing... that seems pretty good to me!
But that does not change the fact that true happiness can only be found within oneself.
Do you have that? Does Trobalt help?
You are not comparing terminal cancer with tinnitus?Good. Excellent. And so are patients with terminal cancer: they are here; they are thinking; they are breathing. But not much more than that, is my guess. Not exactly a definition of success.
With tinnitus, you always have hope and time on your side. With terminal cancer, not so.
Why would you say that?
So people with terminal cancer are hopeless?
There's treatments for cancer patients though, not tinnitus.
You don't consider Trobalt a treatment? Did you know one of the side effects of cancer treatment is tinnitus? I have a friend who had breast cancer and now she's cancer free but has tinnitus.
Well... what am I doing?You are not comparing terminal cancer with tinnitus?
Very true. But also beside the point.With tinnitus, you always have hope and time on your side. With terminal cancer, not so.
There is tinnitus and then there is TINNITUS. For the latter, my response - to your question - would be yes. Very much so.You seem (to me) to be suggesting that tinnitus necessarily precludes happiness. Is that really your viewpoint?
There is tinnitus and then there is TINNITUS. For the latter, my response - to your question - would be yes. Very much so.
At least I am not a dealer of false hope who uses funky phrases such as "fake it until you make it" (or some such non-sense). You only need to go to the "Success Stories" section and you will find several folks there who obviously are trying convince themselves that they are doing better by writing a story about their "success". Not so convincing when the same people reveal in other threads that they are considering TRT, clinical trials, and posting questions in the Doctor's Corner about help.And that's why you're in the state you're in. That type of thinking keeps people broken.
attheedgeofscience...I specifically asked the staff of TinnitusTalk to send "alerts" to all active users (so that they were notified of the developments in this thread upon their next log in). Additionally, @Markku spent a considerable effort producing a newsletter to all 6000 members (which was mailed to their private e-mail accounts). Despite these efforts to create awareness and interest among members, the response and willingness to support the initiative has remained close to what is probably best described as "non-existent" - here's why:
- Out of 6000 members, none volunteered to join Team Trobalt, initially. I had to "hand-pick" members in order to get anyone to join (besides @Steve and @Markku who were already part of the team).
- The ATA was initially contacted as the organization to assist us with the informal trial i.e. getting a formal study undertaken in order to (hopefully) prove efficacy of Trobalt (and hence move the drug from off to on-label in the treatment of tinnitus). The ATA did respond to our request, but I would not describe their feedback as especially "welcoming" i.e. we were essentially told that we should anticipate self-funding (to some degree) and we would have to submit a formal proposal for the ATA to consider (which would then - probably - take a fair bit of time to process by the SAB). We were also told another "fact" (by a former member of the ATA) we would have to comply with in order to increase our chance of success (of the proposal being approved by the ATA). But I cannot disclose that "fact" in public.
- Despite many - both public and private-message - pleas to get participants of the trial to complete their progress forms regularly, the end result has been poor in this respect. I estimate that Team Trobalt has invested some 400 hours of our own time (in total). Still, getting a user to just spend one minute per week or per day to fill out the basic skeleton data of the progress forms has been somewhat difficult (for roughly 50% to 60% of the trialees). As late as yesterday, this very fact was actually highlighted by another non-Team Trobalt member:
Agreed. 100%.All you people that preach happiness and hunky dory despite tinnitus good on you.
It's either that you are some super humans or your t is so bloody mild "need to look for it" to hear it type.
At least I am not a dealer of false hope who uses funky phrases such as "fake it until you make it" (or some such non-sense). You only need to go to the "Success Stories" section and you will find several folks there who obviously are trying convince themselves that they are doing better by writing a story about their "success". Not so convincing when the same people reveal in other threads that they are considering TRT, clinical trials, and posting questions in the Doctor's Corner about help.
Call me cynical - although I personally prefer the word "objective", but cynical or not, at least I don't create false hope, nor do I sweep things under the carpet and pretend the problems aren't there. The truth is most people can't handle the truth, and so they put on their rose-tinted glasses hoping that will fix their problems. What a delusional mindset. Sad.
As for myself, the reason I am part of the forum is because of my involvement with Team Trobalt helping a community that cannot figure out how to help itself:
attheedgeofscience
07/APR/2015.
Right. So what makes you log on to TinnitusTalk just about every day for several hours? I believe I could think of some more exciting forums to join or activities to do. But - hey - perhaps TinnitusTalk is such a cool place to "hang-out" - you never know.I can genuinely say that I have my life back and am doing everything I'd be doing without tinnitus except that now I'm more conscious about my hearing and protecting it.
I have answered questions in this thread from a general point-of-view. Not my own. I don't think anyone knows that much about me really.But I do wish you could see that this thinking is hindering you from moving on, and that while some could be faking it, that doesn't mean all are.
I do not have TINNITUS. Not anymore, at least.It's just you forcing anything that contradicts your belief that TINNITUS = misery to fit that paradigm.