It was quite a shock for me, the 24/7 ringing, straining to hear, discomfort, pain, vertigo, disoriented feeling when so many people were around; it's like information overload. "I felt like my independence was ripped away from me."
I went from being a very strong, component woman to someone who had to have someone with her everywhere she went. I didn't like it at all.
If it wasn't for my strong will and determined, which was instilled in me even as a child. I would never have gotten this far. I demanded of myself to "take back my life". I don't consider myself a "victim" and I think "positive" and life my life on a very strict routine to heal myself.
Currently I work for examiner and yahoo writing articles on content marketing, advocacy issues and doing exclusive interviews. I was in a support group and one day thought, "So many people have this yet there are so few doctors." There is no cure and I myself have seen first hand the struggles of dealing with employers with such conditions. So I asked people, those who suffer from tinnitus or hyperacusis if they would share their story. I think they find is easier to share their story with me because I know what it's like.
So many people do, some use their names while others wish not too. I cover ALL angles, patients, studies, research funding and I'm looking into an interview with a doctor as well. I've interviewed a dietitian on how things we eat and drink affect T and H and patients are always will to give their point of view.
So while, yes my situation is sad, scary even to go from one minute fine to almost being completely deaf to now this diagnosed with T and H. It changed my life forever, it made me see the bigger picture of what happened to me. And I went back to my true calling "writing".
I'm a journalist, with credibility to back me, recognition for my newsworthy pieces and with that I can give those with tinnitus and hyperacusis a voice.
So that's me. A follow patient told me about the forum and said I should take a look...
wendy