Those of us with severe chronic Tinnitus know that there is (currently) no cure.
Let's face it.
It hasn't got better.
It hasn't receded, has it?
Has the volume got less?
Cochlea hair cells can not regenerate.
Nerve damage in the brain can not be reversed.
In his book "Tinnitus - from Tyrant to Friend"
Julian Cowan Hill says - I will show you
"how to let go of the ringing in your ears."
(He didn't say he could cure it, did he?
It can't be done for 'trades descriptions.')
So, my question is:
"Is the only way forward an adaptational route?"
Is the battle one of organising a conceptual shift in our observation and relationship to it?
I strongly suspect this is the truth of it.
If that is the reality then I have to accept it.
If your base concept is faulted, then there can be no reality to your structure.
Jazzer
Let's face it.
It hasn't got better.
It hasn't receded, has it?
Has the volume got less?
Cochlea hair cells can not regenerate.
Nerve damage in the brain can not be reversed.
In his book "Tinnitus - from Tyrant to Friend"
Julian Cowan Hill says - I will show you
"how to let go of the ringing in your ears."
(He didn't say he could cure it, did he?
It can't be done for 'trades descriptions.')
So, my question is:
"Is the only way forward an adaptational route?"
Is the battle one of organising a conceptual shift in our observation and relationship to it?
I strongly suspect this is the truth of it.
If that is the reality then I have to accept it.
If your base concept is faulted, then there can be no reality to your structure.
Jazzer